Jun 15, 2024  
2020-2021 Undergraduate Catalog 
    
2020-2021 Undergraduate Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

Course Descriptions


Use the course filter below to search for active courses.

Course numbers followed by an ‘L’ are cross-listed with another department or program.

This catalog may contain course information that is out of date. Before registering for a course, always check the course information in WISER.

 

English

  
  • ENGL 300 - Intermediate Creative Writing Workshop


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A creative writing workshop for students who have some experience in the writing of poetry, fiction, or drama. Class discussion focuses on student work, and individual conferences with the instructor are required.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  

    015612:1
  
  • ENGL 301 - Advanced Poetry Workshop


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 3 times/9 credits

    Description:
    An advanced poetry workshop in which students practice and improve the poetic skills they have already begun to develop. Class discussion focuses on student work, and individual conferences with the instructor are required.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    Instructor consent

    015591:1

  
  • ENGL 302 - Advanced Fiction Workshop


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 3 times/9 credits

    Description:
    An advanced fiction workshop in which students practice and improve the writing skills they have already begun to develop. Class discussion focuses on student work, and individual conference with the instructor are required

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    Instructor consent

    015605:1

  
  • ENGL 303 - Advanced Special Topics in Creative Writing


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course offers students the opportunity to pursue specialized work in creative writing at the advanced level; these topics vary from semester to semester. Possible offerings include courses on novel writing, hybrid courses requiring creative and critical writing, courses on experimental poetry writing, or courses on travel writing.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 210  or ENGL 211  or ENGL 212  or ENGL 300 

    040270:1
  
  • ENGL 306 - Advanced Nonfiction Writing


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    For serious writers in various nonfictional modes, such as description, narration, expository or informative writing, and written argument. While there is some emphasis on the philosophy of composition, everything read and discussed has a practical as well as a theoretical function. Sections of this course taught by different instructors vary in emphasis from the composing process to techniques of the new journalism, to technical writing, writing for prelaw students, techniques of research for the long paper and report. But all are conducted in small classes or workshops, all are concerned with informative or argumentative writing for advanced students, and all require the permission of the instructor for enrollment.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015619:1
  
  • ENGL 307 - Journalism and Media Writing


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course prepares advanced students to explore careers in writing and reporting for print and online media. Students consider contemporary journalistic texts by professional reporters, columnists, and bloggers and develop their own writing for a range of publication platforms and audiences. The course covers the fundamentals of journalistic craft, from methods for story development–including interviewing, observation, and web-based research–to style, ethics, and genre conventions. Throughout the semester, students draft and revise a series of independent writing and reporting projects on real-world people and events, ranging from news articles and magazine features to blogs and reviews. Students learn strategies for pitching stories to editors and preparing their writing for local, campus, or online publication. Different sections of this course may focus on specialized branches or genres of journalism, such as community journalism or arts journalism. This course welcomes both emerging and experienced writers, regardless of previous journalism experience.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or ENGL 203 

    032946:1
  
  • ENGL 308 - Professional Editing


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    An intensive workshop in developing effective prose style for various kinds of writing, including reports, essays, and theses. Instruction covers advanced grammar, usage, editing, and proofreading, with special attention to problems of expression and style arising from complex ideas and argumentative logic. In conjunction with ENGL 307 , this course provides a strong preparation for editors and writers in all settings.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015627:1
  
  • ENGL 309 - Multimedia Authoring


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    In this hybrid digital workshop and studio course, students learn principles of media production, storytelling, and design across a range of audio-visual and web-based platforms. Through focused readings and discussions on documentary, design, and digital aesthetics, students examine creative works by professional artists and media producers and participate in regular critiques of students-made work. Classes include hands-on instruction in image-, audio-, and video-editing techniques and web design basics in a project-based, collaborative learning environment. Throughout the semester, students propose, edit, author, and design a series of original multimedia projects and produce a professional portfolio website of their creative work. This course welcomes students from all backgrounds; no previous experience with digital media production is expected or required.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or ENGL 203 

    039366:1
  
  • ENGL 311 - How to Write Like a Film Critic


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course explores both the history and the practice of film criticism, from popular genres like the movie review and blog post, to more academically oriented modes such as analytical essays and theoretical articles. To help develop their skills as film critics, students will watch a broad range of films and read and respond to the work of pioneering critics. The bulk of the course, however, will be dedicated to writing, workshopping and revising film criticism as students write a series of reviews and a longer analytical essay. As such this course focuses on film criticism as part of a larger conversation about art, media, and journalism and helps students practice their skills as film critics writing for a range of different audiences.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or ENGL 203  or CINE 101  or CINE 201  or CINE 202 

    040189:1
  
  • ENGL 312 - Digital Culture and Composition


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course centers on the changing relationships among digital texts and different domains of life - including personal, work, education, and public spheres. Course readings and discussions focus on two central questions: first, how do digital texts change the way we read, analyze, interpret, and compose? Second, what are the implications of these changes? To address these questions, students study the historical aspects of and theoretical approaches to the study of digital culture, focusing on the connections between reading, writing, writing, and technology. Additionally, coursework requires students to develop their ability to compose digital texts while thinking critically about those texts. Students will consider how textuality is related to changes in media, and what those changes mean for personal, professional, and community life.

    039491:1
  
  • ENGL 315 - New Wave Cinemas: Global Filmmaking in the 1960s


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course focuses on the new cinemas that emerged around the world in the postwar period, including the French, Italian, Czech, and Japanese new waves, New German, New American, and New Latin American cinema, and Britain’s Angry Young Men. The course explores how these various new waves opposed classical cinema, the tensions between realist and experimental film styles, and the possibilities of cinema as a tool to promote political change. At the same time, it traces the shared thematic concerns of new wave cinema during this period, including youth culture, sexuality, political dissent, nihilism, and emergent global culture.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or CINE 101  or CINE 201  or CINE 202 

    040177:1
  
  • ENGL 316L - Cult Cinema


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course explores the history of cult film in America and its relationship to the mainstream industry and other fringe cinemas.  The course focuses particularly on the way that cult cinema challenges our ideas of quality, taste, and acceptability.  At the same time, it explores questions related to cult audiences, exhibition spaces (drive-ins, art house theaters, midnight movies) fandom and cinephilia, and cult film nostalgia.

    ENGL 316L and CINE 316L  are the same course.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or CINE 101  or CINE 201  or CINE 202  

    040178:1

  
  • ENGL 317 - American Independent Cinema


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course examines the history of independent filmmaking in America, from its origins in the independent production companies of the studio era through to contemporary independent movements, including New American Cinema, Black Independent Cinema, New Queer Cinema, the Sundance Kids, and Mumblecore. this course also explores issues related to production and distribution, including the role of film festivals, the development of digital technology, and fan cultures.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or CINE 101  or CINE 201  or CINE 202  

    040202:1
  
  • ENGL 320 - Memoir and Autobiography


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of various kinds of American autobiography-such as spiritual autobiography and freedom narratives-from colonial to modern times, with attention to European forerunners from Augustine to Rousseau. Texts vary by semester, selected from such authors as Edwards, Franklin, Thoreau, Douglass, Jacobs, Moody, Washington, and Henry Adams, and more recent works by Hellman, Wright, Malcolm X, and Kingston.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015644:1
  
  • ENGL 324 - Short Story


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the short story, chiefly as a genre of this century. The course traces its development from nineteenth century origins, concentrating its reading on such American and Irish writers as Welty, O’Connor, Cheever, Lavin, Joyce, Hemingway, Montague, and considering as well the statements made by short story writers on the poetics of short fiction.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: The Arts

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015123:1
  
  • ENGL 326 - Stage and Page: Drama Before 1642


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of English drama before and during Shakespeare’s career emphasizing the development of comedy and tragedy as form and idea, this course provides a setting for the study of Shakespeare. Readings include selected episodes from the mystery cycles, a morality play, and works by such playwrights as Marlowe, Kyd, Tourneur, Webster, Greene, Dekker, Jonson, Beaumont, as well as a comedy and a tragedy of Shakespeare.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015667:1
  
  • ENGL 327 - Stage and Page: Drama, 1660-1900


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of drama in English since the reopening of the theaters at the Restoration of 1660. The development of comedy of manners from Wycherly and Congreve through Sheridan to Wilde and Shaw, and of tragedy from the early eighteenth century through the romantic era, through Ibsen and his followers, to the early twentieth century.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015673:1
  
  • ENGL 328 - Stage and Page: Drama, 1900-Today


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of 20th century American and British drama, including works in translation by influential playwrights abroad. Attention to themes, forms, styles, staging, and performance. Works by such authors as Ibsen, O’Neill, Williams, Miller, Brecht, Beckett, Genet, Hansberry, August Wilson, Kushner, and Hwang.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015676:1
  
  • ENGL 329 - Narrative in the Novel and Film


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Emphasizing formal and stylistic renditions of 20th- and 21st-century narrative art, this course focuses on experimental aspects of fiction and film. The storytelling structures of fiction and film are compared through close attention to written texts, visual and graphic media, and critical readings. Materials include fiction by authors such as Woolf, Faulkner, and Coetzee, and films by directors such as Eisenstein, DeSica, and Resnais.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Diversity Area: International

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    035425:1
  
  • ENGL 331 - Satire


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Readings from the classical period of satire. Aristophanes, Horace, and others raise issues about the nature, functions, and techniques of satire, its relations to intellectual attitudes, social criticism, and literary forms. Variations on the classical patterns and the role of satire in contemporary culture are seen in a range of later satiric works.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015684:1
  
  • ENGL 332 - Comedy


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Comic literature from different cultures and periods, ancient through modern, illustrates the recurrence of different comic modes: satire, irony, romantic comedy, comedy of manners, and comedy of the absurd. Essays about theories of comedy aid students in evaluating the literature and forming their own ideas about the nature of comedy.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: The Arts

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015126:1
  
  • ENGL 333 - Tragedy


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    The course explores both the changing and the enduring aspects of tragedy by examining tragedic works of different ages, from ancient Greece to modern times. Readings may include such works as Oedipus, Thyestes, Dr. Faustus, Macbeth, The White Devil, King Lear, Samson Agonistes, Desire Under the Elms, Death of a Salesman, and Glengarry Glen Ross examined alongside theories about the definition of tragedy, the nature of tragic action, the tragic hero, the tragic times, for example. Students are encouraged to evaluate concepts of tragedy based on class readings, formulating their own ideas about this important form of drama.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015127:1
  
  • ENGL 334 - Science Fiction


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A historical survey of a distinctive modern mode of fiction, including major works by such 19th- and 20th-century figures as Mary Shelley, HG Wells, Yevgeny Zamyatin, Olaf Stapledon, Alfred Bester, Ursula LeGuin, Octavia Butler, Joan Slonczewski, and Kim Stanley Robinson. The focus is primarily literary, though there may be a brief unit comparing literary and cinematic science fiction. Among the topics for consideration: science and scientists in fiction; history and the future; aliens and alienation; diversity in gender, race, culture, species; the physical environment of Earth and of other worlds.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015128:1
  
  • ENGL 335 - Children’s Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    The study of literature for children, including criticism and the history of the development of literary materials written specifically for children. The works studied-by such authors as Lewis, Grahame, Wilder, and Milne-are explored in the context of the historical and cultural settings in which they were produced, and the texts are analyzed both as works of art and as instruments of cultural and didactic impact.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015692:1
  
  • ENGL 337 - Short Novel


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Readings in 20th-century short novels by authors such as Tolstoy, Joyce, Conrad, James, Wharton, Hemingway, Steinbeck, Roth, Wright, Hurston, Achebe, C Johnson, and Oates. Exploration of how the language of analysis and interpretation affects the ways we relate to texts. Attention to differences among genres: short story, the novella or short novel, and novel.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015125:1
  
  • ENGL 338 - Classical Hollywood Cinema


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course examines mainstream American cinema from the 1920s and 1950s focusing on the major historical, cultural and industrial transformations of Hollywood: the studio system, the advent of sound, classical Hollywood narrative, continuity editing, the star system, and the Production Code. Throughout the course, students will be encouraged to critically analyze how a filmmaker’s artistic and creative impulses intersect with and challenge Hollywood’s economic motivations.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or CINE 101  or CINE 201  or CINE 202  

    040179:1
  
  • ENGL 339 - Post-Classical Hollywood Cinema


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course examines mainstream American cinema from the 1950s to the present, focusing on the major historical, cultural, industrial, aesthetic and technological transformations of Hollywood since the breakup of the studio system: the impact of television and the emergence of New Hollywood, the return of the Blockbuster, the rise of independent film, and the expansion of global film culture. This course encourages students to think about Hollywood as both a domestic and a global industry that develops in relation to national concerns (the Red Scare, youth culture, civil rights) as well as international issues (global trade, transnational media conglomerates, and cultural imperialism).

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or CINE 101  or CINE 201  or CINE 202  

    040180:1
  
  • ENGL 340 - Literature and Visual Media


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A comparison of two kinds of imaginative experience, with particular emphasis on the connection between the visual and verbal, the effects of formula and format, the standardization which results from technological methods of production and distribution to mass audiences. How are our lives different because of the pervasiveness of these new cultural habits?

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    033445:1
  
  • ENGL 341L - Gender and Film: Multidisciplinary Perspectives


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course is designed to encourage multidisciplinary analysis of gender, cultural representations, and film in the 20th and early 21st century. Among the topics that students will explore are: ethnographic film and gendered practices in ethnographic filmmaking; how ideologies of gender, “race,” and class are constructed, disseminated, and normalized through film (documentary as well as “popular” film); Indigenous women and filmmaking in North America; femininities, masculinities, and power in the “horror film” genre; human rights film and filmmaking as activism. Students will view films made in diverse locations and reflecting multiple historical, political, and cultural perspectives and will explore the intellectual, political and social significance of film in their own lives. ENGL 341L and WGS 341L  and CINE 341L  are the same course.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: World Cultures

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000010:1
  
  • ENGL 343 - Literature, Culture and Environment


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of how late nineteenth- and twentieth-century, predominantly American, literature has dealt with the physical environment, concentrating on examples of narrative and nonfictional prose, as well as poetry. Special attention will be devoted to such topics as the relation between environmental experience and literary representation of the environment; the impact of cultural and ideological forces on such representation; the interrelation of the history of the physical environment and the history of literature and the arts; and the changing definitions of “nature” and “wilderness” as well as the values attached to these ideas.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    033826:1
  
  • ENGL 344 - Boston Dreams, Boston Nightmares: Genre, Race, Ethnicity


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    “Boston Dreams, Boston Nightmares: Genre, Race, Ethnicity” explores how Boston authors and authors writing on Boston imagine Boston within utopian and dystopian terms. Since Boston is a hub for knowledge production in the U.S., considering how these authors negotiate Boston’s role in producing scientific knowledge in particular forms the foundation for this course. In this way, “Boston Dreams, Boston Nightmares: Genre, Race, Ethnicity” examines the multiple and intersection histories and genres that make up Boston and situates these histories and genres within dominant discourses. This is a hands-on, interactive course designed with the support of the Mellon Foundation.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities | Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    041388:1
  
  • ENGL 345 - Literature of the American South


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the literary renaissance of the American South from 1920 to the present in works by such authors as Faulkner, Hurston, Wright, Warren, Ransom, Tate, Welty, Porter, Styron, O’Connor, Kenan, A. Walker, M. Walker, and S. Brown.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000720:1
  
  • ENGL 348 - Native American Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course examines some of the ways in which Native American writers express their cultural traditions through literature, with an emphasis on how histories of struggle and survival are reflected in both content and style. Readings include contemporary fiction, poetry, and nonfiction, as well as traditional stories and songs. Special attention is given to how these texts help us to better understand and explain the relationships between human beings and the natural world in Native American cultures, including concepts of power, systems of tribal thought and ethics, and culturally based ways of knowing. Background for guided discussion and discussion and study is provided through readings, slides and films.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    035322:1
  
  • ENGL 349 - Topics in Latina/o/x Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    While Latinxs are people of Latin American descent who live in the United States, the term encapsulates a broad range of racial, cultural, and political backgrounds. Latinxs have played a central role in the United States since its inception. Both colonized subjects and representatives from the other (Latin) America, Latinxs have deeply influenced the history, politics, and culture of the United States. This course examines a number of themes that emerge in Latinx Literature such as revolution, dictatorships, violence, immigration, and futurity.  To gain purchase on these ideas, several critical essays are also paired with the texts to ensure both a theoretical and historical grounding in Latinx literature. A few questions this course asks are: what is the Latinx literature? What is its relationship to Latin America? How do Latinx authors deploy genre? How do these genres subsequently engage with history?

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or ENGL 223  

    041283:1
  
  • ENGL 351 - Early African-American Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the roles of early (1773-1903) African-American literature played in shaping American literary and cultural history. Through an examination of such writers as Wheatley, Equiano, Douglass, Jacobs, and Chesnutt, this course introduces students to foundational themes of African-American literature, from the black Atlantic and the trope of the “talking book” through the “tragic mulatto” and double consciousness.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities | Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    033827:1
  
  • ENGL 352L - Harlem Renaissance


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course focuses on major texts of the Harlem Renaissance within contexts of modernism, history, and the development of an African American literary tradition. The course will examine how literature creates and represents real and “imagined” communities and will explore the diverse and often contradictory roles that literature plays in shaping, resisting, and reinforcing cultural discourses. AFRSTY 352L  and AMST 352L  and ENGL 352L are the same course.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities | Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    032282:3
  
  • ENGL 353 - Multiethnic American Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of poetry, fiction, and drama by Native American, African American, Asian American, Latino/a, and Jewish American writers from a comparative perspective, exploring similarities and differences among the writers in their aesthetics-how they use language to express themselves-and politics-how themes like immigration, resistance, empowerment, activism, heritage, gender relations, sexuality, and family manifest themselves in the works.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015731:1
  
  • ENGL 354 - Race in American Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course reads exemplary U.S. novels and poems that spotlight and conceal the racial realities of our culture, drawing particular attention to the way our national ideas about race originate in the history of slavery and genocide. the course focuses on the ways in which attitudes about race in U.S. literature inform discourses of criminality, of femininity, of science, of primitivism, of passing, and of servitude, to name a few. Authors may include William Wells Brown, Harriet Beecher Stowe, John Rollin Ridge, Maria Amparo Ruiz de Burton, Mark Twain, James Weldon Johnson, George Schuyler, William Faulkner, Richard Wright, Toni Morrison, Gloria Anzaldua, and others.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: The Arts | Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  

    015732:1
  
  • ENGL 357 - African-American Women Writers


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    The course considers content, form and modes of expression in prose, poetry and criticism by black women writers from the eighteenth century to the present. Readings include slave narratives, colonial and abolitionist writings, works from the Harlem Renaissance and by contemporary writers such as Bambara, Sanchez, Walker, and Brooks.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities | Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015744:1
  
  • ENGL 358 - Critical Race Studies in Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    An examination of how the concept of race has been formed in the United States, represented in literature, theory, and history. The course begins with the formation of the concept based on a black/white binary undergirded by immigration and citizenship policies. It then takes up double and triple consciousness- how a sense of one’s race creates a divided sense of self based not only on race, but also on ethnicity and nationality. The course may also consider how immigration policies pivoted on notions of exclusion, and we will discuss how issues of race intersect with gender and sexuality. The course will provide a solid foundation in how scholars have developed Critical Race Studies and applied it to a variety of racial groups in the United States and how authors negotiate and reflect on their racialization in US literature.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  or ENGL 223  

    041135:1
  
  • ENGL 365 - The British Novel and the Nineteenth Century


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of social, technological, and cultural changes in nineteenth-century Britain as reflected in the large-scale novel of social life that reached its peak of popularity as a literary form in several modes including historical fiction, romance, and realism. Novels by such authors as Scott, Austen, the Bronte, Thackeray, Dickens, Eliot, Gaskell, Hardy, Meredith, and Conrad.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000717:1
  
  • ENGL 366 - Women and Men in Nineteenth-Century Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of men and women and their relationships in nineteenth century literature, mainly British and American, with special emphasis on the issues of masculine and feminine sexual identity and sexual stereotypes, and the social position of men and women as these are treated in popular culture and in serious literary works.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000716:1
  
  • ENGL 368 - Modern American Fiction


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of significant works of American fiction written in the first half of the 20th century. Major American modernists-such authors as James, Wharton, S Crane, Cather, Hughes, Fitzgerald, Hemingway, Hurston, and Faulkner-helped to define the “American century” and to demonstrate the sustained achievement of modern American fiction.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015133:1
  
  • ENGL 369 - Post-1945 American Fiction


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of significant works of American fiction written since 1950. These works, in form and substance, reflect America’s debate between those who see “good in the old ways” and those who try to “make it new.” Emphasis upon the variety of fictional voices and identities in works by authors such as Banks, Carver, Ellison, Morrison, and Updike.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015134:1
  
  • ENGL 370 - Reading Sexualities: Queer Theory


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course brings the analysis of sexual difference to the center of cultural critique, revealing the web of sexual ideology that underlies texts and everyday life. Through the close reading of literary works and classic texts of queer theory, the course deconstructs the identity categories that usually shape this conversation, including not only ‘gay’ and ‘lesbian,’ but also ‘heterosexual,’ ‘man,’ and ‘woman.’ This course offers a survey of queer criticism from foundational works in the field to exciting new directions that help us to identify queer forms of time, emotion, and literary expression.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Diversity Area: International

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  

    015698:1
  
  • ENGL 371 - The Coming-of-Age Novel


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course will introduce students to the coming-of-age novel, also called the “novel of formation” or the “bildungsroman.” The course will consider “coming of age” as a cultural construct that relies on ideologies of gender, race, and sexuality and engages with the projects of nationalism and capitalism. Students will learn to identify the narrative conventions upon which this form depends, and they will encounter a range of theoretical texts that offer perspectives on maturity, individualism, and genre.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015788:1
  
  • ENGL 372L - American Women Writers and American Culture


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course examines the significant contribution that women writers have made to the creation and development of an American national literature and culture. Points of emphasis include studying representative writers from different historical periods; examining the structures, forms, themes, concerns, and cultural contexts of individual works; and examining the relation of women’s writing to American culture. AMST 372L  and ENGL 372L are the same course.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000691:2
  
  • ENGL 373 - Working-Class Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course studies literature which takes the working class as its subject. It examines questions such as the following: how is the literary work affected by the relationship of the author to the working class? What have been the traditional literary forms for treating working class subjects and what is their effectiveness? What are the consequences of politics or ideology in literary works?

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: The Arts | Diversity Area: United States

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  

    015136:1
  
  • ENGL 376 - Literature and the Political Imagination


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    The course studies ways authors use imaginative literature to respond to political situations and to voice moral and political beliefs. It probes such themes as war and conquest, wealth, race, sex, but its main emphasis is on language and organization and this emphasis requires close analysis of style and structure. Authors may include Dickens, Forster, and Conrad, Dos Passos, Hansberry, Baraka, and Malraux, Brecht, and Silone.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Diversity Area: International

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015138:1
  
  • ENGL 379 - Special Topics in English and American Literature I


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    Various courses in literature and related fields are offered experimentally, once or twice, under this heading. Topics are announced each semester during pre-registration. Recent topics have included Gothic Literature, The Harlem Renaissance, and memory and World War II.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000714:1
  
  • ENGL 380 - Special Topics in English and American Literature II


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    Various courses in literature and related fields are offered experimentally, once or twice, under this heading. Topics are announced each semester during pre-registration. Recent topics have included Gothic Literature, The Harlem Renaissance, and memory and World War II.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015811:1
  
  • ENGL 381 - Geoffrey Chaucer


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the Canterbury Tales and, time permitting, some of Chaucer”s other works in the original Middle English. No prior knowledge of Chaucer, the period (the later fourteenth century), or Middle English is required. Taped readings aid in learning the language. Discussion emphasizes how the works reflect the medieval period and how Chaucer draws readers of all periods into intellectual and moral pilgrimages of their own.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015139:1
  
  • ENGL 382 - William Shakespeare’s Early Works


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Shakespeare”s comedies, history plays, and early tragedies largely from the first half of Shakespeare”s career. The course emphasizes critical interpretations of individual plays but it attempts as well to review Shakespeare”s dramatic art in general, theater history and conventions, theory of comedy and theory of tragedy, the language of verse drama, and the development of the history play.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015821:1
  
  • ENGL 383 - William Shakespeare’s Later Works


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Shakespeare”s problem plays, major tragedies and late romances. The course emphasizes critical interpretations of individual plays, and it assumes that students will have had some experience of Shakespearean plays, such as those in ENGL 382 . But this course may be elected without such experience.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015827:1
  
  • ENGL 385 - John Milton


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Reading and discussion of John Milton”s English poetry and some of his prose: early lyrics; the tragedy Samson Agonistes; the epics Paradise Lost and Paradise Regained. Attention to modern debates about structure and style and to the relation between Milton”s politics and his poetry.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015830:1
  
  • ENGL 395 - Comparative Reading of Two Authors


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course offers a comparative study of two British or two American writers who worked within a shared national tradition, and whose writings reveal social and thematic affinities or present interesting problems of contrast. Students in the course engage in the meaningful juxtaposition of the two authors, exploring how such comparisons can lead to a more complex understanding of each. Unlike ENGL 394 , which compares writers from different nations, this version of the course does not offer transnational credit. The authors studied vary from year to year. Examples of possible paired writers include Shakespeare and Jonson, Burney and Austen, Hawthorne and Melville, Dickens and Gaskell, or Wharton and Morrison.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    039061:1
  
  • ENGL 396 - Jane Austen


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course examines Jane Austen’s major works with regard to content and context. In trying to understand the enduring popularity of Austen’s major novels, we will discuss questions of adaptation and nostalgia, style and social class. In reading Austen’s major novels, students will be encourages to understand philosophical issues (most notably aesthetics and the theory of the mind), and historical aspects of Regency period culture (the marriage market, inheritance practices, Britain’s view of France, the slave trade, and novel reading). Attention will also be paid to other important female writers of her time in the attempt to understand Austen’s posthumous elevation to literary stardom.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    035596:1
  
  • ENGL 401 - The Medieval Period


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Lyrics, romances, mystery plays, allegories of English literature in the period before the sixteenth century. Old and Middle English writers, including Chaucer, Langland, and the Pearl Poet; stories of King Arthur and his knights.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: Humanities

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015879:1
  
  • ENGL 402 - The Renaissance in England


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Major work of the English Renaissance (early sixteenth through early seventeenth centuries), in poetry and prose. Authors such as Thomas More, Christopher Marlowe, Edmund Spenser, Shakespeare, Ben Jonson, John Donne, and Milton. Reading in Renaissance criticism.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015881:1
  
  • ENGL 405 - British Romanticism


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of literature as a reflection of social and cultural change occurring in the revolutionary age (1780s to 1830s ). Attention to how notions of “nature,” “genius,” and the “imagination” created political changes and altered conceptions of how history was understood. Works by authors such as Wordsworth, Coleridge, Blake, Godwin, Hays, Wollstonecraft, Scott, Byron, Austen, PB Shelley, M Shelley, and Keats.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015893:1
  
  • ENGL 406 - The Victorian Age


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of social, technological, spiritual, and cultural changes in Victorian England (1830s to 1880s) as reflected in tensions-between community and individualism, tradition and progress, belief and doubt, utility and feeling-in works by such writers as Carlyle, Mill, Browning, Barrett Browning, Macaulay, Dickens, Tennyson, Arnold, Ruskin, and Pater. Consideration is given to music and visual arts.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015898:1
  
  • ENGL 408 - American Romanticism


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of literature as a reflection of social and cultural changes occurring from the 1830s through the 1860s. Attention to both the most famous traditional “romantics” (Poe, Emerson, Thoreau, Hawthorne, Melville, and Whitman) and to the important “minority” writers whose works, published in the same period, helped to change the tradition (Fuller, Douglass, Truth, Stowe, Jacobs, and others).

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015906:1
  
  • ENGL 409 - American Realism


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the tradition of realism in American writing, from the age of Whitman to 1925. Primary focus on the post-Civil War period, the Gilded Age, when realistic and naturalistic works replaced the romance as the dominant American mode of literary expression. Whitman, Twain, James, Howells, Crane, Chesnutt, Dreiser, Jewett, Wharton, and others sought to reflect a transformed America, as fact and symbol, in their works. These and other writers helped to confirm and create a new American reality.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015911:1
  
  • ENGL 410 - The Modern Period


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the phenomenon of “modernism” in, roughly, the first half of the twentieth century in Britain and America. Reading and discussion of such writers as Yeats, Joyce, Lawrence, Woolf, Eliot, Hemingway, Pound, and Faulkner.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015150:1
  
  • ENGL 411 - Postcolonial Literary Studies


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course introduces student to the diversity of literary, philosophic, and political topics addressed by postcolonialism. Drawing on a wide range of texts, we will pursue the following avenues of inquiry: What do we mean by the term “Empire”? How has the reach of Empire been historically constructed, critiqued in fiction, and/or sustained through narrative: What forms of identity are available to individuals who have been displaced, either through personal choice or random (and often tragic) circumstance? And, finally, how “post” is postcolonialism? To answer these and related questions, this course will further explore the different experiences of colonization, decolonization, and postcolonial culture and politics during the twentieth century in South Africa, Nigeria, Jamaica, India, Australia, and Northern Ireland. Taking a transdisciplinary approach, we will conduct inquiries into the nature of sociopolitical and cultural conditions that characterize current or former colonies, the diverse registers in which these conditions are discursively articulated, and the modes, spaces, and politics of their (re)production, circulation, and consumption. Some themes this course will address include the psychology of colonization and settlement; violence and decolonization; constructions of the “Other” by imperial center; hybrid cultural formations wrought by the impacts between colonizer and colonized. Taking the above statement by Ghosh as instructive, this course will also seek to interrogate the idea that culture is a coherent or self-contained whole; thus, the final portion of this class will address themes of travel, immigration, and concepts of the diaspora, homeland, and exile by attending to the “new” cosmopolitanism.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Distribution Area: World Cultures | Diversity Area: International

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    033829:1
  
  • ENGL 412 - Contemporary British Fiction and Film


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course will take a wide-ranging view of contemporary British fiction and film by reading novels and watching films about Great Britain (i.e., England, Scotland, Wales, Northern Ireland) produced between 1980 and the present moment. We will study the dynamic internationalism of English writing and filmmaking; we will investigate the highly politicized regionalism apparent in novels and films from Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland. Finally, we will contextualize our in-class discussions of the novels and films with select essays about contemporary politics in Great Britain and, more broadly, contemporary theories about film and narrative theory.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    036999:1
  
  • ENGL 418 - The Modern Irish Novel


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course explores the interests and concerns of the modern Irish novel. Focusing on a variety of representative authors and texts, the course traces the thematic and technical developments of the Irish novel over the decades of the twentieth century. Novels are read with reference to their political, social, and cultural contexts.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015946:1
  
  • ENGL 419 - Recent Irish Writing


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of Irish literature after the age of Yeats and Joyce, the course examines invention, adaptation, and development, in the major genres, of Irish writing during decades of economic depression, cultural isolation, war, and renewed sectional and international tensions. Emphasis is given to the re-emergence of Irish writings, particularly in the achievements of the Ulster poets, in our own day. “If you would know Ireland,” advised Yeats, “body and soul-you must read its poems and stories.”

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015936:1
  
  • ENGL 436 - Law and Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This class will introduce students to the similarities between factual legal cases and fictional narratives. Consider the elements of a stirring trial: an emotional witness, a confrontational cross-examination, and a dramatic summation. Now, consider the elements of a gripping novel: a multi-faceted character, a tension-filled conflict, and a compelling climax. How does law and literature “tell a good story” about human experience? Can the law create fiction and the novel create truth? Does literature shape our understanding of legal issues? This course will address these issues by examining novels from the 18th through 20th centuries, historical court records from England and America, Supreme Court case materials, and popular representations of the law in film and on TV.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    040271:1
  
  • ENGL 437 - Reading the Gothic: Transatlantic Terrors


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course explores how Gothic stories were invented and developed by the transatlantic imagination in the mid 18th century, and surveys their subsequent development through the 20th century. We will address such questions as why readers would be attracted to obviously “unreal” stories and how these stories test the imagination’s ability to make extreme fictions feel “real.” We will trace the influence of Gothic on other areas of the literary arts, on other artistic fields such as architecture and painting, and even on social developments such as how women were viewed and how other foreign cultures were interpreted. Authors may include Walpole, Brockden Brown, Shelley, Irving, Hawthorne, Poe, Dickens, Stoker, Oates, King.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    035599:1
  
  • ENGL 438 - Reading the Graphic: Texts and Images


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Some scholars argue that our culture has become increasingly visual in recent years, and many worry that our ability to understand the complex power of images sometimes lags behind our ability to analyze and use words. This course aims to refine our ability to talk about visual representation, analyzing not only how words and images work together in what we read and see, but also how they collude in photographic essays, graphic novels, and illustrated stories. Classic examples of these genres will be surveyed in the effort to investigate the fascinating relationships between images and words, as well as the roles this relationship plays in our language and our ways of thinking about truth, story-telling, memory, identity, and power.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    035600:1
  
  • ENGL 440 - History of the English Language


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Where did English come from? How have historical events influenced change in the language? Should change today be resisted or accepted? Who or what determines what is “correct”? Participants learn how to analyze and transcribe speech sounds, use traditional grammar to understand grammatical change, and work with specialized dictionaries that help in analyzing short texts from various periods of English.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000708:1
  
  • ENGL 442 - Contemporary English


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A look at the structure and the social dynamics at work in the English language today, chiefly in America. Topics: competing grammars, speech in Massachusetts, effects of social stratification on language, regional and social dialect, language and gender, language and ethnicity, and changes in meaning.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    000707:1
  
  • ENGL 444 - Literary Translation and Interpretation


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This is an intensive course that examines literary translation and interpretation, concentrating on both poetry and prose. Instruction focuses on the practice and theory of literary translation, with particular attention given to close reading and interpretation. Readings include classic and recent essays on translation theory, as well as excerpts from a selection of variant sample translations.

    Course Attribute(s):
    Diversity Area: International

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    040272:1
  
  • ENGL 448 - Perspectives on Literacy


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the theories of literacy, in its relation to human thinking and to social uses and contexts; and of the practice of literacy, in the teaching, learning, and use of literate behaviors in contemporary American society. The course links the active investigation of literacy issues with related readings, and draws implications for the teaching of reading and writing and for the study of literature.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015131:1
  
  • ENGL 450 - Teaching Literature


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Designed for students who are considering English teaching as a career, this seminar is an investigation of why and how we teach literature in the secondary school settings. We will read literary texts from a teacher’s perspective, analyze educational research, develop lesson plans, and respond critically to each other’s work. To clarify and reassess the goals of literature pedagogy, we will attempt to strike a balance between developing practical tools for potential classroom use and examining theories about teaching and learning. We will address teaching literary genres, teaching canonical and non-canonical texts (ranging from those of Geoffrey Chaucer and William Shakespeare to Marjane Satrapi and Zora Neale Hurston), teaching poetic and narrative form, and teaching with unexpected materials. In the spirit of collaboration, this course will draw on our collective interests and educational experiences to identify useful resources and strategies that will assist 21st century-students in their responses to print, visual, and digital texts.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    040701:1
  
  • ENGL 451 - Teaching Writing


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Designed for students considering English teaching, this seminar examines writing instruction in middle and secondary school contexts. In this course, we’ll explore the relationship between theory and practice by articulation, evaluation, revision, and expanding our own theories of writing and writing instruction, and thinking and how those theories impact the choices we make in the classroom. This class presents the teaching of writing as a mode of ongoing inquiry, observation, and (re)design; in other words, you are not just a teacher, but a teacher-researcher.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 102 

    040995:1
  
  • ENGL 452 - Teaching English With Digital Technology


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course addresses the ways that new technologies are changing the teaching of English at the middle and secondary school levels. We will examine the history of writing technologies and consider the ways that scribal proficiency, the printing press, and computer coding have revolutionized our conceptions of writing and the very nature of literacy itself. We will then immerse ourselves in the digital world, contribution to social networks, blogs, and wikis, and evaluation when and how they should be used in our teaching of language, literature, and writing. We will give careful consideration to the philosophical and ethical concerns that accompany these dynamic and collaborative environments. However, the bulk of the course will be dedicated to developing effective strategies for helping our students read, interpret, and produce alphabetic, hyper-, and multi-modal texts. The ultimate goal is the participants will create digital teaching portfolios that reflect their pedagogical beliefs and revitalize their instruction. There questions will be threaded throughout the term: How do Web 2.0 technologies and their multiple modes of representation affect how our students might approach reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing? How can we, as English teachers, prepare our students to engage both actively and critically in a rapidly changing communicative environment while maintaining our traditional curricular focus on literature, language, reading, and writing? How can we most effectively use the technological resources available to us to foster students’ leafing and literacy within 21st century classrooms?

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  

    041136:1
  
  • ENGL 453 - Writing War and Peace: The Joiner Center Summer Writers’ Workshop


    1 Credit(s) | Seminar | Pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit up to 3 times/3credits

    Description:
    Offered every summer by the Joiner Center for the Study of War and Social Consequences, the weeklong Summer Writers’ Workshop focuses on the intersections of creative writing, war, social justice, and peace making. This course offers participating students the option of earning one academic credit for completing the workshop and submitting required writing assignments. The workshop features intensive workshop classes in poetry, fiction, memoir and non-fiction with distinguished writers; readings and performances by faculty, students, and veterans; special master classes in creative writing; and a community dedicated to creative responses to war. Students will be required to attend five days of intensive creative workshop sessions (for a minimum of 12 course hours) on campus with faculty, plus master classes in craft, translation, and creative writing throughout the week. Students taking the workshop for academic credit will be required to submit a portfolio of written work and a reflection on their participation in the workshop. The course is open to both veterans and non-veterans. The course may be taken pass/fail only.

    041614:1
  
  • ENGL 454 - English Internship


    3 - 6 Credit(s) | Internship | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    This is a course for English majors with approved internships that connect to skills learned in the English Department. The course/internship will provide experience working in a professional setting/context and will offer students the potential to reflect on potential career paths. Students meet periodically with a faculty internship director to discuss the progress of the internship. Course requirements typically include a journal or end-of-term portfolio, as well as a reflection essay and evaluation of the internship. For full information about requirements, see the English Department Undergraduate Office. Because potential faculty internship directors made commitments early, students are encouraged to apply during advanced registration. This course awards 3 credits for approximately 10 hours/week of work with the internship (or 150 hours over the course of the semester), in addition to the required portfolio and reflection piece.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    041424:1
  
  • ENGL 455 - Independent Study I


    1 - 3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 6 times/6 credits

    Description:
    A course of study designed by the student in conjunction with a supervising instructor in a specialized subject, one ordinarily not available in the standard course offerings. Open to a limited number of students in any one semester. Preference may be given to senior English majors with a cumulative average of 3.0 or above. A written prospectus must be submitted. Register with director of the major.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    Department consent

    000702:1

  
  • ENGL 456 - Independent Study II


    1 - 3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 6 times/6 credits

    Description:
    A course of study designed by the student in conjunction with a supervising instructor in a specialized subject, one ordinarily not available in the standard course offerings. Open to a limited number of students in any one semester. Preference may be given to senior English majors with a cumulative average of 3.0 or above. A written prospectus must be submitted. Register with director of the major.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    Department consent

    000701:1

  
  • ENGL 457 - Undergraduate Colloquium: Career Development for English Majors


    1 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Through a series of workshops and sequence of assignments, this course helps English majors explore careers in English and prepare materials for a successful job search. Two areas of career development will be emphasized; identifying vocations that capitalize on student skills and abilities; and enhancing self-presentation to prospective employers through work on cover letters, resumes, interviewing and networking skills. In addition, students refine their writing and communication skills in ways intended to benefit them after graduation.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    015985:1
  
  • ENGL 458 - Undergraduate Colloquium: Literature in Public Spaces


    1 Credit(s) | Field Studies |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This one-credit course encourages students to examine the social life of literature in today’s culture. Students explore literature as it is presented in public settings and critique that experience by writing reviews. The course presents students with a series of guest lectures, reading, film and dramatic presentations, workshops, and organized discussions. To receive a grade, students must attend at least five events and write critical reviews for each event attended.

    039492:1
  
  • ENGL 459 - Seminar for Tutors


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Readings, writings and discussion on the theoretical and practical issues one encounters in working as a composition tutor. A nucleus of presentations, lectures, workshops and readings covering the transactional and substantive aspects of teaching writing, particularly remediation, from a peer position. All elements of the course combine to provide an intellectual framework for reflection, articulation, and synthesis of what is learned in the work experience of the tutor.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    Department consent

    032245:1

  
  • ENGL 462 - Advanced Studies in Poetry


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    Studies in various trends and periods of poetry for advanced students; intensive studies in one or two major poets. Topics vary from year to year.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    000700:1
  
  • ENGL 463 - Advanced Studies in Prose


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    A capstone course offering advanced study of topics that vary from semester to semester, such as particular kinds of fiction or nonfiction (e.g., the historical novel or literary journalism), theory or history of rhetoric, theory of fiction or literary nonfiction, or comparative studies of two or three prose writers. A major research project and its presentation to the class are required.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    015990:1
  
  • ENGL 464 - Advanced Studies in Language and Literary Theory


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    This course offers students interested in language or literary theory an opportunity to do advanced work in subjects which vary from semester to semester. Possible subjects include: theories of discourse, varieties of present day English, the linguistic structures of poetry, and advanced stylistics.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    000699:1
  
  • ENGL 465 - Advanced Studies in Literature and Society


    3 - 6 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This capstone course offers advanced study in topics that focus on the relationship between literature and society; these topics vary from semester to semester. Possible subjects include the exploration of literature’s representation of social structures such as class, periods defined by specific social events such as war, social institutions such as work or home, or cultural understandings of social behavior and beliefs. A major research project and its presentation to the class are required.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    035323:1
  
  • ENGL 466 - Advanced Special Topics


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit up to 2 times/6 credits

    Description:
    A capstone course offering intensive study of a topic at the intersection of different approaches to or disciplinary perspectives on literature. Topics may include relationships between literature and (1) other arts; (2) cultural, social, or economic history; or (3) the development of fields such as law, medicine, or science. A major research project and its presentation are required.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    015994:1
  
  • ENGL 470L - New England Literature and Culture


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A study of the New England literary tradition from about 1850 to the near present. How have writers and critics contested their differing versions of native grounds and reinvented the New England idea in their works? Consideration of such topics as Native American culture, Puritanism and Transcendentalism, slavery and Abolitionism, immigration and ethnicity, nationalism and regionalism, industrialization, and popular culture. AMST 470L  and ENGL 470L are the same course.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    000688:2
  
  • ENGL 475 - Professional and News Media Writing Capstone Internship


    Formerly English Internship
    1 - 6 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit up to 6 times/6 credits

    Description:
    A tutorial course for Professional and New Media Writing students with approved internships involving substantial writing in professional settings. Students meet every other week with a faculty internship director to discuss writing they have produced at the internship. The writing is accompanied by a breakdown of the steps involved in researching and composing it, the time spent, the extent of the intern’s contribution, and an analysis of what was learned in the process. Course requirements typically include a journal, readings, and end-o-term portfolio, and a summer essay, and may include an oral presentation to a class or student group. For application forms and full information about requirements, see the director of Professional and New Media Writing. Because potential faculty internship directors make commitments early, students are encouraged to apply during advanced registration. The course awards three hours of credit for a minimum of 25 pages of formal on-the-job writing and ten hours of work per week on site. Six credit hours may be given for proportionally greater writing and on-site hours. The course satisfies the English major capstone requirement.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites: 

    Professional writing and new media students only

    Department consent required

    015986:1

  
  • ENGL 477 - Professional and New Media Writing Internship II


    Formerly English Internship II
    3 Credit(s) | Lecture | Graded or pass/fail
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A tutorial course for students with approved internships involving substantial writing in professional settings. Students meet every other week with a faculty internship director to discuss writing they have produced a the internship. The writing is accompanied by a breakdown of the steps involved in researching and composing it, the time spent, the extent of the intern’s contribution, and an analysis of what was learned in the process. Course requirements typically include a journal, readings, and end-of-term portfolio, and a summary essay, and may include an oral presentation to a class or student group. For application forms and full information about requirements, see the director of internships. Because potential faculty internship directors make commitments early, students are encouraged to apply during advanced registration. The course awards three hours of credit of a minimum of 25 pages of formal on-the-job writing and ten hours of work per week on site.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 475  

    036250:1
  
  • ENGL 480 - History of the Book


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Opening Boston’s rich archival resources to students, this capstone course gives undergraduates the opportunity to work with old, new, hyper, and rare texts. The course offers new perspectives on the book, exploring the book both as a manuscript and visual object and as a printed and edited object. It considers industries of the book, such as publishing and the internet, as well as its cultural effects, such as literacy and the circulation of ideas. In addition to readings in poetry, prose, literary theory, and history, the course is structured by hands-on workshops, library visits, and a self-defined research paper.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    035324:1
  
  • ENGL 489 - Terrorism and the Novel


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Our primary aim in this course is to examine the diversity of ways in which terrorism has been represented in narrative fiction. Topics include: Victorian anarchism, the “Troubles” in Northern Ireland, international responses to 9/11, the collisions between postmodernism and terrorism. This course requires extensive reading in political, historical, and theoretical materials. We will use these materials to pose more general literary questions: How have modern writers engaged questions of political violence? What forms of communication does terrorism authorize and foreclose?

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites:



    035329:1
  
  • ENGL 496 - Creative Writing Honors Seminar


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A creative writing workshop for student writers of poetry, fiction, or drama who have been accepted into the Honors Program in English and Creative Writing. A one-semester course (in the fall), to be followed by one semester of independent work with an advisor.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    Instructor consent

    016068:1

  
  • ENGL 497 - Creative Writing Honors Thesis


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    Independent study in creative writing for student writers of poetry, fiction, or drama who have been accepted into the Honors Program in English and Creative Writing and who have completed ENGL 496  with a grade of B or better.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    Department consent

    016070:1

  
  • ENGL 498 - English Honors Seminar


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A course open to and required to all students doing honors work in English. The course consists of an introduction to research methods, a survey of critical methods (with the end of helping the honors student choose an approach for the writing of the thesis), and the reading of all primary and some secondary materials preparatory to writing the thesis.

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisites: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202 

    016072:1
  
  • ENGL 499 - English Honors Thesis


    3 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    A continuation of ENGL 498 , in which the honors student works individually with a faculty advisor on the writing of the honors thesis. The student receives a grade for each semester of work but honors in English will be awarded only to those students who have written a thesis of high distinction (as judged by the Honors Committee).

    Enrollment Requirements:
    Prerequisite: ENGL 200  or ENGL 201  or ENGL 202  

    Department consent

    016074:1


English as a Second Language

  
  • ESL 100A - Speaking and Listening I


    4 Credit(s) | Lecture |
    Course can be counted for credit once

    Description:
    This course focuses on developing speaking and listening skills that will help students function in their other academic course work. Students participate in small-group work, make oral presentations, and report on first-hand research projects.

    013431:1
 

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