LIT - Literature
Explores the vicarious experience of warfare and the practical and moral problems associated with command.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
This course begins by exploring 15th and 16th century fairy tales as they were recorded from oral culture. Students will then study contemporary revisions as they occur in both literature and film, examining the way contemporary writers and filmmakers challenge social and/or political conventions.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
This course introduces students to the foundational categories and concepts of contemporary literary studies. Students will learn about the defining features of major textual genres, as well as the key terms involved in their literary and linguistic analysis. Students will also practice key skills such as scansion, close reading, and lexical inquiry through class discussion and short essays. Course readings will include examples of major literary genres and elementary literary criticism. The course will also discuss professional preparation for humanities majors.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
Pre- or corequisite:
AWR 101.
A study of the techniques, history and development of selected literature and film classics. Content may vary depending on instructor.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
An introduction to one of the most popular literary genres, the novel, with particular focus on the varied relations novelists establish between individual and society, audience and storyteller, to entertain, unsettle and inspire readers.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
This course will investigate the roots, elements and nature of poetry in an effort to make poetry a rich source of pleasure for a lifetime. We will read poetry of all types from all ages, with an emphasis on modern and contemporary.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
An introductory study of fiction, non-fiction, drama or poetry for majors and non-majors. May be repeated if the content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(A)(HFA)
An introduction to the plays and poems of William Shakespeare, including a survey of the texts and an introduction to the staging and poetry of the work. The objectives of this course are to familiarize students with the work and techniques of a great poet and playwright. For English and writing majors, it is essential. For all students, a familiarity with Shakespeare is a cornerstone of a well-rounded liberal arts education.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
A survey of major world authors from the ancient world through the Renaissance.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG)
A survey of major world authors from the 18th century to the present.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG)
A survey of major authors and literary trends up to the 18th century.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
A survey of major authors and trends from the 19th century to the present. LIT 206 is not a prerequisite for LIT 207.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
A survey of major authors and literary trends from colonial and revolutionary periods to the westward expansion.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
A survey of major authors and literary trends from the Civil War to modern times.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA)
This course introduces students to the shared vocabulary of humanistic scholarship that has developed from aesthetic philosophy, literary and art criticism, and cultural studies. Students will read foundational texts from these traditions and apply their methodologies to analyze contemporary cultural objects in their written work.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101
This cultural studies course explores the intersection of food, literature, history and culture, which means it concerns the way food is represented, manipulated, sold, eaten, cooked, distributed, marketed, grown, and discussed.
Credit Hours: 4
(A)(HFA)
This course investigates literature that concerns the relationship of those in power to the people over whom they have authority and the resulting rebellions, revolutions, and reform movements.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101
A survey of contemporary African authors.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG) (NW) (W)
Students will learn to understand and explain the issues, terms and concepts involved in discussing African literature. They will be able to identify and define the basic concepts and narrative techniques of trauma literature. They will analyze selections of African fiction dealing with human-made and deliberately perpetrated traumas. They will also develop tentative conclusions about the nature and craft of African trauma narratives, how they differ from other trauma literatures and how they evolve African and postcolonial literatures. Students will lead peers in discussions on the core issues/texts of the course and write a clear, well-developed and organized essay that demonstrates rigorous critical thinking, mastery of writing skills and competence in integrating and documenting research.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG) (NW)
This course critically examines women's writing and may incorporate a variety of genres, including fiction, non-fiction, poetry and drama. The texts come from a variety of traditions, from classic texts by women writers to the avant-garde, and from a variety of historical and literary periods.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG) (W)
A study of selected contemporary memoir. Content will vary depending on instructor.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
This course introduces students to a selection of texts drawn from periods up to the age of imperialism. It examines the beginnings and development of literary traditions in classical and vernacular languages. Methodologically, the course investigates the contexts of texts and literary movements, and analyzes their genres, questions the concept of periodization, and situates literature in its cultural and historical moment(s).
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101
This course examines texts from the age of imperialism to the present. It traces the global spread of texts through colonial networks, and investigates the literary and cultural consequences of an increasingly globalized world. Methodologically, this course investigates the contexts of texts and literary movements, and analyzes how genre forms travel, looks at periodization from a global perspective, and positions texts in their cultural and historical moments(s).
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101
A study of selected novels by major contemporary authors.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
An introduction to the history and development of the English language through literary texts and secondary sources.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
A study of traditional or experimental fiction, non-fiction or poetry at the introductory level. May be repeated if the content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
This course examines past or present issues and conflicts in popular culture as they are represented in literature.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101
This course introduces students to how texts have been used to divide people or bring them together. Students will cover major theoretical texts dealing with gender, citizenship, race, language, and ethnicity. Additional readings will be drawn from literary, legislative, and juridical primary sources that illustrate the interplay between popular media, discrimination, and empowerment. Writing assignments will ask students to apply their theoretical knowledge to explain contemporary and historical examples of oppression and liberation.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101
A study of different subjects, themes, and periods in drama at the introductory level. May be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
A study of the Romantic Movement from Blake to Keats.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
A study of Victorian literature from Carlyle to Kipling.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
An introduction to the major poets and schools of modern and contemporary poetry in England and the United States.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
An advanced study of several of Shakespeare's finest romances and tragedies, involving a close analysis of the texts and incorporating a thorough grounding in the Renaissance mindset.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
An advanced study of several of Shakespeare's finest comedies and history plays.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
Studies include Elizabethan, Restoration or contemporary drama. May be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
A selection of today's major living authors from around the world.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG) (NW) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
This course will focus on one genre or a select set of genres through which students will approach literature.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and
ENG 305
Recognizing that literary production does not happen in the abstract but in specific places, this class offers an in-depth investigation of how place facilitates collaboration and dissent among authors and exerts an influence on their works. The course will focus on works from a specific place, to be chosen by the instructor, from which students will read extensively. Students will also read critical and historical material about the place. Informed by these readings, students in their written work will research some aspect of the relationship between the place and the work produced in it.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and
ENG 305
A study of traditional or experimental novels or short fiction. May be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
This course is designed to focus on a variety of colonial and post-colonial literatures in Africa, the Caribbean, Indonesia or Latin America. It is a study of the representation of personal, racial and national identity in works from the selected region, written during the period of struggle against colonialism and afterwards. May be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG) (NW) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
Studies the major authors of the neoclassical period.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor. May be repeated if content varies.
Investigation of medieval views of the world and humankind through close reading of several literary masterpieces.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
The poetry, prose and drama of England's most glorious literary period, the 16th and 17th centuries.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
This course explores four major ethnic heritages - Native American, Hispanic, African American and Asian American - through contemporary literature and film. Discussion of the unique historical background casts light upon multicultural expression in literature and film. Other arts, such as dance, music and folklore, enrich our appreciation of each community's artistic identity.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (NW)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
Close reading and analysis of one or more major poets. May be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
A study of Irish fiction, drama, poetry, memoir and film of the 20th and 21st centuries. Includes the influences of colonialism, politics, sectarianism, religion and notions of family and women's roles on this body of literature. Includes a study of major writers from the early part of the 20th century, such as James Joyce, and their influence on contemporary writers.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (IG) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
This course examines sex, gender and marriage in literature of the early American republic (1775-1815) via its rogues, flirts, virgins, crossdressers, fallen women, mothers, fathers, husbands and wives. In particular, the course will be scrutinizing seduction, didacticism, gender construction and republican mother/wifehood. We will also read, write about and evaluate current scholarship concerning these issues.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
This is a special topics course at the 300 level. The course will incorporate an advanced study of a topic and/or genre. The course material may be from any historical period and may include any nationality, ethnicity, etc. Course may be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
An in-depth study of one or more influential writers.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and
ENG 305
A capstone course focused on a defined area of literary study, such as a major author, literary movement or genre. Content varies depending on instructor. Especially recommended for students going on to professional or graduate school.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
A study of significant contemporary literary theories. Selected approaches to literary texts may include formalist, Freudian, reader response, poststructural, cultural and new historicist criticism.
Credit Hours: 4
(A) (HFA) (W)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
Deals with different subjects each time course is offered and may be repeated for credit.
Credit Hours: 1-4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, one literature course; or permission of the instructor.
Students will produce advanced, research-based writing in a field of literary studies.
Credit Hours: 4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, and
ENG 305
A program of directed readings and related writing assignments agreed upon by individual students and professors. May be repeated if content varies.
Credit Hours: 1-4
(HFA)
Prerequisites
AWR 101,
AWR 201, one literature course; or permission of the instructor.