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A summary of each course to help with your selection.
Course ID
Course
ENGL 590
ENGL 590
Studies in Individual Authors
Course Credits: 3
This course is designed to give students the opportunity of studying for an entire semester the works of up to two significant authors.
ENGL 591
ENGL 591
Children's Literature
Course Credits: 3
The course examines children's literature from the seventeenth century to the present, analyzing representative texts and changing attitudes toward children and their books. Beginning with early didactic stories and traditional folk and fairy tales, and then moving on to British, American, and Canadian novels, the course focuses on questions of history, philosophy, authorship, readership, and genre. The emphasis is on close critical readings of the texts.
ENGL 593
ENGL 593
Fantasy Literature
Course Credits: 3
Examines the long history of fantasy texts by first locating works of George MacDonald, C.S. Lewis, J.R.R. Tolkien, and Madeleine L'Engle within the Anglo-Saxon epic and the Medieval romance literary traditions in English literature, including Beowulf and Sir Gawain and the Green Knight. The course also considers how these works have shaped the imagination of creators of modern fantasy as well as the argument that modern fantasy is a response to post-Enlightenment rationalism.
ENGL 600
ENGL 600
Core Seminar: Reading the Signs of the Times: Text and Interpretation
Course Credits: 3
Designed to orient students to the crucial transition from modernist to postmodernist and post-postmodernist models of texts and interpretation, models that depend on changing philosophical views of truth and reality. It examines the main interpretive paradigms in literary studies in order to show how views of reason, language, and textuality continue to shape one's life horizons.
ENGL 607
ENGL 607
Special Topics in English Literature
Course Credits: 3
Topics may vary. Courses to date include: - Foundations of Ethical Being - James Baldwin: The Dialectic of Race and Religion - Kierkegaard's Postscript - Life Writing as a Literary Genre: Biography as Identification of Self and Subjectivity - The Poetics of Resistance, Affirmation and Immigrant Voices and the Poetry of Trauma - Studies in George MacDonald - German Romanticism - Gothic Fiction - Poetics of American Literature - Merton and the Solitary Tradition - The Eighteenth-Century Novel - Jane Austen - Identity and Ethics in Communication - Milton and the Romantics - Shakespearean Trauma and the Early- Modern Suffering Self - Studies in the Late-Victorian Fiction of Sir Arthur Conan Doyle
ENGL 610
ENGL 610
Bibliography
Course Credits: 3
Under the direction of the student's approved thesis or major research paper advisor, a course of reading and study which leads to the development of both a significant bibliographical essay (or annotated bibliography) and a thesis proposal. The latter includes at least the following: major question(s) to be addressed; significance of the issue(s); methodologies to be used; theories to be addressed and primary sources to be examined.
ENGL 611
ENGL 612
ENGL 613
ENGL 613
Major Essay
Course Credits: 3
Under the direction of a supervisor, students not writing a thesis will research and write a major paper of approximately 10,000-15,000 words in length.