30000

ENG 30003 NATURE IN IRELAND

An interdisciplinary course culminating with a mandatory field-experience in Ireland. Students study the geologic, floral and faunal histories of Ireland, as well as various perceptions and depiction of nature in Irish culture, from the perspective of Irish writers. This course provides an opportunity for inquiry-based examination of a foreign culture. Cross listed with BIO 30003.

ENG 30013 POETRY ANALYSIS

Students will read a range of modern poetry; develop vocabulary and strategies for analyzing and writing poetry;interact with forms and varieties of poetry from poems as objects, patterned words in a visual field, chants, songs, conversations, form, and large structures of poetic writing.

ENG 30124 PROFESSIONAL WRITING

Studies principles and techniques of effective writing for professional settings. Emphasis on development of individual style, clarity of expression and creative communication of ideas. CROSS LISTED with COM 30124.

ENG 30125 CREATIVE NONFICTION

Students will employ the elements of fiction writing to express personal experiences, as well as social, ethical, and political ideas; develop skills as writers which will enable them to develop their authentic voices.

ENG 30221 LIBRARY SKILLS

Emphasizes skill building in library literature searches. Hands-on tour of Hayden or ASU West Library includes use of library catalogues, reference tools, indexes, periodicals, computer searches and microfiche.

ENG 30521 CLASSIC LITERATURE AND FILM

Examines selected classic novels and their film representations.

ENG 30623 MYTHOLOGY

Studies myths and legends from civilizations that have influenced literature and culture of English- speaking people.

ENG 30721 RESEARCH PAPER PREP SKILLS

Examines organization and production of the research paper, including LAS 45014. Research skills covered are topic selection and development, use of appropriate style guides, in-text citation and referencing and the elements of style.

ENG 30722 WRITING APA-STYLE RSRCH PAPERS

Guides students to select focused topics and to organize and develop research papers. Topics include APA in-text citation, internet and online source citation, developing a library research strategy, and basic elements of effective research writing style.

ENG 30723 RESEARCH PAPER PREP SKILLS II

Examines the research process in depth, including library research, CD-ROM and Internet search engines, and the collection of primary research data. Students will produce a series of short research projects using correct in-text citations and bibliography listings, with an emphasis on APA style.

ENG 30824 ANALYSIS CHILDRENS LIT

Examines selection, analysis and use of modern classic literature with young readers.

ENG 30924 ADOLESCENT LITERATURE

Examines a wide range of literacy works appropriate to readers of middle school and high school age. A study of the types and themes of adolescent literature and issues related to its use in school programs. Designed for teachers, librarians and parents. CROSS LISTED WITH EDU 30932.

ENG 31023 ADVANCED EXPOSITORY WRITING

Refinement of expository writing skills through analysis of models and writing practice.

ENG 31033 INTERNSHIP:ENGLISH

Practical experience in the major area of study. Arranged individually and taken after completion of the major course work.

ENG 31723 MULTICULTURAL LITERATURE

Study of works by African-American, Hispanic, Native American, female and other historically marginalized authors specifically to address issues of culture, value and self-development. Literature poses critical issues that arise in the increasingly diverse societies of our shrinking world. Prerequisite: 20000-level English course or consent of instructor.

ENG 31924 SHAKESPEARE HIST PLAYS

Examines major dramas in their historical and cultural context to discover themes central to individual plays and to entire works.

ENG 32523 THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE

Treats history and development of the English language with special attention to grammar, syntax and phonetics. Applies various linguistic approaches to the task of understanding evolution and system of the language. Not designed to treat special problems in speaking or writing English.

ENG 32723 CREATIVE WRITING

Course development skills in writing drama, poetry and fiction. Develops critical skills and encourages students to develop tools to refine expression.

ENG 32724 CREATIVE WRITING II

Designed to assist in revising and completing a three-act play. Process includes weekly meetings with professor and production of text. Evaluation will depend on completion of text by mid-term, revision of text, and productive work.

ENG 32725 INTERMEDIATE CREATIVE WRITING

Focuses on strengthening creative writing skills, expanding those skills by exploring different genres; editing, revising, and polishing manuscripts; and marketing. Prerequisite: ENG 32723 Creative Writing, an equivalent course, or consent of the advisor/instructor.

ENG 33000 MYTH, SYMBOL AND RITUAL IN KENYA

Interdisciplinary seminar which examines myths, symbols, and ritual in Kenya as intersections of popular culture, spiritual life, political history, and sacred spaces. The course culminates in travel to Kenya, including field experience, original research, and reflective writing. Cross listed with LAS 33000 and REL 33000.

ENG 33003 IDS: TRAUMA/MEMORY:THE HOLOCAUST

Interdisciplinary study of trauma, post-traumatic stress and memory in written and oral testimonies of the Holocaust. Combines psychology with literature and literary theory concerining Holocaust literature. Crosslisted with LAS 33003.

ENG 33023 IMAGE AND TEXT

Explores how image and text work together to make meaning in contexts such as illustrated literature, film, advertising, visual poetry, performance art, and graphic novels. Readings from fields such as visual cultural studies, semiotics, art history, film criticism, postmodernism, and psychoanalytic theory will illuminate the relationships between image and text, language and representation.

ENG 33523 ENVIRONMENTAL LITERATURE

An examination of a variety of literary works from several genres, focusing on the portrayal of physical environments and the connections between these environments and human spheres of influence. This course will explore how human beings relate to the natural world, and how that relation influences the way we read texts and the world around us, Authors to be studied might include Leopold, Thoreau, Defoe, the Brontes, Wordsworth, Merwin, Snyder and Kingsolver. Crosslisted with BIO 33523, LAS 33523.

ENG 34000 IDS:TOMBS/TALES ANCIENT SCOTLAND

Course reviews the written and material record of continuous settlement in the Orkney Islands, dating back 5000 years. Topics include a select review of archeologoical evidence for Neolithic and Bronze Age sites as well as the contemporary socio-cultural structure of the Islands from a literary and anthropological perspective. Crosslisted with LAS 34000 and SOC 34000.

ENG 34003 IDS:LITERATURE OF DIFFERENCE

Course introduces students to American Literature, primarily twentieth century, with an emphasis on texts by and about those who are perceived as different. Topics include schizophrenia, dissociative identity disorder, post-traumatic stress, depression, gender identity disorder, and self-injury and are explored through novels, memoirs, and autobiographies. Crosslisted with LAS 34003 IDS:Literature of Difference.

ENG 34023 PROTEST LITERATURE

A study of the literature of social protest, emphasizing the relationship between aesthetics and politics, or the political purposes of literature. This course will examine how various authors assault the status quo of an often inhumane, brutal, and repressive society. Readings might include works by Richard Wright, Upton Sinclair and Nelson Algren.

ENG 34224 READINGS IN LITERATURE

Discussion and analysis of groups of readings from novels, poetry, plays and nonfiction. Individually designed to meet student needs and interests.

ENG 34324 READINGS IN NON-FICTION

Students read five non-fiction works and write an essay/review of each work. The essay/review is shaped around the student's particular interests in history and biography. The essay/reviews are then discussed in terms of relevance.

ENG 34523 LIT & SPIRITUALITY/THE SACRED

Explores some of the ways spiritual experiences and understandings are expressed in a variety of literary forms. Students will discover how authors embrace or struggle with essential religious questions and issues, how they challenge and communicate themes from the major world religions and how religious identities can be shaped through these texts.

ENG 35624 JOURNAL WRITING

Emphasizes techniques in developing a resource book of personal and professional strengths in order to recognize lifestyle patterns, discover creative solutions to problems and increase confidence in decision-making.

ENG 36023 PEACE LITERATURE

Literature, from ancient to modern times, has taken up themes of peace and sought to examine the fragile dynamics of the human community. This course will explore the literature that offers reflections, sorrowful and hopeful, pragmatic and prophetic, on peace.

ENG 37023 LITERATURE OF PERSONAL DISCOVERY

Questions of identity and self-definition, from agonizing to liberating, in the work of such writers as Dante, Franz Kafka, Fyodor Dostoevsky, Kate Chopin, Simone de Beauvoir, Ralph Ellison and Anne Sexton.

ENG 37223 IDS: AESTHETICS

A philosophical examination of the arts and aesthetic experience. Includes aesthetic theories of Artistotle, Kant, Nietzsche, and Grey as well as direct experience in the arts such as literature, poetry, painting, cinema, theatre, and performance art. Crosslisted with LAS 37223 and PHL 37223.

ENG 37623 MADNESS:MULTIFACETED APPROACH

Interdisciplinary seminar which interrogates the literary, artistic, and cultural representations of madness across culture and time. Crosslisted with LAS 37623.

ENG 38023 JAZZ AND BLUES RIFFS

An interdisciplinary examination of jazz and blues in the context of twentieth century American culture. Crosslisted with LAS 38023.

ENG 38223 EXISTENTIALISM IN PHIL & ARTS

An investigation of historical prerequisites and the meaning of existentialism. Readings include Kierkegaard, Nietzsche, Kafka, Rilke, Sartre, Heidegger, Dostoevsky, etc. Crosslisted with PHL 38223, LAS 38223.