40000

ENG 40123 LITERARY CRITICISM (3)

Identifies major trends in the history of critical thought from Plato to Derrida. Seeks to discover the position of literary criticism and to apply various critical theories. Library research and writing. Prerequisite: 30000-level English course.

ENG 40524 PROCESS WRITING (3)

Teaches essential writing skills at both elementary and secondary levels. Evaluation techniques also emphasized.

ENG 41823 SHAKESPEARE SEMINAR (3)

Examines major dramas to discover questions and themes central to individual plays and to the work as a whole. Attention is given to the historical and cultural context of the plays, but the course is primarily concerned with assisting students in reading and exploring the texts.

ENG 45023 SEMINAR: AMERICAN LITERATURE (3)

Analyzes major American literature with emphasis on genre, period or author, to gain understanding of the critical approaches necessary for a thorough investigation of literature.

ENG 45123 SEMINAR IN BRITISH LITERATURE (3)

Analyzes major British literature with emphasis on genre, period or author, to gain understanding of the critical approaches necessary for a thorough investigation of literature.

ENG 49023 SENIOR COMPREHENSIVE (3)

Examination or project designed to assess the student's achievement of the goals of his/her major program.

ENG 49201 INTEGRATIVE SEMINAR IN CRITICISM (4)

Capstone course that guides student in development of an integrative project that demonstrates achievement of the learning outcomes in the English major. Course is organized around the major trends in critical thought and application of literary criticism theories within and across periods and genres.

49900 IDS: LITERATURE AND SPIRIT THE SACRED (3)

Students apply critical thinking and appropriate research skills to demonstrate ability to confront an integrated problem, issue, or circumstance in the liberal arts.  Research will reflect learning acquired through the business or liberal arts track.

ENG 49920 IDS: THE AMERICAN DIET (3)

As one of the LAS capstone courses, this class aspires to provide students with an introduction to a variety of written manifestos and documentary films that espouse particular diets. In the course of the semester, we will gain an understanding of dietary plans, both personal and collective, as well as an appreciation for the social and cultural forces that produce them. Texts may include 'The Omnivore's Dilemma', 'Food, Inc.', 'In Defense of Food', 'Forks over Knives', and a volume of essays entitled 'Know That What You Eat, You Are'.  Cross-listed with LAS 49920 IDS: The American Diet.

ENG 49950 IDS: LITERATURE OF PERSONAL DISCOVERY (3)

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.