Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
Graduate School-Camden
 
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Biology 120
Chemistry 160
Childhood Studies 163
Computer Science 198
Criminal Justice 202
English 200, 350, 352, 354, 615, 842
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Graduate Courses (Creative Writing 200)
Graduate Courses (English 350)
Graduate Courses (American Literature 352)
Graduate Courses (Film 354)
Graduate Courses (Linguistics 615)
Graduate Courses (Rhetoric 842)
History 512
Liberal Studies 606
Mathematical Sciences 645
Physical Therapy 742
Psychology 830
Public Policy and Administration 834
School of Business–Camden
School of Social Work
Graduate School-Newark (on the Camden Campus)
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Camden Newark New Brunswick/Piscataway
Catalogs
  Graduate School-Camden 2007-2009 Programs, Faculty, and Courses English 200, 350, 352, 354, 615, 842 Graduate Courses (English 350)  

Graduate Courses (English 350)

56:350:501,502 Independent Study in British Literature (3,3) Individual study in directed readings. Available only by special arrangement.
56:350:503 Introduction to Graduate Literary Study (3) Required of all students in the program, this course prepares students for graduate study through practice in current methods of research, interpretation, and criticism.
56:350:505,506 International Study (3,3) A short-term study abroad tour focusing on an author or authors or on a literary theme.
56:350:507 Studies in Fiction (3) Narrative forms and their relation to the novel, with attention to theory of fiction.
56:350:508 Critical Theory (3) Study of 20th-century debates in America and Europe: new criticism, Marxist theory, structuralism, and deconstruction.
56:350:510 Studies in Dramatic Form (3) Studies in theater styles and conventions focusing on various periods of English
or American drama.
56:350:511 Studies in Poetry (3) Styles, themes, genres, and conventions of poetry in English; nature and scope of individual achievement in relation to poetic traditions.
56:350:526 Literary Criticism: The Major Texts (3) Study of conventions and current problems in critical discourse from Aristotle to the present.
56:350:529 World Literature in English (3)

Readings in literature, either in translation or originally written in English, from one or more parts of the world.

56:350:530,531 Special topics in World Literature (3,3) Readings in a specific field chosen by the instructor.
56:350:532 Chaucer (3) Readings in the Canterbury Tales, Troilus and Criseyde, and selected minor poems.
56:350:533 Bible as Literature (3) A study of the Bible, its literary variety, and historical and religious development.
56:350:535 Medieval Literature (3) Major works of medieval English poetry and prose, including Chaucer.
56:350:539 The Renaissance (3) Major prose and poetry of the English Renaissance.
56:350:542 Nature and Culture (3) Study of the relations between human communities and the natural world, primarily in the works of British, American, and Native American writers.
56:350:543 Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama (3) Development of the drama from 1580 to 1642, including works by Marlowe, Jonson, Dekker, Webster, and Middleton.
56:350:545 Shakespeare (3) Close reading of selected major plays.
56:350:549 Seventeenth-Century Literature (3) Poetry of Donne, Jonson, Herbert, Marvell, and others and selected prose works.
56:350:554 Milton (3) Poems and selected prose.
56:350:557 Restoration and 18th-Century Drama (3) Drama in the context of Restoration and Georgian England, 1660-1800.
56:350:559 Eighteenth-Century Literature (3) Neoclassical poetry, Augustan prose forms, and the early English novel.
56:350:569 The Romantic Period (3) Major romantic poets and selected prose works.
56:350:570 Nineteenth-Century British Novel (3) Major British novelists of the 19th century, including Austen, Bronte, Eliot, and Dickens.
56:350:571,572 Victorian Literature (3,3) Major Victorian poets, novelists, and essayists viewed in the context of the period's intellectual development.
56:350:573 Introduction to Literary Theory (3) Introduction to contemporary literary theory, including formalism, structuralism, poststructuralism, Marxism, and other approaches.
56:350:580 Literary and Cultural Constructions of Childhood (3) A study of changing representations of childhood in literary and cultural texts, including the impact of childhood on imagination and intellectual and aesthetic traditions.
56:350:581 Romantic Inventions of Childhood (3)

Literary readings based in the British and American romantic beliefs in childhood as a source of innocence, visionary strength, and originality.

56:350:582 Myth and Archetype in Children's Literature (3) A study of recurrent narrative designs, mythic patterns, and character types in literature written for children, with special attention to gender differences.
56:350:583 History of Child Consciousness in the Novel (3)

Study of authors' developing interests in the child mind, from the Victorian through modern and contemporary periods.

56:350:584 Children's Literature in Print and Film (3)

Selected texts in British and American children's literature studied alongside film adaptations of these texts.

56:350:585 Illustration and Media History: Perspectives on Childhood (3)

Study of major children's illustrators, history of the children's book, and technologies of production of children's literature.

56:350:586 Twentieth-Century British Poetry (3) Major British poets of the 20th century.
56:350:592 Literary Biography (3) Reading and discussion of the important modes of literary biography in the 19th and 20th centuries.
56:350:593,594 Special Topics in British Literature (3,3) Readings in a specific field chosen by the instructor.
56:350:800 Matriculation Continued (0) Continuous registration may be accomplished by enrolling for at least 3 credits in standard course offerings, including research courses, or by enrolling in this course for 0 credits. Students actively engaged in study toward their degree who are using university facilities and faculty time are expected to enroll for the appropriate credits.
56:350:877 Teaching Assistantship (0) Practicum for students holding teaching assistantships.
 
For additional information, contact RU-info at 732/932-info (4636) or colonel.henry@rutgers.edu.
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