01:359:201,202
Principles of Literary Study (3,3)
Fundamental concepts and techniques of literary interpretation: methods of analyzing language, genre, structure, and cultural contexts in poetry (01:359:201) and prose (01:359:202). Readings selected from a wide range of major English and American authors, including women and members of minorities.
Required of all English majors. Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:205
Introduction to Research Methods (3)
Workshop in advanced library skills and the use of secondary scholarship.
Open only to junior English majors in the departmental honors program.
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01:359:210
Introduction to Literary Theory (3)
Literary theory through the close reading of texts with common themes; representation of diverse historical periods and theoretical
frameworks.
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01:359:310
History of Literary Theory I (3)
Literary and rhetorical theory from antiquity to the Enlightenment.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:311
History of Literary Theory II (3)
Selected trends and texts of literary theory from Romanticism to the present.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:312
Issues and Problems in Literary Theory (3)
Close investigation of a specifically defined area of literary theory. Topics vary according to individual instructors; consult departmental information.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:315
Theories of Genre (3)
Introduction to the ways in which criticism has theorized literature according to genre, form, and kind.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:316
Issues and Problems in Genre Theory (3)
Formal and cultural issues within the development of a particular genre, or in the relation between genres, in literature in English.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:320
Cultural Theory in Literary Studies (3)
Approaches to defining what culture is and how to theorize culture in relation to the production and consumption of literary and nonliterary texts.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:321
Popular Culture (3)
Exploration of how popular forms like TV, movies, music video, rap, rock, comics, magazines, and advertising shape meaning and value in
contemporary America.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:322
Marxist Literary Theory (3)
Marxist analysis of literature, culture, and society. Attention to dialectical philosophy, the problem of base and superstructure, and theories of ideology and fetishism.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:325
Psychoanalytic Literary Theory (3)
Impact of psychoanalysis upon theories of literature, language, and interpretation; Freud and beyond; attention to theories of subjectivity, sexuality, textuality, and culture.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:326
Literature and Psychology (3)
Exploration of interrelationships of literature and
psychoanalysis (from Freud to feminists and contemporary theorists); topics
include subjectivity, trauma, gender, intersubjectivity, and identity.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:330
Theories of Gender and Sexuality (3)
History and critique of gender and sexuality as discursive categories. May include nonliterary as well as literary texts and involve various theoretical perspectives.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:331
Literature and Sexuality (3)
Themes and assumptions of sexual literature and its basis in sexual fantasy, including gender issues. Reading in major works of sexual
literature.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:335
Feminist Theory in Literary Study (3)
"Woman," "gender," and related concepts as discursive categories deployed in theoretical, literary, philosophical, and popular texts. Attention to historical issues and current debates.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:336
Issues and Problems in Feminist Literary Studies (3)
Themes, questions, forms, and historical issues in feminist literary studies. Sections designed by individual instructors; consult departmental announcement.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:340
Deconstruction and Poststructuralist Theory (3)
Poststructuralism and its origins in France in the late 1960s; attention to the theoretical writings of Derrida, Barthes, Kristeva, and de Man.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:345
Colonial and Postcolonial Theory (3)
Theories of colonial and postcolonial discourse; attention to issues of imperialism, primitivism, creolization, and globalization in fiction, film, and travel narratives.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:351
Literature and Medicine (3)
Literature about medicine, exploring the meeting place of disease, medical treatment, and literary culture, along with shifting understandings of patient and healer, health and illness, and the reach and responsibility of medicine.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:352
Literary and Scientific Writings (3)
Readings in English that explore the impact of science upon literary writing and the literary and discursive dimensions of selected scientific texts.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:361
Literature and Visual Culture (3)
Interactions of word and image on the page, on the stage, and onscreen. Examples may include graphic narratives, tableaux, public spectacles, photography, film, and digital culture, read alongside literary and theoretical texts.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:362
Digital Literary Studies (3)
Explores the relationship between literary practices and the technologies of recording, transmitting, and archiving. Topics may include the
history of the book, media shift, the history of reading, literature in relation to other media, hypertext, and digital literacies.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:365
Literature, Religion, and Theory (3)
Relationships between theological and literary ways of reading texts, including both sacred and secular examples.
Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:366
Literary Approaches to Sacred Texts (3)
Literary analysis of the formation and structure of the major texts of several world religions. Attention to style, genre, and cross-cultural interpretation.
Credit not given for both this course and 01:195:318. Prerequisite: 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:394
Independent Study (3)
Individual work on a topic designed by the student in conference with an instructor who directs the project.
Prerequisites: Permission of department and 01:355:101 or equivalent.
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01:359:395
Junior Honors Seminar (3)
Focus on particular text, theme, or approach in
order to develop reading and writing skills using critical and theoretical materials.
Open only to junior English majors in the departmental honors program.
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01:359:410
Seminar: Topics in Literary Theory (3)
Intensive study, in a discussion-oriented format, of a specifically defined area of literary theory. Topics vary according to individual instructors; consult departmental information.
Prerequisites: 01:359:201 or 202; English major.
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01:359:435
Seminar: Topics in Feminist Theory (3)
Intensive study, in a discussion-oriented format, of a specifically defined area of feminist theory. Topics vary according to individual instructors; consult departmental information.
Prerequisites: 01:359:201 or 202; English major.
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01:359:494
Independent Study (3)
Individual work on a topic designed by the student in conference with an instructor who directs the project.
Prerequisites: Permission of department; 01:359:201 or 202; English major.
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01:359:495
Senior Honors Tutorial (3)
Independent research on a topic, selected by the student and approved by the departmental honors committee, executed under the guidance of
the student's tutor. Meets by arrangement through individual conferences.
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01:359:497
Senior Honors Seminar (3)
Workshop focusing on methodological and theoretical aspects of literary study, with particular emphasis on the senior thesis.
Open only to senior English majors in the departmental honors program.
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01:359:498
Senior Honors Tutorial (3)
Workshop focusing on methodological and theoretical aspects
of literary study, with particular emphasis on the senior thesis.
Open only to senior English majors in the departmental honors program.
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