The
written
communication
requirement
for
any
baccalaureate
degree
is
the
successful
completion
of
ENGL
111X
and
ENGL
211X
or
213X
or
equivalent.
A
student
may
elect
to
fulfill
one
half
of
the
composition
requirement
by
completing
credit
by
examination
in
one
of
the
required
English
courses.
Permission
of
the
Director
of
Composition
in
the
English
Department
is
required
to
begin
all
challenge
procedures.
Required
composition
courses
may
also
be
taken
through
University
of
Alaska
Fairbanks
correspondence
study.
DEVE
060
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Elementary
Exposition
(3+0)
Intensive
work
in
the
process
of
writing
and
revising
to
improve
one's
writing
skills.
Placement
by
examination.
DEVE
068
(1
-
3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
English
Skills
Laboratory
(0+3
-
9)
Individualized
instruction
in
language
skills.
Open
entry/open
exit,
one
credit
lab
modules
in
spelling/vocabulary,
writing,
and
grammar
usage.
Enrollment
in
one
or
more
based
on
diagnosed
need
or
desire;
may
be
repeated.
Counts
as
elective
credit
only;
does
not
fulfill
degree
requirements
in
written
communications
or
humanities.
DEVE
070
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Preparatory
College
English
(3+0)
Instruction
in
writing
to
improve
students'
fluency
and
accuracy
and
communication
skills.
Preparation
for
ENGL
111X.
Placement
by
examination
or
student
decision.
ENGL
104
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Institute
on
Language,
Thought
and
Culture
(3+0)
Development
of
critical
thinking,
writing,
and
reading
skills
using
the
Bard
College
model.
The
intensive
Institute
establishes
and
nurtures
learning
communities
which
support
bold
thinking,
risk-taking,
collaboration,
and
independence.
Offered
only
at
the
Kuskokwim
Campus.
ENGL
111X
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
Introduction
to
Academic
Writing
(3+0)
Instruction
and
practice
in
written
inquiry
and
critical
reading.
Introduction
to
writing
as
a
way
of
developing,
exploring
and
testing
ideas.
Concentration
on
research
methods
and
techniques.
Available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisite:
Placement
examination
or
DEVE
070.)
ENGL
190H
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Honors
English
Composition
(3+0)
Extensive
readings
in
a
variety
of
disciplines.
Frequent
writing
assignments
addressing
a
wide
range
of
topics
for
specific
purposes
and
audiences.
Emphasis
upon
writing
as
a
tool
for
learning
across
the
curriculum.
ENGL
190H
may
be
substituted
for
ENGL
111X.
(Prerequisite:
Admission
to
the
Honors
Program
or
recommendation
of
instructor.)
Offered
only
at
Fairbanks
campus.
ENGL
200X
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
World
Literature
(3+0) h
(Cross-listed
with
FL
200X)
Introduction
to
the
reading
and
appreciation
of
a
wide
variety
of
literary
texts
from
different
cultures.
Includes
exposure
to
a
variety
of
approaches
to
myth,
poetry,
story
telling
and
drama.
Students
will
gain
an
understanding
of
cultural
differences
and
universals
in
texts
from
American,
American
minority,
Western
European
and
non-Western
sources.
Specific
content
to
be
announced
at
time
of
registration.
Course
may
be
repeated
for
credit
when
content
varies.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
and
sophomore
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
211X
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
Academic
Writing
about
Literature
(3+0)
Instruction
in
writing
through
close
analysis
of
literature.
Research
paper
required.
Strongly
recommended
for
English
and
other
humanities
majors.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
111X
or
its
equivalent;
sophomore
standing
recommended.)
ENGL
212
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Business,
Grant,
and
Report
Writing
(3+0)
Forms
and
techniques
of
business,
grant,
and
report
writing.
(Special
emphasis
may
be
placed
on
one
or
another
of
these
topics
in
a
given
semester.)
Does
not
fulfill
the
second
half
of
the
baccalaureate
requirements
in
written
communication.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X.)
ENGL
213X
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
Academic
Writing
about
the
Social
and
Natural
Sciences
(3+0)
Instruction
in
critical
reading
and
argumentative
writing
by
reading
and
responding
to
essays
from
the
social
and
natural
sciences.
Concentration
on
the
research
methods
and
techniques
necessary
to
create
an
extended
written
argument.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
111X
or
its
equivalent;
sophomore
standing
recommended.)
ENGL
217
(3
Credits)
Spring
Introduction
to
the
Study
of
Film
(2+2) h
(Cross-listed
with
JRN
217)
An
appreciation
course
designed
to
introduce
the
student
to
the
various
forms
of
cinematic
art
with
special
emphasis
on
humanistic
and
artistic
aspects.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X.)
ENGL
218
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Themes
in
Literature
(3+0) h
Exploration
of
literary
themes
in
various
genres
of
literature,
including
fiction,
poetry
and
drama.
Such
themes
as
"Women
in
Literature,"
"Literature
of
the
North,"
and
"Detective
Stories
in
Literature
and
Film"
may
be
offered.
Specific
theme
is
announced
at
registration.
Course
may
be
repeated
for
credit
when
content
varies.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
219
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Aleut
Narrative
Art
(3+0) h
Introduction
to
and
survey
of
the
oral
and
written
literature
of
the
Unangan,
the
Aleut
people.
All
works
in
English
translation,
although
some
supplementary
materials
in
the
Aleut
language
(eastern
and
western
dialects).
Offered
at
the
Aleutian
campus.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
230
(3
Credits)
Fall
ENGL
231
(3
Credits)
Spring
English
Language
Proficiency
(3+0)
Intensive
listening,
speaking,
reading,
and
writing
in
English.
Especially
recommended
for
all
students
for
whom
English
is
a
foreign
language.
These
courses
do
not
meet
general
degree
requirements
in
written
communications
and
are
not
classified
as
humanities.
Each
course
may
be
repeated
once
for
credit.
(Prerequisites:
Open
only
to
students
for
whom
English
is
a
foreign
language.
Permission
of
instructor
required.)
ENGL
271
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
Introduction
to
Creative
Writing
--
Fiction
(3+0) h
Forms
and
techniques
of
fiction
for
beginning
students;
discussion
of
students'
work
in
class
and
in
individual
conferences.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
272
(3
Credits)
Fall
Introduction
to
Creative
Writing
--
Poetry
(3+0) h
Forms
and
techniques
of
poetry
for
beginning
students;
discussion
of
students'
work
in
class
and
in
individual
conferences.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
290H
(2
Credits)
Fall
Summer
Reading
Program
(Honors)
(2+0) h
Selected
readings
in
a
variety
of
disciplines.
Group
discussions
and
written
responses
to
the
readings
follow
in
the
fall.
Students
keep
a
summer
journal.
May
be
repeated
for
credit.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
111X
and
enrollment
in
the
Honors
Program;
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
301
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Continental
Literature
in
Translation:
The
Ancient
World
(3+0) h
Readings
from
ancient
Mesopotamian,
Greek
and
Roman
texts:
the
classical
background
out
of
which
western
literary
tradition
has
risen.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
302
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Continental
Literature
in
Translation:
Medieval
and
Renaissance
(3+0) h
Readings
from
the
works
of
such
writers
as
Dante,
Macchiavelli,
Petrarch,
Boccaccio,
Rabelais,
Margherite
de
Navarre,
Calderon
della
Barca,
and
Cervantes
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
306
(3
Credits)
Fall
Survey
of
American
Literature:
Beginnings
to
the
Civil
War
(3+0) h
Comprehensive
study
of
American
thought
as
reflected
in
the
works
of
early
explorers,
Calvinists,
Rationalists,
and
Transcendentalists.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
307
(3
Credits)
Spring
Survey
of
American
Literature:
Civil
War
to
the
Present
(3+0) h
Comprehensive
study
of
American
thought
as
reflected
in
the
writers
of
Realism,
Naturalism,
Modernism,
an
Post-modernism.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
308
(3
Credits)
Fall
Survey
of
British
Literature:
Beowulf
to
the
Romantic
Period
(3+0) h
Survey
of
writers
and
works
in
Old
and
Middle
English,
including
Chaucer,
through
Elizabethan
period
(Shakespeare),
Restoration,
and
Neoclassic
Period
of
the
18th
Century.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
309
(3
Credits)
Spring
Survey
of
British
Literature:
Romantic
Period
to
the
Present
(3+0) h
Survey
of
writers
and
works
from
the
early
Romantic
Period
(Blake
and
Burns),
through
the
Victorian
period,
James
Joyce,
and
Stream-of-Consciousness,
to
the
present.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
310
(3
Credits)
Spring
Literary
Criticism
(3+0) h
History
and
principles
of
literary
criticism,
from
earliest
days
to
present.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
313W
(3
Credits)
Spring
Writing
Non-Fiction
Prose
(3+0) h
Instruction
in
writing
for
students
who
wish
to
develop
proficiency
in
organizing
and
composing
essays
on
factual
material
in
which
they
have
genuine
interest.
Readings
and
research
paper
required.
Course
does
not
fulfill
the
second
half
of
the
general
degree
requirement
in
written
communication.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
junior
standing;
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
314W,O/2
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
Technical
Writing
(3+0) h
Writing
business
letters
(letters
of
inquiry,
complaint,
evaluation,
and
job
application
with
resume),
preparing
tables,
graphs,
process
descriptions,
technical
instructions,
abstracts,
grant
proposals
and
technical
reports
(progress,
laboratory,
survey,
incident,
inspection,
feasibility,
and
research).
Course
does
not
fulfill
the
second
half
of
the
requirement
in
written
communication.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
junior
standing;
or
permission
of
instructor).
ENGL
317
(3
Credits)
Fall
Traditional
English
Grammar
(3+0) h
Identification
and
usage
of
the
more
common
types
of
phrase
and
sentence
structures.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
318
(3
Credits)
Spring
Modern
English
Grammar
(3+0) h
Structure
of
current
English
as
seen
through
traditional
and
contemporary
grammatical
theories.
(Prerequisite:
English
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
333
(3
Credits)
Fall
Women's
Literature
(3+0) h
(Cross-listed
with
WMS
333)
Reading,
discussing
and
analyzing
literary
works
dealing
with
the
social,
cultural
and
political
implications
of
patriarchal
structures
and
traditions
from
the
perspective
of
feminist
theory
and
criticism.
Focus
may
be
on
a
particular
theme,
period,
or
genre,
but
readings
will
include
both
primary
and
secondary
texts.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
recommended.)
ENGL
340
(3
Credits)
Fall
Contemporary
Native
American
Literature
(3+0) h
(Cross-listed
with
ANS
340)
Contemporary
Native
American
writing
in
English,
including
novels,
short
stories,
poetry
and
plays.
Examples
of
Native
American
film
when
related
to
a
writing.
Works
discussed
in
relation
to
cultural
contexts
and
interpretations.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
341
(3
Credits)
Fall
Contemporary
Alaska
Native
Literature
(3+0) h
Contemporary
Alaska
Native
literature
including
novels,
short
stories,
poetry
and
plays.
Bibliography,
genres
and
viewpoints,
structural
and
thematic
features
of
stories.
May
concentrate
on
specific
regional
areas
of
the
state.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
347
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
(Cross-listed
with
ANS
347)
Voices
of
Native
American
Peoples
(3+0) h
Exploration
of
the
forms
by
which
Native
American
peoples
have
narrated
their
life
experiences.
Includes
oral
narratives,
written
autobiographies,
memoirs
and
speeches,
and
an
introduction
to
the
social,
historical
and
cultural
content
surround
these
texts.
Readings
selected
from
all
of
North
America
with
an
emphasis
on
Alaska
Natives.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X.
Next
offered:
2003
-
04.)
ENGL
349
(3
Credits)
Fall
Narrative
Art
of
Alaska
Native
Peoples
(in
English
Translation)
(3+0) h
(Cross-listed
with
ANS
349)
Traditional
and
historical
tales
by
Aleut,
Eskimo,
Athabascan,
Eyak,
Tlingit,
Haida
and
Tsimshian
storytellers.
Bibliography,
Alaska
Native
genres
and
viewpoints,
and
structural
and
thematic
features
of
tales.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
350
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Literature
of
Alaska
and
the
Yukon
Territory
(3+0) h
Representative
fiction,
verse,
and
nonfiction
dealing
with
Alaska
and
the
Yukon
Territory.
Also
available
via
Independent
Learning.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2004-05.)
ENGL
360
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Multi-Ethnic
Literatures
of
the
United
States
(3+0) h
Ethnic
American
writings.
Includes
Native
American,
Asian
American,
Hispanic
American,
African
American,
Jewish
American,
immigrant
and
other
traditions
of
literary
expression.
Ethnic
writings
will
be
compared
to
mainstream
American
literature.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2003-04.)
ENGL
371W,O
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
Intermediate
Creative
Writing
(3+0) h
Practice
and
guidance
in
writing
fiction,
poetry,
drama,
or
essays.
Students'
work
read
and
discussed
in
class
and
in
conference
with
the
instructor.
Close
study
of
the
techniques
of
established
writers.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
403W,O/2
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Spring
American
Renaissance
(3+0) h
American
literature
of
the
mid-nineteenth
century:
Poe
through
Whitman.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
306
recommended
but
not
required.
Next
offered:
2004
-
05.)
ENGL
404O/2
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Spring
American
Realism
(3+0) h
American
literature
from
the
Civil
War
to
World
War
I:
Twain
through
James.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
307
desirable
but
not
required.
ENGL
306
desirable
but
not
required.
Next
offered:
2005-06.)
ENGL
405
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Fall
British
Writers
of
the
19th
Century:
Romantic
Period
(3+0) h
English
literary
romanticism
including
authors
such
as
Byron,
Keats,
Shelley,
Coleridge,
Wordsworth,
Austen,
the
Bronte
sisters
and
Scott.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
Recommended:
ENGL
309.
Next
offered:
2005-06.)
ENGL
406
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Fall
British
Writers
of
the
19th
Century:
Victorian
Period
(3+0) h
Impact
of
industrialization,
social
reformation,
religious
controversy,
and
philosophical
attitudes
on
literature.
Authors
to
include
(but
not
limited
to):
Browning,
Tennyson,
Thackeray,
Eliot,
Arnold,
Dickens,
Hazlitt,
Ruskin
and
Meredith.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
309
desirable
but
not
required.
Next
offered
2003
-
04.)
ENGL
407
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Fall
British
Writers
of
the
Restoration
and
18th
Century:
Neo-Classical
Period
(3+0) h
Developments
in
drama,
verse,
and
prose
reflecting
new
forces
in
government,
religion,
and
society
during
the
Augustan
Age.
Attention
to
the
mode
of
satire
and
to
the
fashion
of
sentimentalism
in
all
genres.
Authors
to
include
(but
not
limited
to):
Dryden,
Defoe,
Addison,
Steele,
Swift,
Pope,
Johnson,
Boswell,
Goldsmith
and
Sheridan.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
308
recommended.
Next
offered:
2004-05.)
ENGL
408W,O/2
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Spring
American
Origins
(3+0) h
Writers
who
contributed
to
the
development
of
a
national
literary
identity:
Bradstreet
through
Cooper.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
306
recommended
but
not
required.
Next
offered:
2003
-
04.)
ENGL
414W
(3
Credits)
Fall
Research
Writing
(3+0) h
Practice
in
reporting
primary
and
secondary
research
in
the
forms
and
styles
appropriate
to
the
student's
field.
Preference
given
to
seniors.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
their
equivalent.)
ENGL
421
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Chaucer
and
His
Age
(3+0) h
Major
poetry
of
Chaucer
and
his
contemporaries,
with
emphasis
on
The
Canterbury
Tales,
and
survey
of
criticism.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
308
desirable
but
not
required.
Next
offered:
2004-05.)
ENGL
422W,O/2
(3
Credits)
Fall
Shakespeare:
History
Plays
and
Tragedies
(3+0) h
Major
chronicle
plays
and
tragedies,
including
significant
criticism.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
308
desirable
but
not
required.)
ENGL
425W,O/2
(3
Credits)
Spring
Shakespeare:
Comedies
and
Non-Dramatic
Poetry
(3+0) h
Major
comedies
and
non-dramatic
poems,
including
significant
criticism.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
308
desirable
but
not
required.)
ENGL
426O/2
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Spring
Milton
(3+0) h
Major
poetry
and
prose,
and
survey
of
Miltonian
criticism.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
308
desirable
but
not
required.
Next
offered:
2005-06.)
ENGL
430
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
ESL
for
Teaching
Assistants
(3+0) h
Instruction
in
English
as
a
second
language.
Designed
for
teaching
assistants
who
want
to
improve
their
lecturing
skills,
and
whose
native
language
is
other
than
English.
Graded
Pass/Fail.
(Prerequisite:
Permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
444W
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Fiction
in
Translation
(3+0) h
Major
fiction
in
English
translation.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2003
-
04.)
ENGL
445
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Drama
after
1900
(3+0) h
The
major
dramatists
and
their
achievements.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2004-05.)
ENGL
446
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Major
Modern
and
Contemporary
Poetry
(3+0) h
Yeats
to
the
present.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2003
-
04.)
ENGL
447O/2
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
British
Prose
after
1900
(3+0) h
Study
of
fiction
and
nonfiction
prose,
modern
and
contemporary.
(Prerequisite:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2003-04.)
ENGL
448W,O/2
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
American
Prose
after
1900
(3+0) h
Study
of
fiction
and
nonfiction
prose,
modern
and
contemporary.
(Prerequisites:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
111X;
ENGL
211X
or
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2004-05.)
ENGL
452O/2
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Fall
The
British
Novel
to
1900
(3+0) h
Origin
and
development
of
the
novel
with
concentration
on
significant
novelists
from
Daniel
Defoe
to
Thomas
Hardy.
(Prerequisite:
COMM
131X
or
141X;
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X;
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2005-06.)
ENGL
462
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Applied
English
Linguistics
(3+0) h
Topic(s)
for
each
offering
of
the
course
are
announced.
Examples
are
teaching
English
as
a
second
language,
dialects
and
education,
dictionaries,
stylistics
and
composition.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
111X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2003
-
04.)
ENGL
471W
(3
Credits)
Fall,
Spring
Undergraduate
Writers'
Workshop
(3+0) h
Discussion
of
craft
and
techniques
and
student
work.
For
advanced
students
who
prepare
a
manuscript
as
a
final
project.
May
be
repeated
one
time
for
credit.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
111X,
ENGL
371,
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
472
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
History
of
the
English
Language
(3+0) h
Origin
and
development
of
the
English
language
from
prehistoric
times
to
the
present.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
ENGL
318
or
a
linguistics
course
is
desirable,
but
not
required.
Next
offered:
2004-05.)
ENGL
482A
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Undergraduate
Seminar
(3+0) h
Intensive
study
of
selected
topics
in
the
discipline.
(Prerequisite:
ENGL
211X
or
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2004-05.)
ENGL
485
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Teaching
Composition
in
the
Schools
(3+0)
Theoretical
background
and
workshop
experience
for
teaching
composition
in
middle
and
high
schools
with
current
pedagogy
on
teaching
of
writing
stressed.
Variety
of
teaching
methods
demonstrated,
practiced
and
discussed.
(Prerequisites:
ENGL
211X
or
ENGL
213X
or
permission
of
instructor.
Next
offered:
2003
-
04.)
ENGL
601
(3
Credits)
Spring
Bibliography,
Methods,
and
Criticism
(3+0)
A
study
of
the
basic
reference
works
for
research
in
literature,
the
methods
for
conducting
research,
and
the
principles
of
literary
criticism.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
603
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Studies
in
British
Literature:
Old
and
Middle
English
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
Anglo-Saxon
and
Middle
English
literature.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
604
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Studies
in
British
Literature:
Renaissance
and
17th
Century
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
16th
and
17th-century
British
literature.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
606
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Studies
in
British
Literature:
Restoration
and
18th
Century
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
British
literature
of
the
Restoration
period
and
the
18th
century.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
607
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Studies
in
British
Literature:
19th
Century
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
British
literature
of
the
Romantic
and
Victorian
periods.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
608
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Studies
in
British
Literature
after
1900
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
modern
British
literature.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
609
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Early
American
Literature
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
American
literature
of
the
colonial
and
early
national
periods.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
611
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Fall
Nineteenth-Century
American
Literature
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
American
literature
of
the
nineteenth
century.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
612
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Modern
American
Literature
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
modern
American
literature.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
614
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Studies
in
Comparative
Literature
(3+0)
Advanced
study
in
literature
on
a
transnational
basis
with
varying
emphases,
including
literature
of
particular
locales,
modes
or
themes.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
615
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Contemporary
Literature
(3+0)
Variable
subject
matter
in
significant
topics
in
post-World
War
II
literature.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
620
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Images
of
the
North
(3+0)
(Cross-listed
with
NORS
620)
Interdisciplinary
approaches
to
the
variety
of
images
created
about
and
by
the
people
and
environment
of
the
circumpolar
North.
The
course
will
analyze
conceptualizations
of
the
north
as
expressed
in
a
number
of
media
such
as
film,
art,
literature,
travel
journals
and
oral
tradition
employing
methodologies
from
many
disciplines.
(Prerequisites:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
661
(1
Credit)
Fall,
Spring
Mentored
Teaching
in
English
(1+0+2)
Mentored
teaching
provides
consistent
contact
on
course
related
issues
between
teaching
assistants
and
mentoring
faculty.
(Prerequisites:
Acceptance
into
the
M.A.
or
M.F.A.
in
creative
writing
program,
and
a
teaching
assistantship
award.
Note:
Teaching
assistants
are
required
to
be
enrolled
in
a
mentored
teaching
section
while
teaching.
May
be
repeated
up
to
six
times,
for
one
credit
per
semester.)
ENGL
671
(Credits
Arr.)
Fall,
Spring
Writers'
Workshop
The
writing
of
verse,
fiction,
drama
or
nonfiction
prose
in
accordance
with
the
individual
student's
needs
and
the
instructor's
specialization.
Depending
on
available
staff,
the
workshop
may
be
limited
during
any
semester
to
work
in
a
particular
genre.
(Prerequisites:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
681
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Semester
Forms
of
Poetry
(3+0)
Intensive
study
of
the
forms
and
techniques
of
poetry
writing.
Includes
readings
and
poetry
writing
exercises.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
682
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Semester
Forms
of
Fiction
(3+0)
Advanced
study
in
narrative
technique
through
analysis
of
selected
fiction
and
the
students'
own
writing.
Variable
content
in
terms
of
the
writers
to
be
studied,
and
the
kinds
of
narrative
writing
to
be
assigned.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
684
(3
Credits)
Every
Third
Semester
Forms
of
Non-Fiction
Prose
(3+0)
Intensive
study
of
the
forms
and
techniques
of
nonfiction.
Includes
readings
and
writing
exercises.
(Prerequisite:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
685
(3
Credits)
Fall
Teaching
College
Composition
(3+0)
An
investigation
into
current
practice
and
theory
with
demonstrations
and
reports
on
pedagogy.
Required
of
all
teaching
assistants
in
English.
(Prerequisites:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
686
(3
Credits)
As
Demand
Warrants
Teaching
Writing
in
a
Cross-Cultural
Context
(3+0)
Contemporary
methods
of
teaching
writing
in
middle
school
and
high
school
classrooms,
with
special
emphasis
on
cross-cultural
issues
and
pedagogy
and
on
contemporary
rhetorical
theory.
Includes
methodologies
and
theoretical
underpinnings
of
teaching
grammar
and
fiction
writing.
(Prerequisites:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
688
(3
Credits)
Alternate
Spring
Writing
for
Film
and
Television
(3+0)
Advanced
training
in
dramatic
writing
for
film
and
television,
with
a
focus
on
cinematic
story
structure,
visual
imagery,
dialogue,
pacing,
continuity,
and
manuscript
format.
(Prerequisites:
Graduate
standing
or
permission
of
instructor.)
ENGL
692
(Credits
Arr.)
Fall,
Spring
Graduate
Seminar
Intensive
study
of
selected
topics
in
the
discipline.
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