Undergraduate Catalog 2014-2015
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4000
Prerequisites: ENGL 3011 or permission of instructor. A practical study of the techniques and craft of writing scripts for the stage, screen, or broadcast media. (Cross-listed as THEA 4011.) This course is repeatable for credit.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 3012 or permission of the instructor. A practical study of the techniques and craft of writing the creative nonfiction essay, article, or interview. This course is repeatable for credit.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 3021 or permission of instructor. A workshop/studio course exploring the techniques and applications of creatively translating a literary text from another language into English. Study in another language helpful but not necessary. This course is repeatable for credit.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 3021 or permission of instructor. A workshop-intensive course in the practical study of the techniques, craft, and meaning of poetry. This course is repeatable for credit.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 3022 or permission of instructor. A workshop-intensive course in the practical study of the techniques, craft, and meaning of short fiction. This course is repeatable for credit.
3
This is the first course in a two-semester sequence in which students mentor small groups of apprentice writers. Students learn classroom skills and strategies for teaching writing in the schools. This course is the prerequisite for the spring course (ENGL 4024) in the two-semester sequence (the spring course fulfills the senior capstone requirement for the ENGL-CRWR major concentration. Prerequisite: ENGL 2208 and permission of instructor.
3
This is the second course in a two-semester sequence in which students mentor small groups of apprentice writers. Students learn classroom skills and strategies for teaching writing in the schools. This course fulfills the senior capstone requirement for the ENGL-CRWR major concentration. Prerequisite: ENGL 4023 and permission of instructor.
3
This course teaches the rudiments of literary journal publishing (conception, design, selection, and production) and the use of desktop publishing applications (such as Photoshop and InDesign) to produce a unique literary journal from scratch. This course is especially useful to upper division majors in English and Art (graphic design) and fulfills the senior capstone requirement for the ENGL-CRWR major concentration. Junior or Senior status. Prerequisite: ENGL 2208 or permission of the instructor.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 4011, 4012, 4021, or 4022; this course serves as the Senior Exit Exam for the B.A. English/Creative Writing major and is typically taken in the major�s last or next to last semester before graduation. A review of the literary discipline, from both critical and creative perspectives, essential to the English major with a concentration in Creative Writing.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of literary criticism from Aristotle to the present, with particular emphasis on recent applications of contemporary theories.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of the theories affecting contemporary approaches to composition and literary analysis.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of the development of the English language from its Indo-European roots to its present status as a world language.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A comprehensive study of the phonology, morphology, and syntax of present-day English, with reference to standards, variations, and pedagogy.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected works in Old or Middle English, read in the original language.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected works from Chaucer, read in the original language.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected works from the English Renaissance.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected topics, genres, or issues in Shakespeare; may be linked with a Shakespearean production staged by the Department of Theatre. (Cross-listed as THEA 4226.)
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected major and minor works of Milton.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of the development of English drama from the Middle Ages through the early modern period. (Cross-listed as THEA 4228.)
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of the development of the English novel in the eighteenth century.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of the development of the English novel in the eighteenth century.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected British Romantic works.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected British Victorian works.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of the development of the British novel in the nineteenth century.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected modern plays in English. (Cross-listed as THEA 4440.)
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected works of twentieth-century fiction from the British Isles.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A multicultural study of the contributions of women writers and critics to the development of literature. (Cross-listed as WMST 4445.)
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected modern poetry in English.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A comparative study of texts from different backgrounds and cultures. (Cross-listed as BLST 4447.)
3
Cross Listed Courses
BLST 4447
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A comprehensive overview of adolescent literature, its history and genres, the issues and approaches it has generated, and its links with the major literary movements in adult literature. Other areas of focus are the problems and questions unique to adolescence and how these are reflected in the literature for this audience.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected influential texts of literature, history, science, etc.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. In-depth study of African literature, with attention to its social, political, historical, and economic backgrounds. Attention to the historical development of African literature and aesthetics, and the differences and continuities between Anglophone and Francophone writers. (Cross-listed as AFST & BLST 4451).
3
Cross Listed Courses
BLST 4451, AFST 4451
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A course concerned with the African woman writer's preoccupation with the condition of African womanhood. It will look at these writers' treatment of issues like motherhood, polygamy, marriage, changing roles, the exploitation of women, the education of women, women in politics, and women and tradition. (Equivalent to AFST 4452, BLST 4452 and WMST 4452).
3
Cross Listed Courses
BLST 4452, AFST 4452
Pre-requisite: ENGL 1102. In-depth study of selected works by writers culturally connected to the Islamic world (or its diaspora), with attention to cultural, political, and historical backgrounds relevant to the works, including special attention to literary and aesthetic developments across the Islamic world. Course Themes will vary.
3
This course introduces students to the basic developmental conditions of Japanese literature and culture from the earliest times to the present. Works studied will include traditional poetic contemporary religion (Shinto), historical periods of japanese literature, and the effect of westernization on contemporary Japanese artistic expression. Prerequisite: ENGL 1101, and ENGL 1102, and ENGL 2110.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected American works before 1865, emphasizing literary romanticism.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected American works from 1865 to 1920, emphasizing literary realism.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected works from the modern South.
3
Prerequisites: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of short stories, novels, and critical essays of Flannery O'Connor, with access to the O'Connor collection. (Cross-listed as WMST 4664.)
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected American works from 1920 to the present, emphasizing literary modernism and post-modernism.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of selected works of African-American literature. (Cross-listed as BLST 4667.)
3
Cross Listed Courses
BLST 4667
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. A study of American literature arising from ethnic or immigrant experience. (Cross-listed as BLST 4669.)
3
Cross Listed Courses
BLST 4669
Prerequisite: ENGL 2110, IDST 2305, or permission of the instructor. Study of selected works of Native American literature, with attention to socio-cultural context. Specific focus may vary from semester to semester (e.g. �'Contemporary Native American Women Writers� or �Native American myths and traditional literature�) so that students might take the course for credit more than once with permission of the instructor.
3
Pre-requisite: ENGL 1102. A study of selected works by and about women from literature and popular culture focused on genres, issues, and images connected to gender.
3
Study of major areas, genres, and branches of folklore, along with historical and theoretical trends in the discipline. Specific focus may vary or be specialized in certain semesters (e.g. folk narratives, material culture, women's folklore, or history and theories of folklore) so that students may take the course for credit more than once with permission of instructor.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 1102. Study of the works of a single author of special interest not routinely offered in the curriculum. Offered subject to student and faculty interest and demand. This course is repeatable for credit.
3
Prerequisite: ENGL 3900 or permission of the Chair. A culmination course reviewing the major figures of British and American literature and the basics of standard English. (For students in the literature concentration, this course replaces the English exit exam and is required for graduation.) This course is repeatable for credit.
3
Prerequisite: Department chairperson's approval. Tutorial investigation of a topic or author of special interest. This course is repeatable for credit.
1 - 4
Topics of special interest not listed in the Catalog. This course is repeatable for credit.
1 - 4
Prerequisite: ENGL 2160. Special studies in topics in international literature. This course is repeatable for credit.
3
Prerequisite: Department chairperson's approval. An individually designed and planned learning experience involving off-campus field experiences and study in the public sector. This course is repeatable for credit.
1 - 15
Prerequisite: Department chairperson's approval. Research, writing, and presentation of a substantial scholarly/creative project developed in conjunction with a faculty advisor or group of faculty advisors. A component of the Senior Capstone Experience options for English majors. (See Senior Capstone Experience entries in English and Rhetoric section of the catalog for details.) This course is repeatable for credit.
1 - 3
See the International Studies section of the Catalog for details. This course is repeatable for credit.
1 - 15
Prerequisite: Department Chairperson's approval. Research project undertaken as preparation for writing a thesis (usually completed the following semester under ENGL 4970) or for a scholarly or creative presentation or publication at GCSU or elsewhere. Component of the Senior Capstone Experience options for English majors (see Senior Capstone Experience entries in English and Rhetoric section of the catalog for details). This course is repeatable for credit.
1 - 4