1 Curriculum: Spring 2013 New Department Distribution EN142

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

1 Curriculum: Spring 2013 New Department Distribution EN142 New department Curriculum: Spring 2013 distribution EN142 Introduction to Cinema Studies (See CI142) C EN172 The English Seminar EN226 Performance History II (See TD226) EN252 International History of Cinema II (See CI252) Studies in American Literary History: Civil War to the EN256 Present EN271 Critical Theory EN278 Fiction Writing I EN279 Poetry Writing I P EN336 Early American Women Writers E EN351 Contemporary American Poetry P Great Books by American Women of Color: from EN368 Hurston to Danticat (See AM368) D EN378 Fiction Writing II EN379 Poetry Writing II P EN380 Creative Nonfiction EN386A Special Topics: Writing the Personal Essay EN387 Graphic Novel C Converting the Dead: Early Modern Historical Poetry EN398A and a Protestant, Civic Poetics E,P Affecting Metaphysics: Reading 17th-Century EN398C Metaphysical Poetry E, P EN412 Global Shakespeares E, C EN413B Author Course: Jane Austen EN413C Author Course: Samuel Beckett: Comedy of the Abyss EN413D Author Course: Geoffrey Chaucer E EN418 Cross-Dressing in Literature and Film C EN435 Narratives of Contact and Captivity E EN478 Advanced Studies in Prose EN479 Advanced Studies in Poetry P EN480 Teaching Poetry in the Schools Seminar: Keats and Coleridge: Romanticism and EN493C Theories of the Lyric Self E, P Seminar: The 21st-Century Latino Novel and the EN493D Transnational Imaginary D New department Curriculum: Fall 2013 distribution EN172 The English Seminar 1 EN224 Performance History I (See TD224) n/a EN244 19th-Century American Poetry P EN255 Studies in American Literary History: Pre-1860 C, E Comparative Studies: Emily Dickinson and English EN264 Poetry C EN271 Critical Theory EN278 Fiction Writing I EN279 Poetry Writing I P EN280 Creative Nonfiction Writing I EN314 17th-Century Poetry E, P EN322 British Romanticism E EN323 Victorian Literature I EN329 21st-Century Comparative Literature C EN378 Fiction Writing II EN379 Poetry Writing II P EN386 Special Topics: Documentary Radio C EN413D Author Course: Chaucer's Canterbury Tales E EN413F Author Course: William Faulkner EN493B The Beats and the New York School Poets P New Department JanPlan 2014 Distribution Course Title EN238 Art of Fly Fishing: Maine and Bishop, California EN251 History of International Cinema I (See CI251) C EN279J Poetry Writing I P EN351 Contemporary American Poetry P Great Books by American Women of Color: from EN368J Hurston to Danticat (See AM368J) D EN397 Multiethnic American Literature D EN413H Author Course: Henry James and Edith Wharton New Department Course Spring 2014 Distribution EN142 Introduction to Cinema Studies (See CI142) C EN172 The English Seminar EN226 Performance History II (See TD226) n/a EN252 International History of Cinema II (See CI252) C 2 Studies in American Literary History: Civil War to the EN256 Present EN268 Survey of International Women Writers D EN271 Critical Theory EN278 Fiction Writing I EN279 Poetry Writing I P EN315 Medieval Saints and Sinners E EN319 Fictions of Empire E, C EN341 American Realism and Naturalism C EN378 Fiction Writing II EN379 Poetry Writing II P EN380 Creative Nonfiction Writing II Special Topics: Leaps, Surprises! Figures and Images in EN386B Poetry P EN398 Native American Literature D Author Course: Nathaniel Hawthorne and Herman EN413E Melville Author Course: Cormac McCarthy: Novels and Film EN413G Adaptations C Shakespeare Texts and Contexts: Renaissance London EN413J and 19th-Century America E,C EN478 Advanced Studies in Prose EN479 Advanced Studies in Poetry P Passionate Expression: Love, Sex, and Sexuality in EN493A Western Literature E, D Going South: The Southern Short Story and Its EN493C Traditions D Ireland and Otherness: James Joyce's Ulysses and Early EN493D Writings New Department Curriculum: Fall 2014 Distribution Req. EN172 The English Seminar EN224 Performance History I (See TD224) n/a EN255 Studies in American Literary History: Pre-1860 C, E EN264 Comparative Studies: Emily Dickinson and English Poetry C EN268 Survey of International Women Writers C, D EN271 Critical Theory EN278 Fiction Writing I 3 EN279 Poetry Writing I P EN280 Creative Nonfiction Writing I EN313 Renaissance Poetry E, P EN316 Sex, Love, and Marriage in the Middle Ages E EN321 Topics in Film Theory (See CI321) C EN322 British Romanticism E EN325 Modern British Fiction EN329 21st-Century Comparative Literature C EN353 The American Short Story EN379 Poetry Writing II P The Mother Tongue(s): Grammar, Syntax, and Style for EN386A Writers Reading Race Now: 21st-Century Multiethnic American EN397A Literature C, D Shopping for the Sublime: Capitalism, Crisis, and EN397B Romanticism E EN411 Race and Gender in Shakespeare E EN413A Author Course: Toni Morrison D Converting the Dead: History, Memory, and Early EN493A Modern Historical Poetry E, P Passionate Expression: Love, Sex, and Sexuality in EN493B Western Literature E, C New Department Curriculum: JanPlan 2015 Distribution Req. EN237 Postcolonial Pastoral: Ecology, Travel, and Writing D EN238 Art of Fly-Fishing: Maine and Bishop, California EN297 Special Topics: Prose Poem, Flash Fiction, Lyric Essay C American Independents: Their Art and Production (See EN335 AM335) C New Department Curriculum: Spring 2015 Distribution Req. EN142 Introduction to Cinema Studies (See CI142) C EN172 The English Seminar EN226 Performance History II (See TD226) n/a EN252 International History of Cinema II (See CI252) C Studies in American Literary History: Civil War to the EN256 Present EN271 Critical Theory EN278 Fiction Writing I 4 EN279 Poetry Writing I P Environmental Literature: Reading through the EN282 Ecocritical Prism D EN312 Death and Dying in the Middle Ages E EN345 Modern American Fiction EN364 Buddhism in American Poetry P EN367 History of the English Language C, E Great Books by American Women of Color: from EN368 Hurston to Danticat (See AM368) D EN378 Fiction Writing II EN379 Poetry Writing II P EN380 Creative Nonfiction Writing II EN386C Special Topics: Documentary Radio C Secrets, Lies, and the Gothic Imagination in the Age of EN398A Revolution Disability in Modern and Contemporary American EN398B Literature and Culture D, C EN412 Shakespeare on Screen E,C EN413K Author Course: William Wordsworth EN457 American Gothic Literature EN478 Advanced Studies in Prose EN479 Advanced Studies in Poetry P Seminar: Virginia Woolf and Modernism: Politics, EN493C Poetics, Theory EN493D Seminar: Lyric Self and Other E,C New Department Curriculum: Fall 2015 Distribution Req. EN142 Introduction to Cinema Studies (See CI142) C EN172 The English Seminar EN224 Performance History I (See TD224) n/a EN251 History of International Cinema I (See CI251) C EN255 Studies in American Literary History: Pre-1860 C, E EN264 Comparative Studies: Emily Dickinson and English Poetry P,E EN271 Critical Theory EN278 Fiction Writing I EN279 Poetry Writing I P EN280 Creative Nonfiction Writing I EN314 17th-Century Literature and the Natural World E EN323 Victorian Literature I EN325 Modern British Fiction 5 EN343 African-American Literature: Speaking in Tongues D EN347 Modern American Poetry P Reading Race Now: 21st-Century Multiethnic-American EN369 Literature C, D EN379 Poetry Writing II P EN397 Global Middle Ages E,C, D EN413L Author Course: Lord Byron and Dangerous Knowledge EN413P Author Course: Salman Rushdie D EN474 Public Speaking EN493A Seminar: Literature and Film Adaptation E,C Seminar: Beyond Borders: Narratives of Crossing and EN493B Return C, D New Department Curriculum Janplan 2016 Distribution Req. EN238 Art of Fly-Fishing: Maine and Bishop, California EN297 Poetry and the Nature of Being E, P EN413H Author Course: Henry James New Department Curriculum Spring 2016 Distribution Req. EN142 Introduction to Cinema Studies (See CI142) C Reading and Writing about Literature: Rebellion and EN151B Revolution EN172 The English Seminar EN226 Performance History II (See TD226) EN252 History of International Cinema II (See CI252) C Studies in American Literary History: Civil War to the EN256 Present EN271 Critical Theory EN278 Fiction Writing I EN279 Poetry Writing I P EN280 Creative Nonfiction Writing I Fools Rush In: Comedy and Adaptation in Hollywood EN298A (See CI298A) C EN315 Medieval Saints and Sinners E Dating and Relationships in 18th-Century British EN318 Literature E EN321B Topics in Film Theory: Hitchcock's Cinema (See CI321B) C EN322 British Romanticism E EN336 Early American Women Writers E EN341 American Realism and Naturalism: Then and Now C EN345 Modern American Fiction 6 EN346 Culture and Literature of the American South American Poetry since 1945: Wars and Wiles and Other EN351 Charms P EN378 Fiction Writing II EN379 Poetry Writing II EN380 Creative Nonfiction Writing II P EN386C Special Topics: Documentary Radio C EN398 Environmental Justice and World Literature D EN412 Global Shakespeares E,C EN413M Author Course: The Complications of Jonathan Swift E EN442 U.S. Orientalisms and Arab American Literature D EN478 Advanced Studies in Prose Ireland and Otherness: James Joyce's Ulysses and Early EN493C Writings E, C EN493D History of the Book 7 .
Recommended publications
  • Literature (LIT) 1
    Literature (LIT) 1 LITERATURE (LIT) LIT 113 British Literature i (3 credits) LIT 114 British Literature II (3 credits) LIT 115 American Literature I (3 credits) LIT 116 Amercian Literature II (3 credits) LIT 132 Introduction to Literary Studies (3 credits) This course prepares students to understand literature and to articulate their understanding in essays supported by carefully analyzed evidence from assigned works. Major genres and the literary terms and conventions associated with each genre will be explored. Students will be introduced to literary criticism drawn from a variety of perspectives. Course Rotation: Fall. LIT 196 Topics in Literature (3 credits) LIT 196A Topic: Images of Nature in American Literature (3 credits) LIT 196B Topic: Gothic Fiction (3 credits) LIT 196C Topic: American Detective Fiction (3 credits) LIT 196D Topic: The Fairy Tale (3 credits) LIT 196H Topic: Literature of the Supernatural (4 credits) LIT 196N Topic: American Detective Fiction for Nactel Program (4 credits) LIT 200C Global Crossings: Challenge & Change in Modern World Literature - Nactel (4 credits) Students in the course will read literature from a range of international traditions and will reach an understanding and appreciation of the texts for the ways that they connect and diverge. The social and historical context of the works will be explored and students will take from the course some understanding of the environments that produced the texts. LIT 200G Topic: Pulitzer Prize Winning Novels-American Life (3 credits) LIT 200H Topic: Poe and Hawthorne (3 credits) LIT 201 English Drama 900-1642 (3 credits) LIT 202 History of Film (3 credits) The development of the film from the silent era to the present.
    [Show full text]
  • Victorian Drama
    VICTORIAN DRAMA By jOHN A. DEGEN MosT HISTORIANS OF Victorian life and art have not given sustained and serious attention to the drama and the theatrical environn1ent in which it was produced. The theatre as a social pheno1nenon is forgotten in the wake of other, more pressing concerns-the growth of industry, labor legislation, public health, and political enfranchisetnent-while the drama written during the bulk of the century is generally looked upon as the black sheep of Victorian literature. Indeed, even historians of theatrical art tend to treat the nineteenth-century Eng­ lish theatre with overtones of derision, while most sur­ ve ys of British dra1na seem to suggest that the genre underwent a nearly total eclipse between the plays of Sheridan and Shaw. Yet the Victorian theatre was one of the most vitally active in the long history of dramatic art. Particularly after the well-reported attendance of the newly ascended Queen Victoria made it unquestionably respectable, the theatre was a part of the lives of London­ ers of all classes. And since the theatre was patronized by such a broad spectrum of the population, the study of the types of dramatic entertainment which were demanded and made available cannot help but be revealing of the society of the time. As a repository for the resources for such a study, the Lilly Library is as richly endowed with materials relating to the nineteenth-century British theatre as it is in the street literature and other aspects of Victorian popular culture. The core of the Lilly's holdings in this area is the vast collection of nineteenth-century British [ 5 J drama assembled by Keith L.
    [Show full text]
  • Victorian Literature
    Victorian Literature Defining Victorian literature in any satisfactory and comprehensive manner has proven troublesome for critics ever since the nineteenth century came to a close. The movement roughly comprises the years from 1830 to 1900, though there is ample disagreement regarding even this simple point. The name given to the period is borrowed from the royal matriarch of England, Queen Victoria, who sat on throne from 1837 to 1901. One has difficulty determining with any accuracy where the Romantic Movement of the early nineteenth century leaves off and the Victorian Period begins because these traditions have so many aspects in common. Likewise, identifying the point where Victorianism gives way completely to Modernism is no easy task. Literary periods are never the discrete, self- contained realms which the anthologies so suggest. Rather, a literary period more closely resembles a rope that is frayed at both ends. Many threads make up the rope and work together to form the whole artistic and cultural milieu. The Victorian writers exhibited some well-established habits from previous eras, while at the same time pushing arts and letters in new and interesting directions. Indeed, some of the later Victorian novelists and poets are nearly indistinguishable from the Modernists who followed shortly thereafter. In spite of the uncertainty of terminology, there are some concrete statements that one can make regarding the nature of Victorian literature, and the intellectual world which nurtured that literature. If there is one transcending aspect to Victorian England life and society, that aspect is change – or, more accurately, upheaval. Everything that the previous centuries had held as sacred and indisputable truth came under assault during the middle and latter parts of the nineteenth century.
    [Show full text]
  • Introduction to Victorian and Twentieth-Century Literature Heesok Chang
    Introduction to Victorian and Twentieth-Century Literature Heesok Chang Unlike the preceding three volumes in this Companion to British Literature – the Medieval, Early Modern, and Long Eighteenth Century – the current one attempts to cover at least two distinct periods: the Victorian and the Twentieth Century. To make matters more difficult, the second of these hardly counts as a single period; it is less an epoch than a placeholder. In terms of periodization, the Victorian era is succeeded – or some might say, overthrown – by the Modern. But modernism is not capacious enough to encompass the various kinds of literary art that emerged in Britain following World War II, the postmodern and the postcolonial, for example. We could follow the lead of recent scholars and expand the modernist period beyond the “high” to include the “late” and arguably the “post” as well. But this conceptual as well as temporal expansion does not take in the vital British literature written from the 1970s onward, an historical era distinct from the “postwar” that critics refer to, for now, as the “contemporary” (see English 2006). Of course, all periods are designated after they have finished, including the Victo- rian, which was very much a modernist creation. Yet it is unlikely we will come to call the period stretching from the middle of the last century to the early decades of the new millennium, from the breakup of Britain’s empire to the devolution of Scotland, Wales, and Northern Ireland, “Elizabethan.” And this despite the Victo- rian longevity of the Windsor monarch’s reign. The queen is one and the same, but the national culture is anything but.
    [Show full text]
  • ENL 4251 Victorian Poetry Syllabus
    ENL 4251: Victorian Literature Theme: The Social Measures of Victorian Poetry Professor: Dr. Amy Kahrmann Huseby Email: [email protected] Discussion Meets: Tues./Thurs. 9:30-10:45 a.m. Location: AC2 Rm. 210 Office Hours: Thurs. 11:00-12:00 and by appointment Office: AC1 Rm. 354 Table of Contents Welcome to ENL 4251: Victorian Poetry Course Description 2 This course engages with literature of Course Theme 2 nineteenth-century England to gain Texts you should buy 3 How we will evaluate your progress 3 understanding of the history, culture, and What you’ll achieve in this course 3 aesthetics of the era. In Victorian England, How you can succeed in this course 4-5 poetry was ubiquitous, informing both Frequently asked questions 5 everyday Victorian practices (expressions of What if you’re sick or miss class? 5 What if you can’t turn work in on time? 5 sociability, sexual identity, faith, and grief, for The types of assignments you’ll do 5 example), and transformative literary, On using cell phones and laptops 5 artistic, political, religious, social, and How you’ll learn about assignments 5 scientific developments of the nineteenth What about syllabus changes? 5 What is academic misconduct? 6 century (the Pre-Raphaelite, Tractarian, and What other resources are available? 6-7 Chartist movements, for instance, or Calendar of readings and due dates 8-12 debates over evolution, empire, and mass culture). Consequently, we will focus our attention entirely on the poetry from this era in this course, working to understand its forms, sounds, and its unique ability to form communities, collectives, and groups.
    [Show full text]
  • Literature and the Late-Victorian Radical Press
    Literature Compass 7/8 (2010): 702–712, 10.1111/j.1741-4113.2010.00729.x Literature and the Late-Victorian Radical Press Elizabeth Carolyn Miller* University of California, Davis Abstract Amidst a larger surge in the number of books and periodicals published in late-nineteenth-century Britain, a corresponding surge occurred in the radical press. The counter-cultural press that emerged at the fin de sie`cle sought to define itself in opposition to commercial print and the capitalist press and was deeply antagonistic to existing political, economic, and print publishing structures. Litera- ture flourished across this counter-public print sphere, and major authors of the day such as William Morris and George Bernard Shaw published fiction, poetry, and literary criticism within it. Until recently, this corner of late-Victorian print culture has been of interest principally to historians, but literary critics have begun to take more interest in the late-Victorian radical press and in the literary cultures of socialist newspapers and journals such as the Clarion and the New Age. Amidst a larger surge in the number of books and periodicals published in Britain at the end of the nineteenth century, a corresponding surge occurred in the radical press: as Deian Hopkin calculates, several hundred periodicals representing a wide array of socialist perspectives were born, many to die soon after, in the decades surrounding the turn of the century (226). An independent infrastructure of radical presses, associated with various radical organizations and editors, emerged as an alternative means of periodical production apart from commercial, profit-oriented print.1 Literature and literary discourse flourished across this counterpublic sphere, and major authors of the day published fiction, poetry, and journalism within it: in the 1880s, for example, William Morris spent five years editing and writing for the revolutionary paper Commonweal, while George Bernard Shaw cut his teeth as an author by serializing four novels in the socialist journals To-Day and Our Corner.
    [Show full text]
  • Characteristics of Victorian Literature the Style of the Victorian Novel
    Characteristics of Victorian Literature The literature of the Victorian age (1837 – 1901, named for the reign of Queen Victoria) entered in a new period after the romantic revival. The literature of this era expressed the fusion of pure romance to gross realism. Though, the Victorian Age produced great poets, the age is also remarkable for the excellence of its prose. The discoveries of science have particular effects upon the literature of the age. If you study all the great writers of this period, you will mark four general characteristics: 1. Literature of this age tends to come closer to daily life which reflects its practical problems and interests. It becomes a powerful instrument for human progress. Socially & economically, Industrialism was on the rise and various reform movements like emancipation, child labor, women’s rights, and evolution. 2. Moral Purpose: The Victorian literature seems to deviate from "art for art's sake" and asserts its moral purpose. Tennyson, Browning, Carlyle, Ruskin - all were the teachers of England with the faith in their moral message to instruct the world. 3. Idealism: It is often considered as an age of doubt and pessimism. The influence of science is felt here. The whole age seems to be caught in the conception of man in relation to the universe with the idea of evolution. 4. Though, the age is characterized as practical and materialistic, most of the writers exalt a purely ideal life. It is an idealistic age where the great ideals like truth, justice, love, brotherhood are emphasized by poets, essayists and novelists of the age.
    [Show full text]
  • African American Transformations of Victorian Literature
    © Copyright, Princeton University Press. No part of this book may be distributed, posted, or reproduced in any form by digital or mechanical means without prior written permission of the publisher. IntroductIon t he african Americanization of victorian LiteratUre One muffled strain in the Silent South, a jarring chord and a vague and uncomprehended cadenza has been and still is the Negro. And of that muffled chord, the one mute and voiceless note has been the sadly expectant Black Woman, An infant crying in the night, An infant crying for the light; And with no language— but a cry. —a nna Julia cooPer, A Voice from the South Reprinting Charles Dickens’s Bleak House in an antislavery newspaper. Reimagining David Copperfield as a mixed- race youth in the antebellum South. Arguing that Alfred, Lord Tennyson plagiarized “The Charge of the Light Brigade” from an African war chant. Using George Eliot’s poetry to promote African American solidarity. Reading a poem by Dante Gabriel Rossetti as an allegory of African American literary history. These are some of the many unlikely and intriguing things African Amer- ican writers and editors did to and with Victorian works of literature in the second half of the nineteenth and early decades of the twentieth centuries. No marginal phenomenon or fringe practice, these transnational, cross- racial transpositions and repurposings were often the handiwork of major figures in the African American literary and intellectual tradition, including Frederick Douglass, Frances Ellen Watkins Harper, Charles Chesnutt, Pau- line Hopkins, and W.E.B. Du Bois. Yet almost all these deployments of and responses to Victorian literature remain little known; indeed, some of the most sustained and provocative instances have gone entirely unrecognized.
    [Show full text]
  • The Victorian Period (1837- 1901) By: Gillian Gross and Francesca Poliseno Introduction
    The Victorian Period (1837- 1901) By: Gillian Gross and Francesca Poliseno Introduction ● In the midst of the Victorian Era was a social change. Many people challenged the religious and social ideals that had been the norm. With this social change also came advances in technology and science that changed the way people viewed the world forever. Philosophical Context ● The Victorian Code of Conduct included sexual restraint, low tolerance of crime and no tolerance of homosexuality. ● Slavery was abolished in 1834, but anti- slavery morality took years to come into effect. ● Factory conditions were worse than conditions for slaves. Freed slaves were transported to Sierra Leone , or “Freetown” Religion ● The Anglican Church ● Puritanism ● Methodism and Presbyterianism ● The Crisis of Faith Literature of the Victorian Era ● Writers in the Victorian Era pushed for religious, political, and social change. ● Many writers challenged the model for perfect social behavior. Types of Literature ● The pre- raphaelites ● Aestheticism and Decadence ● Novels developed more intricate plots and character development. Famous Authors and Literature ● Great Expectations by Charles Dickens ● Oscar Wilde ● Emily Bronte ● Christina Rossetti Christina Rossetti- One of the most famous Pre- Raphaelite poets of the Victorian Era Excerpts “On this day of the year, long before you were born, this heap of decay,” stabbing with When midnight mists are creeping, And all the land is her crutched stick at the pile of cobwebs on the table but not touching it, “was brought here. sleeping, Around me tread the mighty dead, And It slowly pass away. Lo, warriors, saints, and sages, From and I have worn away together.
    [Show full text]
  • National Open University of Nigeria Plot 91, Cadastral Zone, University
    National Open University of Nigeria Plot 91, Cadastral Zone, University Village, Nnamdi Azikiwe Expressway, Jabi, Abuja. ENG 426: TWENTIETH CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE Course Team: Course Developer/Writer: Dr. Folasade Hunsu Department of English Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile-Ife. [email protected] Course Editor: Professor Abdul R. Yesufu National Open University of Nigeria Lagos. Course Co-ordinator: Dr. Felix Gbenoba Department of Languages National Open University of Nigeria Abuja. 1 ENG 426: TWENTIETH CENTURY ENGLISH LITERATURE Introduction This 3 credits unit course opens up ways in which the realities of the twentieth century shaped the literary works of the time. It shows how writers represented the events of the century and how the desire for change informed the innovative and experimental techniques of their literature. In order to help students understand the literature of the time, the socio- political, historical realities, the relationship between the literature of the previous century or era and the twentieth century literature especially, writers‘ choice of style and themes will be discussed. The course is divided into five modules of four units each. Modules 1-4 focus on modernist writings: modernist prose, drama and poetry while Module 5 briefly introduces postmodernism which came about towards the end of twentieth century. Using the Course Guide Students are to read the course guide so as to be familiar with what the course entails and requires. The course guide comprises the course description, course aims and objectives, expectations and requirements, among others. Most especially, the course guide contains the course modules and units. At the end of each unit there is at least one self- assessment question which helps the student to assess their grasp of the course content of each unit.
    [Show full text]
  • Preview Unit Goals
    Included in this unit: TEKS 1B, 1D, 1E, 2, 2A, 2C, 3, 4, 5A–D, 6, 7, 9B, 9C, 10A, 10B, 11A, 11B, 12A–D, 13A–E, 14, 14A, 14C, 15A, unit5 15C, 15D, 16, 17, 17A, RC-12(A), RC-12(B) Preview Unit Goals literary • Understand the historical and cultural context of the Victorian era analysis • Identify and analyze characteristics of realism and naturalism in fiction • Identify and analyze point of view, plot structure, and theme in fiction • Identify and analyze rhyme scheme and rhythm in poetry • Identify and analyze speaker, mood, and tone in poetry reading • Make inferences and draw conclusions • Identify a writer’s key ideas and supporting details • Identify, analyze, and evaluate persuasive techniques • Compare, contrast, and synthesize ideas writing and • Write an analytical essay grammar • Add descriptive details, choose effective settings, and establish voice • Use rhetorical questions and interrogative sentences vocabulary • Use context clues and affixes to help determine the meaning of unfamiliar words • Use a dictionary • Understand the history and development of the English language academic • analyze • impact • scheme vocabulary • dominate • resource media and • Evaluate the presentation of social and cultural messages in media viewing • Evaluate the interactions of different techniques used in multi- layered media • Evaluate how audience, bias, and purpose influence the representation of an issue or event, including changes in formality and tone • Create a power presentation Find It Online! Go to thinkcentral.com for the interactive version of this unit. 910 TX_L12PE-u05s00-uo.indd 910 9/11/09 12:20:38 PM The VICTORIANS 1832–1901 Elizabeth BarrETT BrOWNING an era of rapid change • The Influence of ROMANTICISM DVD-ROM • Realism in FICTION 'REAt'REAt STORIEs on FILMFILM • VICTorian VIEWPOINTS DISCOVEr how vISUAl aNd sOUNd tECHNIQUEs COMBINe to cAPTURe tHe drIVINg mOTIOn of BRITAIN’s INDUSTRIAl REVOLUTION.
    [Show full text]
  • Foundational Core Courses
    FOUNDATIONAL Core Mathematics MA 101 Modern College Mathematics MA 105 Mathematical App. For Health Sciences MA 106 College Algebra MA 107 Mathematics for Elem. School Teachers MA 109 Mathematics for Decision Making MA 110 Calculus for Decision Making MA 140 Precalculus MA 151 Calculus I MA 152 Calculus II MA 253 Calculus III MA 261 Linear Algebra Philosophy PH 221 Historical Survey of Philosophy PH 224 Intro to Ancient Philosophy PH 229 Eastern Philosophy PH 231 Intro to Philosophy of Knowledge PH 240 Intro to Philosophy of Beauty PH 251 Intro to Ethics PH 255 Intro to Social and Political Philosophy PH 272 Intro to Metaphysics PH 274 Existentialism PH 243 Introduction to Modern Philosophy PH 280 Logic PH 290 Foundational Topics in Philosophy Revised 5/15/20 FOUNDATIONAL Core Theology/Religious Studies TRS 201 Intro to Old Testament TRS 202 Intro to New Testament TRS 203 Intro to Gospels TRS 204 Letters of Paul TRS-205 Gospel of Luke and Acts TRS 220 Intro to Catholic Theology TRS 221 Understanding Theology TRS 222 Faith and Reason TRS 230 History of Christianity I TRS 231 History of Christianity II TRS-232 Christian Spirituality TRS 233 Women in Christianity TRS 234 Contemporary Roman Catholic Thought TRS 235 Constructing Concept of God TRS-236 Comparative Theology TRS 240 Foundations of Catholic Ethics TRS 241 History of Christian Ethics TRS 242 Catholic Social Justice Tradition TRS 243 Ethics in World Religions TRS 260 Eastern Religions TRS 261 Islam TRS 262 Judaism TRS 263 Symbol, Myth & Ritual TRS-264 Ancient Cults and Religions
    [Show full text]