| 200 A | READING LIT FORMS (Reading Literary Forms) | Reeves | M-Th 9:30-10:20 | 14549 | 
Catalog Description: Techniques and practice in reading and enjoying literature in its various forms: poetry, drama, prose fiction, film. Examies such features of literary meanings as imagery, characterization, narration, and patterning in sound and sense.
| 200 B | READING LIT FORMS (Reading Literary Forms) | Daniel | MW 12:30-2:20 | 14550 | 
Catalog Description: Techniques and practice in reading and enjoying literature in its various forms: poetry, drama, prose fiction, film. Examies such features of literary meanings as imagery, characterization, narration, and patterning in sound and sense.
| 200 C | READING LIT FORMS (Reading Literary Forms) | Haden | M-Th 2:30-3:20 | 14551 | 
Catalog Description: Techniques and practice in reading and enjoying literature in its various forms: poetry, drama, prose fiction, film. Examies such features of literary meanings as imagery, characterization, narration, and patterning in sound and sense.
| 202 A | INTRO TO ENGL LANG AND LIT (Introduction to the Study of English Language and Literature) | Foster | MWF 10:30-11:20 | 14554 | 
Catalog Description: Gateway course designed for English pre-majors and majors. Introduces critical, historical, and theoretical frameworks important to studying the literature, language, and cultures of English.
| 202 AA | INTRO TO ENGL LANG AND LIT (Introduction to the Study of English Language and Literature) | Fisher | M 9:30-10:20 | 14555 | 
Catalog Description: Gateway course designed for English pre-majors and majors. Introduces critical, historical, and theoretical frameworks important to studying the literature, language, and cultures of English.
| 202 AB | INTRO TO ENGL LANG AND LIT (Introduction to the Study of English Language and Literature) | Fisher | M 12:30-1:20 | 14556 | 
Catalog Description: Gateway course designed for English pre-majors and majors. Introduces critical, historical, and theoretical frameworks important to studying the literature, language, and cultures of English.
| 202 AC | INTRO TO ENGL LANG AND LIT (Introduction to the Study of English Language and Literature) | Moore | W 11:30-12:20 | 14557 | 
Catalog Description: Gateway course designed for English pre-majors and majors. Introduces critical, historical, and theoretical frameworks important to studying the literature, language, and cultures of English.
| 202 AD | INTRO TO ENGL LANG AND LIT (Introduction to the Study of English Language and Literature) | Moore | W 1:30-2:20 | 14558 | 
Catalog Description: Gateway course designed for English pre-majors and majors. Introduces critical, historical, and theoretical frameworks important to studying the literature, language, and cultures of English.
| 202 AE | INTRO TO ENGL LANG AND LIT (Introduction to the Study of English Language and Literature) | McCourt | Th 9:30-10:20 | 14559 | 
Catalog Description: Gateway course designed for English pre-majors and majors. Introduces critical, historical, and theoretical frameworks important to studying the literature, language, and cultures of English.
| 202 AF | INTRO TO ENGL LANG AND LIT (Introduction to the Study of English Language and Literature) | McCourt | Th 11:30-12:20 | 14560 | 
Catalog Description: Gateway course designed for English pre-majors and majors. Introduces critical, historical, and theoretical frameworks important to studying the literature, language, and cultures of English.
| 204 A | POPULAR FICTION & MEDIA (Popular Fiction and Media) | Kaup | MW 10:30-12:20 | 14561 | 
Catalog Description: Introduces students to the study of popular culture, possibly including print or visual media, understood as sites of critical reflection. Particular attention to dynamics of production and reception, aesthetics and technique, and cultural politics. Topics may foreground genres (science fiction; romance) or forms (comics; graffiti
| 206 A | Rhetoric in Everyday Life (Rhetoric in Everyday Life) | Peterson | TTh 2:30-4:20 | 14562 | 
Catalog Description: Introductory rhetoric course that examines the strategic use of and situated means through which images, texts, objects, and symbols inform, persuade, and shape social practices in various contexts. Topics focus on education, public policy, politics, law, journalism, media, digital cultural, globalization, popular culture, and the arts.
| 207 A | INTRO CULTURE ST (Introduction to Cultural Studies) | Kumler | TTh 11:30-1:20 | 14563 | 
Catalog Description: Asks three questions: What is Cultural Studies? How does one read from a Cultural Studies perspective? What is the value of reading this way? Provides historical understanding of Cultural Studies, its terms and its specific way of interpreting a variety of texts, i.e. literature, visual images, music, video, and performance.
| 242 C | READING Prose FICTION (Read Prose Fiction) | Williams | TTh 2:30-4:20 | 14567 | 
Catalog Description: Critical interpretation and meaning in works of prose fiction, representing a variety of types and periods
| 243 A | READING POETRY (Reading Poetry) | McCue | TTh 2:30-4:20 | 22929 | 
Catalog Description: Critical interpretation and meaning in poems. Different examples of poetry representing a variety of types from the medieval to modern periods.
| 250 A | American Literature (American Literature) | Griffith | M-Th 8:30-80:0p | 14570 | 
Catalog Description: Introduces American culture through a careful reading of a variety of representative texts in their historical contexts.
| 256 A | Intro Queer Cultural Studies (Introduction to Queer Cultural Studies) | Grimmer | MW 4:30-6:20p | 22922 | 
Examines the cultural practices in literature, film, and art that articulate and give meaning to bodies, sexualities, and desires. Teaches critical thinking about identity, power, inequalities, and marginality. Offered: jointly with GWSS 264.
| 257 A | Asian American Lit (Asian American Literature) | Liu | TTh 9:30-11:20 | 14571 | 
Catalog Description: Examines the emergence of Asian American literature as a response to anti-Asian legislation, cultural images, and American racial formation. Encourages thinking critically about identity, power, inequalities, and experiences of marginality.
| 259 A | LIT & SOC DIFFERENCE (Literature and Social Difference) | Ishii | MW 1:30-3:20 | 14573 | 
Catalog Description: Literary texts are important evidence for social difference (gender, race, class, ethnicity, language, citizenship status, sexuality, ability) in contemporary and historical contexts. Examines texts that encourage and provoke us to ask larger questions about identity, power, privilege, society, and the role of culture in present-day or historical settings.
| 270 A | USES OF ENGL LANG (The Uses of the English Language) | Moore | MW 12:30-2:20 | 14574 | 
Catalog Description: Survey of the assumptions, methodologies, and major issues of English in its cultural settings. Designed to connect English Language study with the study of literature, orality and literacy, education, ethnicity, gender, and public policy.
| 281 E | INTERMED EXPOS WRIT (Intermediat Expository Writing) | Hitchman | MW 12:30-2:20 | 14578 | 
Catalog Description: Writing papers communicating information and opinion to develop accurate, competent, and effective expression.
Prerequisites:
While 281 has no formal prerequisite, this is an intermediate writing course, and instructors expect entering students to know how to formulate claims, integrate evidence, demonstrate awareness of audience, and structure coherent sentences, paragraphs and essays. Thus we strongly encourage students to complete an introductory (100 level) writing course before enrolling in English 281.
| 281 F | INTERMED EXPOS WRIT (Intermediat Expository Writing) | Gilbert | TTh 12:30-2:20 | 14579 | 
Catalog Description: Writing papers communicating information and opinion to develop accurate, competent, and effective expression.
Prerequisites:
While 281 has no formal prerequisite, this is an intermediate writing course, and instructors expect entering students to know how to formulate claims, integrate evidence, demonstrate awareness of audience, and structure coherent sentences, paragraphs and essays. Thus we strongly encourage students to complete an introductory (100 level) writing course before enrolling in English 281.
| 282 A | INT MULTIMODAL COMP (Intermediate Multimodal Composition) | Walker | TTh 10:30-12:20 | 14580 | 
Catalog Description: Strategies for composing effective multimodal texts for print, digital physical delivery, with focus on affordances of various modes--words, images, sound, design, and gesture--and genres to address specific rhetorical situations both within and beyond the academy. Although the course has no prerequisites, instructors assume knowledge of academic writing.
| 282 C | INT MULTIMODAL COMP (Intermediate Multimodal Composition) | Boyle | MW 12:30-2:20 | 14582 | 
Catalog Description: Strategies for composing effective multimodal texts for print, digital physical delivery, with focus on affordances of various modes--words, images, sound, design, and gesture--and genres to address specific rhetorical situations both within and beyond the academy. Although the course has no prerequisites, instructors assume knowledge of academic writing.
| 283 A | BEGIN VERSE WRITING (Beginning Verse Writing) | TTh 10:30-11:50 | 14584 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive study of the ways and means of making a poem.
| 284 A | BEG SHORT STRY WRIT (Beginning Short Story Writing) | Al Zuwayed | MW 10:30-11:50 | 14586 | 
Catalog Description: Introduction to the theory and practice of writing the short story.
| 284 B | BEG SHORT STRY WRIT (Beginning Short Story Writing) | Zimmerman | TTh 1:30-2:50 | 14587 | 
Catalog Description: Introduction to the theory and practice of writing the short story.
| 288 A | Intro Prof & Tech Writing (Introduction to Professional and Technical Writing) | Holstrom | TTh 2:30-4:20 | 14588 | 
Catalog Description: Engages in professional genres and communication practices in light of emerging technologies. Students produce texts that prepare them to enter professional spaces.
| 288 B | Intro Prof & Tech Writing (Introduction to Professional and Technical Writing) | Medina | MW 10:30-12:20 | 23782 | 
Catalog Description: Engages in professional genres and communication practices in light of emerging technologies. Students produce texts that prepare them to enter professional spaces.
| 288 C | Intro Prof & Tech Writing (Introduction to Professional and Technical Writing) | Medina | MW 2:30-4:20 | 23783 | 
Catalog Description: Engages in professional genres and communication practices in light of emerging technologies. Students produce texts that prepare them to enter professional spaces.
| 296 A | Critical Literacy in the Natural Sciences (Critical Literacy in the Natural Sciences) | Callow | WF 8:30-10:20 | 23222 | 
Develops critical literacy in the diffuse but interlocking disciplines of the natural sciences. Through analysis and composition of various texts, students become authoritative participants in scientific discourse while also becoming familiar with ways that Western values are embedded and centered (often invisibly) in the sciences and its related institutions.
| 297 B | ADV WRITING HUM (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Humanities) | Elezovic | MWF 10:30-11:20 | 14591 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified humanities course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 297 C | ADV WRITING HUM (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Humanities) | George | MW 11:30-12:50 | 14592 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified humanities course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 A | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Daniel | TTh 8:30-83:0p | 14593 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 B | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Daniel | TTh 10:00-11:20 | 14594 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 C | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Coen | TTh 1:00-2:20 | 14595 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 D | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Williams | MWF 1:30-2:20 | 14596 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 E | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Lee | TTh 3:30-4:50 | 14597 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 F | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Barr | MW 3:00-4:20 | 14598 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 G | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Chaterji | TTh 3:00-4:20 | 14599 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 H | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Marado-Peters | WF 11:30-12:50, WF 11:30-12:50 | 14600 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 I | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Heslop | TTh 11:30-12:50 | 14601 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 298 J | ADV WRITING SOCSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Social Sciences) | Bartley | MWF 2:30-3:20 | 14602 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified social science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 299 A | ADV WRITING NATSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Natural Sciences) | Wacker | MWF 12:30-1:20 | 14603 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified natural science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 299 C | ADV WRITING NATSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Natural Sciences) | Matthews | MWF 12:30-1:20 | 14605 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified natural science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 299 D | ADV WRITING NATSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Natural Sciences) | Matthews | MWF 1:30-2:20 | 14606 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified natural science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 299 E | ADV WRITING NATSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Natural Sciences) | Ghasedi | MW 10:30-11:50 | 14607 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified natural science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 299 F | ADV WRITING NATSCI (Advanced Interdisciplinary Writing/Natural Sciences) | Roberts | MWF 12:30-1:20 | 14608 | 
Catalog Description: Expository writing based on materials presented in a specified natural science course. Assignments include drafts of papers to be submitted in the specified course, and other pieces of analytical prose. Concurrent registration in the specified course required.
| 300 A | READING MAJOR TEXTS (Reading Major Texts) | Alaniz | WF 1:30-3:20 | 14611 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive examination of one or a few major works of literature. Classroom work to develop skills of careful and critical reading. Book selection varies, but reading consists of major works by important authors and of selected supplementary materials.
| 302 A | CRITICAL PRACTICE (Critical Practice) | Patterson | MW 12:30-2:20 | 14612 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive study of, and exercise in, applying important or influential interpretive practices for studying language, literature, and culture, along with consideration of their powers/limits. Focuses on developing critical writing abilities. Topics vary and may include critical and interpretive practice from scripture and myth to more contemporary approaches, including newer interdisciplinary practices.
| 302 B | CRITICAL PRACTICE (Critical Practice) | Harkins | TTh 3:30-5:20 | 14613 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive study of, and exercise in, applying important or influential interpretive practices for studying language, literature, and culture, along with consideration of their powers/limits. Focuses on developing critical writing abilities. Topics vary and may include critical and interpretive practice from scripture and myth to more contemporary approaches, including newer interdisciplinary practices.
| 309 A | THEORIES OF READING (Theories of Reading) | Knight | MW 1:30-3:20 | 14615 | 
Catalog Description: Investigates what it means to be a reader. Centers on authorial and reading challenges, shifting cultural and theoretical norms, and changes in the public's reading standards.
| 310 A | BIBLE AS LITERATURE (The Bible as Literature) | LaPorte | TTh 2:30-4:20 | 14616 | 
Catalog Description: Introduction to the development of the religious ideas and institutions of ancient Israel, with selected readings from the Old Testament and New Testament. Emphasis on reading The Bible with literary and historical understanding.
| 315 A | LITERARY MODERNISM (Literary Modernism) | Staten | TTh 11:30-1:20 | 14617 | 
Catalog Description: Introduces the genealogy, character, and consequences, of modernism/modernity. Topics may include: preoccupations with novelty/the new; narratives of historical development; temporality; constructions of high and low culture; intersections between aesthetics and politics; transnationalism; and philosophical influences upon literary modernism.
| 320 A | ENGL LIT: MID AGES (English Literature: The Middle Ages) | Remley | TTh 4:30-6:20p | 14618 | 
Catalog Description: Literary culture of Middle Ages in England, as seen in selected works from earlier and later periods, ages of Beowulf and of Geoffrey Chaucer. Read in translation, except for a few later works, which are read in Middle English.
| 324 A | SHAKESPEARE AFTER 1603 (Shakespeare After 1603) | Streitberger | MW 11:30-1:20 | 14619 | 
Catalog Description: Explores Shakespeare's later works. Focuses on the mature tragedies and late-career romances, by may include selected comedies and histories.
| 330 A | ROMANTIC AGE (English Literature: The Romantic Age) | Shields | MW 12:30-2:20 | 14620 | 
Catalog Description: Literary, intellectual, and historical ferment of the period from the French Revolution to the 1830s. Readings from major authors in different literary forms; discussions of critical and philosophical issues in a time of change.
| 337 A | MODERN NOVEL (The Modern Novel) | Burstein | MW 2:30-4:20 | 14621 | 
Catalog Description: Explores the novel in English from the first half of the twentieth century. May include such writers as Virginia Woolf, D.H. Lawrence, Gertrude Stein, E.M. Forster, Claude McKay, Elizabeth Bowen, Raja Rao, William Faulkner, Jean Rhys, and Edith Wharton. Includes history and changing aesthetics of the novel as form, alongside the sociohistorical context.
| 346 A | STDYS SHORT FICTION (Studies in Short Fiction) | Hushagen | TTh 2:30-4:20 | 14622 | 
Catalog Description: Explores the workings and evolution of short fiction. Introduces the distinct styles and pruposes of short fiction, such as the realistic, the fantastic, the explicitly instructive, and the non-didactic descriptive, as well as the historical development of the short story from the simple tale and fable to the psychologically complex narrative.
| 352 A | US LIT TO 1865 (Literatures of the United States to 1865) | Abrams | TTh 3:30-5:20 | 14623 | 
Catalog Description: Explores American fiction, poetry, and prose from the early nineteenth century through the Civil War. May include such representative authors of the period as Emerson, Melville, Hawthorne, Douglass and fuller, along with supplementary study of the broader cultural and political milieu.
| 357 A | JEWISH AM LIT &CLTR (Jewish American Literature & Culture) | MW 9:30-11:20 | 14624 | 
Catalog Description: Examines the literary and cultural production of American Jews from the colonial period to the present time. Considers ways in which American Jews assimilate and resist assimilation while Jewish writers, filmmakers, playwrights, and graphic novelists imitate and alter American life and literature.
| 362 A | US LATINO/A LIT (U.S. Latino/a Literature) | Kaup | MW 1:30-3:20 | 14625 | 
Catalog Description: Addresses selected contemporary and historical works by United States Latino/a authors from the nineteenth century to the present, tracing their genealogy from a foundational triad of communities - Mexican, American, Puerto Rico, and Cuban American. Engages with issues of power, inequality, and marginality stemming from ethnic, linguistic, and racial experience.
| 370 A | ENGL LANG STUDY (English Language Study) | Stygall | TTh 1:30-3:20 | 14627 | 
Catalog Description: Wide-ranging introduction to the study of written and spoken English. Includes the nature of language; ways of describing language; the use of language study as an approach to English literature and the teaching of English.
| 381 C | ADV EXPOSITORY WRIT (Advanced Expository Writing) | Gibbons | TTh 1:30-3:20 | 23343 | 
Catalog Description: Concentration on the development of prose style for experienced writers.
| 382 A | SPECIAL MULTIMODAL (Special Topics in Multimodal Composition) | Burns | W 10:30-12:20, M 10:30-12:20 | 14630 | 
Catalog Description: Focuses on emerging questions, debates, genres, and methods of multimodal analysis and production. Topics vary but might include transmedia storytelling, digital humanities, audiovisual essays, new media journalism, and performance. Although course has no prerequisites, instructors, assume knowledge of academic argumentation strategies.
| 383 A | CRAFT OF VERSE (The Craft of Verse) | Bierds | TTh 1:30-2:50 | 14632 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive study of various aspects of the craft verse. Readings in contemporary verse and writing using emulation and imitation.
Prerequisites:
ENGL 283 & ENGL 284
| 384 A | CRAFT OF PROSE (The Craft of Prose) | Paris | W 4:30-7:20p | 14633 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive study of various aspects of the craft of fiction or creative nonfiction. Readings in contemporary prose and writing using emulation and imitation.
Prerequisites:
ENGL 283 & ENGL 284
| 384 B | CRAFT OF PROSE (The Craft of Prose) | Sonenberg | TTh 9:30-10:50 | 14634 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive study of various aspects of the craft of fiction or creative nonfiction. Readings in contemporary prose and writing using emulation and imitation.
Prerequisites:
ENGL 283 & ENGL 284
| 440 A | SPEC STUDIES IN LIT (Special Studies in Literature) | Kaplan | TTh 1:30-3:20 | 14636 | 
Catalog Description: Themes and topics offering special approaches to literature.
| 451 A | AMERICAN WRITERS (American Writers: Studies in Major Authors) | Ibrahim | TTh 11:30-1:20 | 14637 | 
Catalog Description: Concentration on one writer or a special group of American writers.
| 471 A | TEACHING WRITING (The Theory and Practice of Teaching Writing) | McCue | TTh 12:30-2:20 | 14638 | 
Catalog Description: Reviews the research, core debates, and politics tht have shaped the practice, teaching and study of writing. Introduces theoretical and methodological approaches that inform the teaching and learning of writing
| 484 A | ADV PROSE WORKSHOP (Advanced Prose Workshop) | Sonenberg | TTh 11:30-12:50 | 14641 | 
Catalog Description: Intensive prose workshop. Emphasis on the production and discussion of student fiction and/or creative nonfiction.
Prerequisites:
ENGL 383, 384
| 494 A | HONORS SEMINAR (Honors Seminar) | Gillis-Bridges | MW 2:30-4:20 | 14647 | 
Catalog Description: Survey of current issues confronting literary critics today, based on revolving themes and topics. Focuses on debates and developments affecting English language and literatures, including questions about: the relationship of culture and history; the effect of emergent technologies on literary study; the rise of interdisciplinary approaches in the humanities.
| 494 B | HONORS SEMINAR (Honors Seminar) | Taylor | TTh 2:30-4:20 | 14648 | 
Catalog Description: Survey of current issues confronting literary critics today, based on revolving themes and topics. Focuses on debates and developments affecting English language and literatures, including questions about: the relationship of culture and history; the effect of emergent technologies on literary study; the rise of interdisciplinary approaches in the humanities.