The English Department's main office is in Muenzinger D110.

Summer 2020 Undergraduate Courses

Content List: Summer 2020 General Literature & Language

ENGL 1420: Poetry

Poetry is alive. Poets have written for more than a thousand years and continue to study, write and perform poetry today. Poetry is not meant to wither and die in dusty pages on forgotten shelves. It is meant to be heard, read and voiced—aloud and alive. This course will introduce you to a great variety of poems written and composed in English from the very beginning of the English language until recently, and provide you with tools to help understand them. We will discuss terminology, themes, forms and for...

ENGL 3000: Shakespeare for Nonmajors

Tales of love, lust, and betrayal; greed, jealousy, and murder; revenge, mercy, and redemption—welcome to the world of Shakespeare! You’ll discover how Shakespeare’s characters have beguiled audiences for over 400 years. We’ll read two comedies, a history play, a tragedy, and a romance:  A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Richard III, Hamlet or Othello, and The Tempest. Assignments include weekly discussion posts and reading quizzes, two Zoom conferences, two papers, and a creative project o...

ENGL 3060: Modern & Contemporary Literature for Nonmajors

Maymester Surveys the major literary trends from 1900 to the present in the Anglo-American tradition of modern, postmodern, and contemporary literature.  It will provide a basic grounding in two important moments in literary history:  modernism and post-modernism. Quite a bit of the focus of the course will be on poetry—we will be looking at modernist poets like Ezra Pound, T.S. Eliot, W.B. Yeats and Hilda Dolittle (H.D.) to post-modernist poets (poets coming after modernist poets) like Robert Lowell, Eliz...

Content List: Summer 2020 Introductory English Requirements

Content List: Summer 2020 British Literature, 1600 - 1900

ENGL 3164: History & Literature of Georgian Britain

Augmester The historical period known as Georgian England runs from 1714-1830. That period encompassed a time of extraordinary change:  Great Britain has by 1800 arguably become the most powerful nation in the world; it had gained an empire in the new world that it then lost with the American Revolution; cities (especially London) grew explosively; the IGeorgian England is a dynamic moment in British history.  It covers the literature, life, and history during the reign of four King Georges (1714-1830).  I...

Content List: Summer 2020 Genre, Media, and Advanced Writing

ENGL 3026: Syntax, Citation, Analysis -- Writing Â鶹ÊÓƵ Literature

Students hone their writing skills by closely analyzing the language in literary texts. The course will focus on the nuances of sentence structure and grammar, in order to help students become better writers and readers. Students will learn how to perform research in literary criticism and will write and revise a research paper, as well as a number of other short papers for different audiences. Students will learn and use citation methods within the discipline and will discuss the reasoning behind citationa...

Content List: Summer 2020 Critical Studies in English

ENGL 4039: Critical Studies in English

Uncommon Arrangements: Love in Modernist Fiction This seminar will examine the representation of love and relationships in modernist novels published between 1910-1945, a period spanning the two world wars in which a radically new order of gender, sexuality, and class relations coincided with innovations in literary representation. We will look closely at a range of affectionate relationships including: traditional marriage, unconventional domestic arrangements, same-sex couplings, friendship, childlike re...