Course Template
The following information should be available to students as a part
of all syllabi for this course.
Course
Information
Number:
ENGL 4310
Section:
Catalog Name: Studies in Literary Theory
Instructor
sub-title (optional) |
Instructor
Information
Instructor's name:
Office Location:
Office hours:
Phone/email: |
Required texts and other readings/materials
- Individual instructors
may assemble a group of texts that will allow students to meet the objectives
and specifications of the course. No specific texts are required.
Course
description
- An
examination of a particular facet of or approach to literary theory
and/or criticism. Typical
offerings may include History of Literary Theory, Cultural Studies,
Feminist Theory, Comparative Literature, etc.
May be repeated for credit as topic varies.
- Prerequisites:
ENGL 1101 and 1102.
- A further specific
description pertaining to this section of the course may be added.
Course
Goals
- Students
will develop the ability to identify achievements in a specific field
of aesthetics and/or critical theory and/or criticism; and/or
- Students
will be familiar with important characteristics of and distinctions
between critical schools and methodologies.
- Students
will recognize how both theory and literature construct a dialectical
relationship with social, historical, political, economic, and cultural
forces as they are both produced and consumed.
- Students
will understand and appreciate the relationship between theory and literature
and the role played by each in the production and consumption of the
other.
- Students
will be able to apply theoretical issues and skills to real-world cultural
circumstances.
- Students will
demonstrate in both oral and written work a discipline-specific critical
facility through convincing and well-supported analysis of related material.
- Students will
demonstrate their command of academic English and the tenets of sound
composition by means of thesis-driven analytical prose.
- Students will
learn to use discipline-specific computer technologies related to the
study of language such as listservs, word processing, and internet research.
Program
Goals
- This course fulfills
one of the departmental requirements for the completion of the English
major.
- Students will develop
the analytical, oral and written skills to pursue graduate study or
careers in teaching, writing, business and a variety of other fields.
- Students will be
able to define and pursue independent research agendas.
- This course contributes
to the program goal of equipping students with a foundation in literary
history and the issues surrounding literary study in contemporary culture.
- This course broadens
students' desire and ability to take pleasure in their encounter with
literature.
General
topics and assignments appropriate to those topics
- To be determined
by instructor.
Assessment
activities
- To be determined
by instructor.
- Students will display
their command of academic English and of the tenets of
sound composition by means of thesis-driven analytical prose,
including at least ten pages of research-based writing.
Other
policies
- Departmental
plagiarism policies
- Other policy statements
specific to this class should be included on the syllabus.
- A detailed calendar
of readings and assignments should be made available to the class at
the first class meeting. A copy should be posted electronically and
kept on file in the English department office.
- Students should
be expected to come to class, prepared and able to participate.
- MLA style should
be emphasized and required on out-of-class essays.
|