Archive | Courses

Fall ’21–Whitman and Melville

ENGL 517: Whitman, Melville, and the Question of American Identity Professor: Dr. Scott Peeples Location: College of Charleston Time: Tuesday, 6:00 – 8:45 Almost exact contemporaries, Walt Whitman and Herman Melville were among the most formally experimental writers of the nineteenth century. Both were also highly engaged with the political and social turmoil of their […]

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Fall ’21–Survey of World Literature II

ENGL 521: Survey of World Literature II  Professor: Dr. Licia Hendriks Location: Citadel Time: Monday 5:00 – 7:45 As the rampant globalization of contemporary culture has made the twenty-first-century world seem more homogenized than ever, this retrospective study of pivotal authors and works that were transformative in the nations within which they were written offers […]

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Fall ’21–Adolescent Literature

ENGL 552: Young Adult Literature Professor: Dr. Tom Thompson Location: Citadel Time: Thursdays, 5:00 – 7:45 This course will introduce you to the amazing variety of young adult literature currently available. Activities will include whole-class and small-group readings, but the emphasis will be on reading and discussing self-selected novels and nonfiction books across a range […]

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Spring ’21–Advanced Composition

ENGL 562: Advanced Composition Professor: Dr. Tom Thompson Location: Citadel Time: Thursdays, 6:00 – 8:45 This course aims to help you become a better writer by challenging you to think critically about the processes of composition; teaching you to adapt your style to your audience, purpose, and context; and providing you with rhetorical strategies to convey […]

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Spring ’21–Victorian Novel

ENGL 526: The Victorian Novel Professor: Dr. Tim Carens Location: CofC Time: Mondays, 6:00 – 8:45 This course aims to introduce you to a diverse range of Victorian novelists and their works.  We will read some fine examples of genres such as domestic realism, social satire, industrial problem, sensation, pastoral tragedy, and imperial quest. The […]

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Spring ’21–Native America

ENGL 576: Native America Professor: Dr. Jesslyn Collins-Frohlich Location: CofC Time: Wednesday 6:00 – 8:45 Using Charleston as a geographical and cultural touchstone, this course draws upon a vast body of novels, poetry, political speeches, and other public documents as well as critical theory written by both native and non-native writers and public figures to move […]

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Spring ’21–Literary Criticism

ENGL 555: Literary Criticism Professor: Dr. Scott Lucas Location: Citadel Time: Thursday 7:00 – 9:45 (Hybrid Offering, Room TBA) In this course, we will study the history and influence of literary criticism in the Western tradition, from its earliest expressions to contemporary theoretical approaches.  We will explore various views on the proper focus and scope […]

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Spring ’21–American Fiction Since 1945

ENGL 529: American Fiction since 1945 Professor: Dr. Lauren Maxwell Location: Citadel Tuesday: 6:00 – 8:45 (Room TBA) In this course, we will examine a wide range of contemporary American fiction and consider how the works explore questions about American identity. Our class discussion will orient the novels and short stories in the context of […]

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Aaron Douglas, Into Bondage (1936)

Fall ’20–African American Literature

Professor Licia Hendriks *Fulfills the American Literature requirement Meets at The Citadel, Tuesday, 4-6:45 This survey course situates the African American literary tradition in a developing domestic and international cultural context, and addresses the ways in which it is (and isn’t) a legitimate offshoot of the overarching category of American Literature.  Encompassed in the discussions […]

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Maria of Brabant's marriage with the French king Philip III of France, miniature in the manuscript Chroniques de France ou de St. Denis, British Library, London.

Fall ’20–Medieval Feminism

Professor Myra Seaman *Fulfills the British Literature before 1800 requirement Meets at the College of Charleston, Wednesday, 6-8:45 The Middle Ages lacked a women’s movement—there were no protests in the streets, no proposals of an Equal Rights Amendment, no calls for women to find self-fulfillment through working outside the home. And yet, women appear everywhere […]

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