Archive | Previous Courses

Grammar in Blocks

Summer ’20: ENGL 553 – Modern English Grammar (online)

Meets at The Citadel, Summer I  Session: May 12—June 23 Online (Fulfills an elective requirement) Prof. Alyson Eggleston This course examines modern English morphology and syntax using formal Minimalist analytical approaches. Additionally, through a typological understanding of common crosslinguistic structures as documented in the World Atlas of Language Structures (WALS), varieties of Standard American English are […]

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A moment from "Far Away", by Caryl Churchill

Spring ’20: ENGL 704 – Modern British Drama (Seminar)

Professor Thomas Horan *Fulfills the British Literature since 1800 requirement Meets at The Citadel, Tuesday, 7-9:45 This course will acquaint you with seminal plays by some of the most influential British and Commonwealth playwrights of the last hundred years. Through short lectures, class conversations, and a bit of impromptu acting, we will contextualize this drama […]

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road & copse of trees

Spring ’20: ENGL 576 – American Regionalism

Professor Mike Duvall **Fulfills the American Literature requirement Meets at the College of Charleston, Wednesday 6-8:45 This course examines the literary history, conventions, and cultural concerns of regional writing (also sometimes called “local color”) in the US at the end of the 19th century via extensive reading of the primary texts (mostly short fiction) and […]

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Spring ’20: ENGL 560 – Film Studies

Professor Sean Heuston *Elective Meets at The Citadel, Thursdays, 7-9:45 This course will examine films from a variety of nations, filmmakers, and genres (everything from classic older films to recent mainstream films to music videos to short online videos) and will consider the ways aspects of filmmaking such as acting, editing, mise en scène, montage, sound, and lighting communicate a film’s construction of meaning. We […]

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Summer ’19: ENGL 554 – History of the English Language

Professor Alyson Eggleston. Elective. Meets at The Citadel, Tuesday & Thursday, 5:30-8:30 p.m., Summer I Evening Session. A historical survey of English language changes with a focus on identifying phonological, morphological, and syntactic features of Old, Middle, Early Modern, and present-day varieties of English. Special emphasis is placed on the predictive sociolinguistic factors of dialectal variation. Language-specific […]

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Teaching with Technology Wordcloud

Fall ’19: ENGL 550 (CofC)/564 (Citadel) – Teaching with Technology

Professor Lauren Maxwell. Elective*. Meets at The Citadel, Wednesday, 4-6:45 p.m. Have you ever wondered how you could incorporate technologies that your students use on a daily basis to enhance your instruction? Would you like to work with current teachers and educational technology specialists to develop web-based projects and technology strategies that you could actually […]

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"Dirty Words" by GaseousClay1 - Flickr

Fall ’19: ENGL 511 – Introduction to Graduate English Studies

Professor James Hutchisson. Required for MA students. Meets at The Citadel, Online with Periodic Scheduled Meetings (TBD). ENGL 511 offers a practical introduction to research and writing for graduate study in English. The course will cover theoretical approaches to literary and cultural interpretation; the discovery, analysis, evaluation, and integration of primary and secondary sources; and strategies […]

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Randolph Hall, CofC

Fall 2019 Courses

ENGL 502 – Shakespeare Professor Devin Byker Fulfills the British Literature before 1800 requirement Meets at the College of Charleston Tuesday, 6-8:45 p.m. ENGL 511 – Introduction to Graduate English Studies Professor James Hutchisson Required for MA students Meets at The Citadel Online with Periodic Scheduled Meetings (TBD) ENGL 552 – Young Adult Literature Professor Thomas […]

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Fall ’19: ENGL 576 – Nineteenth-Century American Novel

Professor Scott Peeples. Fulfills the American Literature requirement. Meets at the College of Charleston, Monday, 7-9:45 p.m. Special Topic in American Literature. In this course, we will examine some of the most influential novels published in the U. S. from approximately 1820 to 1899 — influential in terms of their uses in popular culture, their […]

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