Southern New Hampshire University Undergraduate Catalog 2011-2012

Page 174

Southern New Hampshire University LIT 319 Shakespeare (3 credits) Students will study selected Shakesperian comedies, tragedies and chronicle plays. The course also provides the students with a general overview of the Elizabethan era and the world in which Shakespeare lived and worked. Prerequisite: ENG 120.

LIT 337 Modern Poetry (3 credits) This course immerses students in modernism and postmodernism via British and American poetry. Students will read Frost, Eliot, Pound, Stevens and other major modern and contemporary poets, as well as essays on poetry and artistic ambition in the twentieth century. Prerequisite: ENG 120.

LIT 320 Hemingway’s Paris Years (3 credits) Perhaps more than any other twentieth century American writer, Ernest Hemingway continues to be studied and celebrated throughout the world. This course is designed to explore the man behind the myth. Through reading, writing, discussing, and a trip to Paris—the place where it all truly started — students in this course will gain insight into this complex world icon. Update your passport and come discover the larger picture that made a young Ernest Hemingway from Oak Park, Illinois, into a worldly author that all want to claim as their own. Currently offered only at Seacoast Center. Prerequisite: ENG 120.

LIT 344 Comedy and Satire (3 credits) This course introduces students to an important type of Western literature that is found in almost every genre, from drama (Aristophanes, Moliere, and Wilde), to poetry (Horace, Pope, and Frost), to stories and novels (Aesop, Chaucer, Voltaire, and Gogol). These authors and many others have developed comedy and satire into effective literary tools for critiquing their society. Each instructor will focus on a major period or target of this literature—for example, the eighteenth-century or contemporary times or the medical, religious, or political profession. Prerequisite: ENG 120.

LIT 328 Multi-Ethnic Literature (3 credits) Since the beginnings of American literature, writers have been concerned with defining and creating American identity. After the Civil Rights movement, many writers defined American identity in ethnic and racial terms, arguing for a revised, pluralistic idea of American identity. Students will read fiction, poetry, and essays by twentieth-century American authors who identify with African American, Native American, Asian American, and Chicano heritages. In addition to race and ethnicity, students will discuss how class, native language, religion, gender, sexuality, and history figure into these writers’ images of an American self and community. Prerequisite: ENG 120. LIT 330 Gender and Text (3 credits) Focusing on literary works about women, women’s roles, as well as masculinity and men’s roles, students will analyze how gender, race, sexuality, class, and other factors influence various writers’ representations of gender roles. The course also examines how definitions of gender roles change over time and across cultures. Students will read selections from feminist theory and gender studies that illuminate pervasive assumptions about women and men, past and present. Prerequisite: ENG 120. LIT 332 The Nature Writers (3 credits) This course introduces students to the prose and poetry of major British and American writers and naturalists since the 18th century who observe nature vividly and write about humanity’s relationship with the natural environment. Students will read authors such as Emerson, Thoreau, Dickinson, Wordsworth, Leopold, and Abbey. Prerequisite: ENG 120. LIT 336 Thoreau and His Contemporaries (3 credits) This course considers the works of Henry David Thoreau as a transcendentalist, essayist, poet, naturalist and teacher. Other members of the Concord School, such as Emerson, the Alcotts, and Fuller, are also discussed. Prerequisite: ENG 120. 172

LIT 345 Postcolonial Encounters (3 credits) We will explore an array of regional and national literatures from the “third world,” such as Africa, India, Latin America, and the Caribbean. In addition, we will also address questions of culture and knowledge production in those areas, the dialectic between first and third world, as well as the notions of the modern, civilized metropolitan center and the traditional primitive periphery. We will also take up questions concerning autonomy and authority, power and powerlessness, voice and silence, and the re-presentation of fundamental theoretical concepts like culture, identity, racism, immigration, and decolonization to name a few. Our task, then, is to carefully re-examine postcolonial literature from beyond the western metaphysical lens. Global Marker. Prerequisite: ENG 120. LIT 350 The Black Literary Tradition (3 credits) This course surveys African-American literature from its earliest roots through the slave narratives, the Harlem Renaissance, the Black Arts movement, and into contemporary literature. Students will read works that illuminate both the history of African America and hotly debated ideas of racial identity. Course readings may include works by Washington, DuBois, Ellison, Brooks, and Morrison. Prerequisite: ENG 120. LIT 370 Studies in American Literature (3 credits) This course explores novels, short stories, poetry, drama, and/or non-fiction by American writers, spanning at least two literary periods or historical eras (such as American Colonialism, Renaissance, Realism, Modernism, and Postmodernism) or focusing on one theme (i.e. violence, race, war, business, law, love and marriage, and identity). The topic of the course will vary, depending on the instructor. Readings, films, and lectures on cultural and historical contexts may supplement the literary material. Prerequisite: ENG 120. LIT 375 Studies in British Literature (3 credits) This course examines novels, short stories, poetry, drama, and essays produced by British writers, spanning at least two literary periods or historical eras (such as Renaissance, Romantic, and Postmodern) or focusing on one theme (such as violence, race, war, business, law, love and marriage, and


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