SPRING 2018

ENGL 2110

INTRO TO WORLD LIT

MULTIPLE SECTIONS

ENGL 2120

INTRO TO BRITISH LIT

MULTIPLE SECTIONS

ENGL 2130

INTRO TO AMERICAN LIT

MULTIPLE SECTIONS

ENGL 2160

POP CULTURE

THOMAS  T/R  4PM

ENGL 3225: The History and Future of the Book

From ancient scrolls to digital narratives, the forms that literature takes influences how and what people write and read. This course examines the development of the book-making process using case studies from the Gutenberg Bible to Fifty Shades of Grey.

ECKERT  T/R  9:30

ENGL 3040

INTRO LIT STUDIES

M/W 1:30PM  or  T/R 9:30 

ENGL 3105

PRACTICAL GRAMMAR

MCLEOD  M/W  12PM

ENGL 3250

TOPICS IN THEORY

THOMAS  T/R  5:30

ENGL 3300

MEDIEVAL LIT

LIGHTSEY  T/R  1PM

ENGL 3420: Mythology

Why do some myths and stories persist, change, or come to serve new functions? This course examines how Virgil and Ovid’s stories were later developed in the works of both several early modern English writers and a few recent ones.

DOBRANSKI  T/R  11AM

ENGL 3630

HAUNTING IN BRITISH FICTION

MCLEOD  M/W  3PM

ENGL 3720

20C ENGLISH POETRY

MALAMUD  T/R  4PM

ENGL 3840

POSTMODERN AMERICAN LIT

KOCELA  M/W  5:30

ENGL 3895

COMICS & GRAPHIC NOVELS

COLLINS  TUES  2:30  

ENGL 3970: Caribbean Literature

Caribbean literature has never been more relevant to contemporary social and political issues than it is today. This course provides an introduction to literature from the Caribbean, including Jamaica, Trinidad, Haiti, and the Dominican Republic.

RAJIVA  M/W  1:30

ENGL 3900

IRISH LIT

RICHTARIK  T/R  9:30

ENGL 3920

SOUTHERN LIT

MCHANEY  T/R  11AM

ENGL 3980

WOMEN’S LIT BEFORE 1800

SNOW  T/R  2:30

ENGL 4130

SHAKESPEARE, EARLY WORKS

VOSS  M/W  1:30

ENGL 4300

WRITING BORDERLANDS

GOODMAN  M/W  3PM