{"id":256,"date":"2017-10-13T20:40:23","date_gmt":"2017-10-13T20:40:23","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.macalester.edu\/160-english\/schedules\/"},"modified":"2024-07-24T19:51:46","modified_gmt":"2024-07-24T19:51:46","slug":"schedules","status":"publish","type":"page","link":"https:\/\/www.macalester.edu\/english-and-creative-writing\/schedules\/","title":{"rendered":"Class Schedules"},"content":{"rendered":"
\n <\/a>\n

\n \n Spring 2026<\/a>\n \n \n Fall 2026<\/a>\n \n \n\t\n\t\n\t\n <\/p>\n \n\t

Spring 2026<\/h2>\n

ÈÕº«¾«Æ· the Registrar's Class Schedule for live registration information<\/a><\/p>\n

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Num. \/ Sec. \/ CRN<\/th>\n Name<\/th>\n Days<\/th>\n Time<\/th>\n Room<\/th>\n Instructor<\/th>\n <\/th>\n \n <\/tr>\n <\/thead>\n
ENGL 105-01 32203<\/span><\/td>\n LGBTQ2S+ Literature in America: Identities and Differences in U.S. Literature<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:30 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Rachel Gold\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with WGSS 194-03 (32805)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 137-01 32204<\/span><\/td>\n Novel<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-10:40 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 009\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>James Dawes\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 140-01 32205<\/span><\/td>\n Once Upon a Crime<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>07:00 pm-10:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>THEATR 202\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Michael Householder\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-01 32206<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-10:40 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>CARN 05\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Sarah Ghazal Ali\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Registration limit will be adjusted to save 4 seats for First Years*<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-02 32207<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>10:50 am-11:50 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>CARN 05\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Sarah Ghazal Ali\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Registration limit will be adjusted to save 4 seats for First Years*<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-03 32208<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>12:00 pm-01:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>CARN 304\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Matt Burgess\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Registration limit will be adjusted to save 5 seats for First Years*<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-04 32209<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Cody Klippenstein\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Registration limit will be adjusted to save 4 seats for First Years*<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-05 32210<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-11:10 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Cody Klippenstein\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
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<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-06 32211<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>THEATR 202\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Aurora Masum-Javed\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Registration limit will be adjusted to save 5 seats for First Years*<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-07 32212<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:10 pm-02:10 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>CARN 05\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Michael Kleber-Diggs\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
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<\/p>\n

ENGL 200-01 32213<\/span><\/td>\n Major Medieval and Renaissance British Writers<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>12:00 pm-01:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 010\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Karen Soto\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
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<\/p>\n

ENGL 224-01 32214<\/span><\/td>\n Video Games: Coding and Narrative<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-11:10 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>LIBR 250\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Dawes, Jackson\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with COMP 325-01 (32215)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 225-01 32493<\/span><\/td>\n Musical Fictions<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MUSIC 228\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Mark Mazullo\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with MUSI 225-01 (32492)*<\/p>\n

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\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
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\n From E. M. Forster's Lucy Honeychurch, who "entered into a more solid world when she opened the piano," to James Baldwin's Sonny, who "moved in an atmosphere which wasn't like theirs at all," fictional musicians encounter trouble when negotiating the conflicting realms of art and society. Experts in one kind of expression, they fail in others. What draws these characters to music? What does it offer them? What is its value to us? In the musical novel and short story, we encounter music as an agent of violence, of consolation, of transcendence and redemption as well as damnation. We witness empathy through music, but we also learn that shared feeling can be both beautiful and dangerous, that music unites and divides. This course combines the close reading of literary texts (as well as works of literary theory and musicology) with the examination of the musical contexts that inform and inspire them. We will explore, for example, the relationship between Kazuo Ishiguro's novel The Unconsoled and Richard Wagner's music drama Parsifal. We will talk about syncopation in "jazz" by Charles Mingus and Toni Morrison. We will watch Marguerite Duras and Katherine Mansfield turn innocuous music lessons into spaces of wretchedness. We will try to understand what David Mitchell's young composer Robert Frobisher means when he says, "One writes music because winter is eternal and because, if one didn't, the wolves and blizzards would be at one's throat all the sooner."\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Writing WA\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Fine arts\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n \n Course Materials<\/strong>\n <\/a>\n <\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n \n

ENGL 230-01 32216<\/span><\/td>\n Media Mayhem: Nineteenth Century British Edition<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>10:50 am-11:50 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>THEATR 101\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Mercedes Sheldon\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 235-01 32335<\/span><\/td>\n A Kafkaesque Century<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>HUM 213\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Kiarina Kordela\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with GERM 365-01 (32334)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 240-01 32217<\/span><\/td>\n Irish Literature<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>10:50 am-11:50 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>CARN 204\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Amy Elkins\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 262-01 32218<\/span><\/td>\n Cottagecore<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:10 pm-02:10 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 111\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Amy Elkins\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with ENVI 262-01 (32219)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 263-01 32368<\/span><\/td>\n Muslim Women Writers<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>CARN 204\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Jenna Rice Rahaim\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with INTL 263-01 (32367) and WGSS 263-01 (32369)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 276-01 32220<\/span><\/td>\n African American Literature 1900 to Present<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-11:10 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 111\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Daylanne English\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with AMST 294-03 (32221)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 280-01 32222<\/span><\/td>\n Crafts of Poetry: The Political Poem<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:10 pm-02:10 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Sarah Ghazal Ali\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 281-01 32223<\/span><\/td>\n Fantasy Fiction<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> W \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>07:00 pm-10:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 010\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Emma T\u00f6rzs\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 282-01 32224<\/span><\/td>\n Creative Nonfiction: The Art of the Attempt: The Personal Essay<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:10 pm-02:10 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Michael Prior\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 285-01 32709<\/span><\/td>\n Playwriting<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>THEATR 213\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Alayna Jacqueline\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with THDA 242-01 (32708)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 294-01 32225<\/span><\/td>\n Emily Dickinson and Taylor Swift<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>ARTCOM 202\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>James Dawes\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with WGSS 294-02 (32894)*<\/p>\n

\n
\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
\n

\n Word for word, Emily Dickinson is one of the most powerful writers in the history of the English language. She is the King of All Media\u2014appearing everywhere from novels and video games to prestige TV and pop culture myth. Barring Shakespeare, no other English or American poet has inspired such fervent and lasting devotion.In contemporary music, Taylor Swift is an equally unparalleled force\u2014a songwriter whose work inspires a level of obsession, interpretation, and emotional investment rivaling Dickinson\u2019s. Known for her fascination with Dickinson, Swift is also\u2014 in one of literary history\u2019s most delightful surprises\u2014her distant cousin.What\u2019s behind the cults of Dickinson and Swift? In this class, you\u2019ll find out. We\u2019ll study their poems and songs\u2014works that are aesthetically joyful and existentially wrenching. And we\u2019ll study their legacies: how both have been mythologized, idolized, and contested, used to embody conflicting fantasies of gender, genius, privacy, power, and pain. To study Dickinson and Swift side by side is to trace some of the most revealing\u2014and unresolved\u2014ideological struggles in modern American life.Students will have the opportunity to write creative nonfiction, poetry, and songs. The course fulfills the 19th-century American literature requirement for the English major.\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Writing WC\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Humanities\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n \n Course Materials<\/strong>\n <\/a>\n <\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n \n

ENGL 294-02 32010<\/span><\/td>\n Storied Lives:Japanese-American Experiences and Literature from Incarceration\/Redress to Present Day<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:30 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>HUM 215\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Nagasawa, Prior\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with AMST 294-01 (32009)*<\/p>\n

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\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
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\n In this course, we will examine Japanese American history and literature from the mid-nineteenth century to the present with an eye toward Japanese American activism and resistance. Balancing historical accounts and scholarly texts with poems, stories, and novels by Japanese American authors whose work offers a lens into the past, we will interrogate how Japanese Americans have been historically articulated as both enemy spies and a \u201cmodel minority;\u201d we will also explore the experiences of Japanese Americans in Hawai\u2019i, U.S Imperialism in Asia, Japanese American solidarity with the Civil Rights Movement, and Japanese American organizing against Islamophobia. By pairing critical and creative texts, we will not only consider how Japanese Americans have been positioned within American racial discourse, but also the ways Japanese American activists and activist-writers have challenged and countered such imaginings with their work. We will supplement our class readings and discussions with field trips to Fort Snelling and the College archive in order to better understand the histories of Japanese Americans in Minnesota and even on the Macalester campus. It fulfills the English Department's writers of color requirement.\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Humanities\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n \n Course Materials<\/strong>\n <\/a>\n <\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n \n

ENGL 294-03 32792<\/span><\/td>\n Invisible Cities: Digital Memorialization<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>LIBR 250\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Quigley, Voigt\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with MCST 294-05 (32791)*<\/p>\n

\n
\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
\n

\n In this research-based creative writing course, students will interpret and contribute to the collective memory of the Twin Cities, using their imagination to fill gaps, silences, and erasures in the archive. We will spend the semester building a digital anthology of poetry, fiction, nonfiction and visual art that memorializes vanished and vanishing places in the metro area. To inform our work, we\u2019ll read about critical archiving, material culture, and digital memorialization, and study models from the arts: short stories, films, odes, lyric essays, collages and museum exhibits. We\u2019ll also learn about the city itself through field trips to the Minnesota Historical Society and selected neighborhoods, focusing on suppressed and marginalized histories like the disappearance of Spirit Island, urban renewal in Cedar Riverside, and ongoing efforts to remember George Floyd. Authors and filmmakers will range from danez smith, Mary-Kim Arnold, Macalester\u2019s own Morgan Adamson, and Guy Maddin. Ultimately, students will learn to engage with and curate archival materials, and create a multimedia creative writing piece for the final site. The course will culminate in a public launch of our digital project. No prerequisite\u2013just an interest in researching for creative writing, making multimedia work, or uncovering the past of the place where you live.\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Fine arts\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n \n Course Materials<\/strong>\n <\/a>\n <\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n \n

ENGL 380-01 32227<\/span><\/td>\n Topics in African American Literature: Afrofuturism<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 111\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Daylanne English\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with AMST 380-01 (32228)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 387-01 32229<\/span><\/td>\n International Storytelling<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-10:40 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Matt Burgess\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
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<\/p>\n

ENGL 406-01 32230<\/span><\/td>\n Projects in Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:30 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Emma T\u00f6rzs\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
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<\/p>\n

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\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
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\n This capstone seminar will provide a workshop environment for advanced students with clearly defined projects in poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, drama or a combination of genres. The seminar will center initially on a group of shared readings about the creative process and then turn to the work produced by class members. Through the presentation of new and revised work, and the critiquing of work-in-progress, each student will develop a significant body of writing as well as the critical skills necessary to analyze the work of others. Course may be repeated for credit if the topic is different. Prerequisite(s): ENGL 150,\u00a0plus one creative writing Crafts class at the 200- or 300- level. Capstone courses are intended to be a culminating experience for the major. Students without Senior status will need instructor permission to enroll.\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Writing WC\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Fine arts\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n \n Course Materials<\/strong>\n <\/a>\n <\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n \n <\/tbody>\n <\/table>\n<\/div>\n\n \n\n \n\t

Fall 2026<\/h2>\n

ÈÕº«¾«Æ· the Registrar's Class Schedule for live registration information<\/a><\/p>\n

\n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n \n
Num. \/ Sec. \/ CRN<\/th>\n Name<\/th>\n Days<\/th>\n Time<\/th>\n Room<\/th>\n Instructor<\/th>\n <\/th>\n \n <\/tr>\n <\/thead>\n
ENGL 112-01 10247<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to African American Literature<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>10:50 am-11:50 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 111\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Daylanne English\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with AMST 112-01 (10248)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 115-F1 10251<\/span><\/td>\n Shakespeare<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 010\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Penelope Geng\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*First-Year Course only*<\/p>\n

ENGL 125-F1 10252<\/span><\/td>\n Ghost Stories<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>12:00 pm-01:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Andrea Kaston Tange\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*First-Year Course only*<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-01 10254<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Michael Prior\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*6 seats saved for incoming First-Years*<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-02 10255<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-10:40 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Peter Bognanni\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-03 10256<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>10:50 am-11:50 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Peter Bognanni\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-04 10257<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Emma T\u00f6rzs\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
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<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-05 10258<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Emma T\u00f6rzs\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
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<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-06 10259<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:10 pm-02:10 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Aurora Masum-Javed\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 150-07 10260<\/span><\/td>\n Introduction to Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>02:20 pm-03:20 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Aurora Masum-Javed\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 194-01 10261<\/span><\/td>\n Creativity in the Age of Brain Rot<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-11:10 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>James Dawes\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 194-02 10778<\/span><\/td>\n Literature in Medicine<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>07:00 pm-10:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Michael Householder\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 200-01 10262<\/span><\/td>\n Major Medieval and Renaissance British Writers<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-11:10 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 009\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Penelope Geng\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 215-01 10263<\/span><\/td>\n Movie Medievalisms<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>07:00 pm-10:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 010\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Coral Lumbley\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 216-01 10035<\/span><\/td>\n Graphic Novel<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-11:10 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>ARTCOM 202\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Burgess, Vossler\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with ART 216-01 (10034)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 219-01 10781<\/span><\/td>\n Renaissance Literature: Demonology<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 010\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Penelope Geng\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

\n
\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
\n

\n The story goes like this. While performing Christopher Marlowe\u2019s Doctor Faustus\u2014a play featuring spell-casting, necromancy, and other devilish arts\u2014the actors noticed that \u201cthere was one devil too many amongst them.\u201d They stopped the play; the audience panicked. Whether a true story or not (the anecdote comes down to us through a seventeenth-century source), it captures one of the \u201ccertainties\u201d of the period: that demons, devils, witches, and other things of darkness are a part of the here and now. In this course, we explore sixteenth- and seventeenth-centuries tales of the demonic. At the same time, we examine how authors used the public\u2019s fascination with the supernatural to explore the pressing issues of the day: religious controversies regarding freewill and election, political nightmares of state tyranny and oppression, and social crises surrounding the vanishing culture of hospitality and charity. Hence, just as characters strive to see beyond appearances and outward show, so we shall investigate the religious, political, and legal debates out of which the texts arise. Central to our study are the major works of early modern English literature such as Marlowe\u2019s Dr. Faustus, Shakespeare\u2019s Macbeth, and Milton\u2019s Paradise Lost, and lesser known texts such as The Witch of Edmonton, The Discovery of Witchcraft, and King James VI and I\u2019s Daemonologie. No prior knowledge of conjuring is presumed or required.\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Humanities\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n \n Course Materials<\/strong>\n <\/a>\n <\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n \n

ENGL 262-02 10779<\/span><\/td>\n Nature, Magic, and Myth in the Middle Ages<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>09:40 am-11:10 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>OLRI 301\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Coral Lumbley\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with ENVI 262-02 (10780)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 265-01 10268<\/span><\/td>\n Literature and Human Rights<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>03:00 pm-04:30 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>THEATR 201\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>James Dawes\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 275-01 10269<\/span><\/td>\n African American Literature to 1900<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>02:20 pm-03:20 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 111\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Daylanne English\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with AMST 275-01 (10270)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 284-01 10272<\/span><\/td>\n Screenwriting<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:10 pm-02:10 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 010\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Peter Bognanni\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 285-01 10729<\/span><\/td>\n Playwriting<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> W \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>07:00 pm-10:00 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span> \n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Jarek Pastor\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with THDA 242-01 (10728)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 294-03 10275<\/span><\/td>\n Victorian Culture from Research to Podcast<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>10:50 am-11:50 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 001\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Andrea Kaston Tange\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

\n
\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
\n

\n This class, more than anything, is one that demands curiosity. We will start with some sensational 1860s fiction, read a little Victorian race theory, and dip into everything from cookbooks and photography to corsets and children-as-chimney-sweeps. This course will not cover all there is to know about the British empire in the nineteenth century. Instead, it will give you a taste of key issues (technology, labor, gender- and race-based hierarchies, colonial power) and invite you to find questions about which you want to learn more. Through discussion, you will choose a topic focused on 19th-century British culture and then spend the bulk of the semester on deep research\u2014working with databases, archives, and the internet to learn to search smarter. You will come away with research skills such as asking better questions, following leads in multiple directions, balancing primary and secondary materials, and, ultimately finding the arc of a narrative through all that material. This class aims to foster modes of thinking that can help you uncover information that turns a historical \u201coddity\u201d into a story\u2014an essential skill for anyone who imagines applying humanities training in contexts beyond the classroom. Your findings will yield three projects: a plan for an academic paper, a piece of public writing aimed at a mainstream audience, and a five-minute episode\u2014which you will both write and produce\u2014that will air as part of the class podcast. In each mode, we will talk about essential skills of the genre, including how to pitch public writing and what it means to write for listeners. By the end of the semester, you will have developed archival research skills, the ability to synthesize material in very different ways for different audiences, and a sense of how to get from \u201clook at all this cool stuff I found\u201d to a compelling narrative with a clear point that will keep an audience riveted. Course satisfies 18th-19th century British lit requirement on the major.\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Writing WA\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Humanities\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n \n Course Materials<\/strong>\n <\/a>\n <\/p>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/div>\n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n \n

ENGL 350-01 10777<\/span><\/td>\n 20th Century Poetry<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 009\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Michael Prior\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

ENGL 367-01 10425<\/span><\/td>\n Postcolonial Theory<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span>M W F \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>10:50 am-11:50 am\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>CARN 404\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>David Moore\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

*Cross-listed with INTL 367-01 (10424)*<\/p>\n

ENGL 400-01 10276<\/span><\/td>\n Advanced Methods in Creative-Critical Projects<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>HUM 217\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Coral Lumbley\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

\n
\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
ENGL 406-01 10277<\/span><\/td>\n Projects in Creative Writing<\/td>\n \n Days: <\/span> T R \n <\/td>\n \n Time: <\/span>01:20 pm-02:50 pm\n <\/td>\n \n Room: <\/span>MAIN 002\n <\/td>\n \n Instructor: <\/span>Matt Burgess\n <\/td>\n \n \n <\/td>\n <\/tr>\n
\n

<\/p>\n

\n
\n \n Details\n <\/a>\n
\n

\n This capstone course has two fundamental goals. One: To help students work individually on a substantial creative project of their own choosing. Our second, equally important goal, is to work collectively to build a mutually supportive arts community dedicated to helping everyone achieve their best work.\n <\/p>\n

\n General Education Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Writing WC\n \n \n <\/p>\n

\n Distribution Requirements:<\/strong>\n \n \n Fine arts\n \n \n <\/p>\n

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