Senior Seminar
Overview
Subject area
ENG
Catalog Number
350
Course Title
Senior Seminar
Department(s)
Description
(May not be taken before 25 credits of the major have been completed.) Topics vary from semester to semester. Students will present reports to the seminar and will prepare at least one major paper. Focus on a literary topic, which will be explored in a group of interrelated works, usually from several genres and periods.Prerequisites: Declared English Major/Minor Prerequisite: Successful completion of ENG 300: 25 completed credits in the major.
Typically Offered
Fall, Spring
Academic Career
Undergraduate
Liberal Arts
Yes
Credits
Minimum Units
3
Maximum Units
3
Academic Progress Units
3
Repeat For Credit
No
Components
Name
Lecture
Hours
3
Course Topic ID
1
Formal Description
18th Century Literature
Course Topic ID
2
Formal Description
Self and Others in Literature
Course Topic ID
3
Formal Description
Contemporary Literature
Course Topic ID
4
Formal Description
Social, Political & Econ Issues Women Devl World
Course Topic ID
5
Formal Description
Irish Literature Post Revival
Course Topic ID
6
Formal Description
Easter Rising 1916-2016-Commemorating Centenry Lit
Course Topic ID
7
Formal Description
Contemporary Fiction: From Flash to Novel
Course Topic ID
8
Formal Description
Southern Gothic: It was a Dark and Stormy Night
Course Topic ID
9
Formal Description
The Politics of Freedom
Course Topic ID
10
Formal Description
Charles Dickens' World
Course Topic ID
11
Formal Description
Crafting Popular Fiction: The Anatomy of Suspense
Course Topic ID
12
Formal Description
Intertextuality
Course Topic ID
13
Formal Description
Feminist Sci-Fi
Course Topic ID
14
Formal Description
Writing and Reading After the English Major
Course Topic ID
15
Formal Description
Irish Gothic
Course Topic ID
16
Formal Description
James Baldwin
Course Topic ID
17
Formal Description
Rare Books and Manuscripts Research
Course Topic ID
18
Formal Description
Keats at 200: Archives and Afterlives
Course Topic ID
19
Formal Description
Research and Writing
Course Topic ID
20
Formal Description
World Lit and Global Crisis
Course Topic ID
21
Formal Description
The Literary Bronx
Course Topic ID
22
Formal Description
Young Adult Fiction
Course Topic ID
23
Formal Description
Contemporary Irish Literature
Course Topic ID
24
Formal Description
Film Studies
Course Topic ID
25
Formal Description
Hybrid Poetry and 21st C Epics
Course Topic ID
26
Formal Description
Tattoo in/as Literature
Course Topic ID
27
Formal Description
Renaissance Embodiment: Race & Sexuality
Course Topic ID
28
Formal Description
For the Love of Books: Book Studies & Bibliography
Course Topic ID
29
Formal Description
Greatest Hits of Irish Lit
Course Topic ID
30
Formal Description
Literature After the Bomb
Course Topic ID
31
Formal Description
Poetry and Women
Course Topic ID
32
Formal Description
James Baldwin and His Circle
Course Topic ID
33
Formal Description
Writing About Art
Course Topic ID
34
Formal Description
Drama!
Course Topic ID
35
Formal Description
Black Film Soundtracks
Course Topic ID
36
Formal Description
Novels in an Age of Novelty
Course Topic ID
37
Formal Description
Archives
Course Topic ID
38
Formal Description
Global Politics of Violence and Non-Violence
Course Topic ID
39
Formal Description
Jazz: A Phenomenon in Music and Words
Course Topic ID
40
Formal Description
Reading and Writing Change
Course Topic ID
41
Formal Description
Film and Genre
Course Topic ID
42
Formal Description
The 1970s
Course Topic ID
43
Formal Description
Black Chicago Renaissance
Course Topic ID
44
Formal Description
Horror Films and Literature
Course Topic ID
45
Formal Description
Modes of Revisioning
Course Topic ID
46
Formal Description
(dis)enchantment
Course Topic ID
47
Formal Description
Writing About Trauma
Requisites
036268