Skip to main content Skip to local navigation
Home » Page 13

4000

AP/EN 4722 6.0 Editing Shakespeare

CROSSLISTED COURSE: AP WRIT 4722 This course engages the theoretical and practical problems in Shakespearean editorial scholarship and consequently, in how Shakespeare's canonicity has been transmitted, received, interpreted, and transformed by generations of literary critics. Our historical survey of seminal editions (and their theoretical underpinnings) begins with F1 (1623) and ends with the emergence of […]

AP/EN 4582 6.0 James Joyce

Through selected texts, this course explores the literature of James Joyce. Please consult the departmental supplemental calendar for a detailed course description.Course credit exclusion: AP/EN 4582 6.00. PRIOR TO FALL 2009: Course credit exclusions: AS/EN 4260B 6.00 (prior to Fall/Winter 2003-2004), AS/EN 4268 6.00.

AP/EN 4585 6.0 Modernist Fiction

This course examines the fiction (both short stories and novels) of writers from Britain, Ireland, and America during themodernist period (circa 1890 to 1945).

AP/EN 4851 6.0 Modernism Across the Arts

CROSSLISTED COURSE: AP CLTR 4851 Examines literary, musical, and visual arts of the modernist period to explore why there is an inter and multidisciplinary impetus during the period and how such crossovers between and among different cultural forms contributes to the generation of new modes of artistic material.Course credit exclusion: AP/CLTR 4851 6.00.

AP/EN 4999 6.0 Special Topics

This course seeks to provide students pursuing the Honours Major with specialized approaches to a special topic by exploring research and advanced methods of inquiry.

AP/EN 4999 3.0 Special Topics

This course seeks to provide students pursuing the Honours Major with specialized approaches to a special topic by exploring research and advanced methods of inquiry.

AP/EN 4851 3.0 Modernism Across the Arts

CROSSLISTED COURSE: AP CLTR 4851 Examines literary, musical, and visual arts of the modernist period to explore why there is an inter and multidisciplinary impetus during the period and how such crossovers between and among different cultural forms contributes to the generation of new modes of artistic material.Course credit exclusion: AP/CLTR 4851 6.00.

AP/EN 4751 3.0 The Rhetoric of Science

This course examines scientific texts as rhetorical creations, including how scientific authors seek to persuade by means of appeals to personal credibility, authority, community standards, forensic probability, ethics and utility, and emotion.Course credit exclusions: None. PRIOR TO FALL 2009: Course credit exclusion: AS/EN 4751 3.00.

AP/EN 4750 3.0 Oral Traditions and Professional Writing

Oral composition and performance have existed as professions for some 5000 years. This course surveys the aesthetics, history, techniques, and methods of remuneration of professional oral composition.Course credit exclusions: None. PRIOR TO FALL 2009:  Course credit exclusion: AS/EN 4754 3.00. PRIOR TO FALL 2009: AP/EN 4750 3.00 was AS/EN 4754 3.00