Lists of texts and readings for courses may be obtained from the Secretary of the Department of English. Courses for which there is insufficient demand will not be given.
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ENGL 1000 and 1090 are courses for students who have attained a standard in Level III English acceptable to the Department.
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ENGL 1001, 1110, 1191, 1192, 1193 are courses which may be taken by students who have successfully completed 1000 or 1090.
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ENGL 1000, 1001, 1090, 1191, 1192, 1193 are courses which may be taken by students who have successfully completed 1020 or the former 1030.
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Students cannot receive credit for more than one of ENGL 1000 or 1090, or for more than one of 1001, 1110, 1191, 1192, or 1193.
A tentative list of upcoming English course offerings can be found at www.mun.ca/hss/courses.php.
English courses are designated by ENGL.
102F
Foundation English
is a non-credit course designed for students whose first language is other than English and whose knowledge and use of English do not meet the standards for entry into the regular first-year English courses.
CH: 0
LC: 4 hours of lecture plus one hour conversation class
LH: 1
UL: may not be taken concurrently with a 1000-level English course
1020
Writing for Second Language Students I
is an introduction to the use of English with emphasis on composition for non-native English-speaking students. This course is for students whose first language is not English and who have passed 102F or have attained a standard acceptable to the University on an approved language proficiency exam such as IELTS, TOEFL or CAEL. Students who have passed ENGL 1020 may take as their second English course one of ENGL 1021, 1090, 1191, 1192, or 1193. Students completing this course may elect to use it with ENGL 1021 to fulfill the Bachelor of Arts Language Study Requirement.
CR: the former ENGL 1030, ENGL 1110
1021
Writing for Second Language Students II
develops skills in critical reading and writing of academic English, with emphasis on research and writing syntheses from sources, for non-native English-speaking students. Students completing this course may elect to use it with ENGL 1020 to fulfill the Bachelor of Arts Language Study Requirement.
PR: ENGL 1020
1090
Critical Reading and Writing: Telling Stories
is a foundational course for all university programs undertaken at Memorial University of Newfoundland, since understanding how stories work is fundamental lo all disciplines. This course focuses on the language we encounter in our reading and use to record our reading experiences. Emphasis is placed on critical reading and writing: analyzing texts, framing and using questions, constructing essays, organizing paragraphs, conducting research, quoting and documenting, revising and editing. All sections of this course follow Critical Reading and Writing Course Guidelines available at www.mun.ca/hss/crw.
CR: ENGL 1000 or the former 1080
1110
Critical Reading and Writing in Rhetoric
is an examination of prose texts such as essays, articles and reviews. Students write for different purposes and audiences. Emphasis is placed on critical reading and writing: analyzing texts, framing and using questions, constructing essays, organizing paragraphs, conducting research, quoting and documenting, revising and editing. All sections of this course follow Critical Reading and Writing Course Guidelines available at www.mun.ca/hss/crw and build on foundational Critical Reading and Writing content delivered in ENGL 1090.
CR: ENGL 1020, the former ENGL 1030
1191
Critical Reading and Writing: Self and Society
studies a variety of texts that explore the interaction between individual desires and social identities. Building on foundational critical reading and writing skills acquired in English 1090, students gain further experience with analyzing texts, framing and using questions, constructing essays, organizing paragraphs, conducting research, quoting and documenting, revising and editing. All sections of this course follow Critical Reading and Writing Course Guidelines available at www.mun.ca/hss/crw and build on foundational CRW content delivered in ENGL 1090. Bachelor of Arts students should normally choose the second Critical Reading and Writing course from a discipline listed in the Breadth of Knowledge Requirement, unless pursuing a Major or Minor in English.
CR: ENGL 1110 and the former ENGL 1030, 1101, 1102, 1103
PR: ENGL 1000 or 1020 or the former 1030 or the former 1080 or 1090
1192
Critical Reading and Writing: Imagined Places
studies a variety of texts that explore imaginary (or imaginatively reconstructed) places and the responses of the humans who inhabit them. Building on foundational critical reading and writing skills acquired in English 1090, students gain further experience with analyzing texts, framing and using questions, constructing essays, organizing paragraphs, conducting research, quoting and documenting, revising and editing. All sections of this course follow Critical Reading and Writing Course Guidelines available at www.mun.ca/hss/crw. Bachelor of Arts students should normally choose the second Critical Reading and Writing course from a discipline listed in the Breadth of Knowledge Requirement, unless pursuing a Major or Minor in English.
CR: ENGL 1110, and the former ENGL 1101, 1102, 1103
PR: ENGL 1000 or 1020 or the former 1030 or the former 1080 or 1090
1193
Critical Reading and Writing: Ways of Reading
focuses on the process of reading, on specific strategies and approaches that we take in our encounters with texts and on the ways we report those encounters. Building on foundational critical reading and writing skills acquired in English 1090, students gain further experience analyzing texts, framing and using questions, constructing essays, organizing paragraphs, conducting research, quoting and documenting, revising and editing. All sections of this course follow Critical Reading and Writing Course Guidelines available at www.mun.ca/hss/crw. Bachelor of Arts students should normally choose the second Critical Reading and Writing course from a discipline listed in the Breadth of Knowledge Requirement, unless pursuing a Major or Minor in English.
CR: ENGL 1110 and the former ENGL 1101, 1102, 1103
PR: ENGL 1000 or 1020 or the former 1030 or the former 1080 or 1090
2000
Major Writers to 1800
is an introduction to the work of major authors by detailed study of selected texts. There is an emphasis on the various skills of essay writing.
CR: ENGL 2005
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2001
Major Writers from 1800
is an introduction to the work of major authors by detailed study of selected texts. There is an emphasis on the various skills of essay writing.
CR: ENGL 2007
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2002
Drama
is a survey of drama from the Greeks to the present day.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2003
Poetry
is a study of poetry, which aims to increase the student's critical understanding and appreciation of poetry, conducted through an examination of a wide variety of kinds and techniques.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2004
Short Fiction
is a study of short fiction which aims to give the students an appreciation of the short story as a literary form. The course will deal with the nature, history and development of short fiction by considering a variety of authors and stories.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2010
Introduction to Professional Writing
requires students to analyze published essays for their aims, strategies, and discourses. Students practice writing as a process of discovery in the context of a learning community: for instance identifying questions to explore, free-writing, finding a focus, drafting, peer-editing, revising, editing. Each student produces a portfolio of revised, edited work.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2013
Twentieth Century Musicals
(same as Music 2013) is a survey of twentieth-century musical theatre. Selected works, presenting different styles and periods, will be examined in detail. There will be a strong, required listening/viewing component to this course. The ability to read music is not required.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
UL: cannot be taken for credit by students enrolled in the Bachelor of Music program
2122
Introduction to World Literature in English
addresses contemporary literature consciously pre-occupied with global cultural identities and practices. The writers studied address transnational issues such as migration, environmental and human rights, travel and tourism, and the legacies of European colonialism. All sections of this course follow International Studies guidelines available at www.mun.ca/hss/IS.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2150
Modern Canadian Fiction
is a study of representative Canadian fiction since 1930, including such authors as Ross, Buckler, Davies, Laurence, Atwood, Ondaatje and Findley.
CR: ENGL 2146
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2151
New Canadian Fiction
is a study of fiction of Canadian writers since the 1970s.
CR: ENGL 2146
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2160
North American Aboriginal Literature
will introduce Aboriginal literature in a social, political and historical context. Beginning with the oral tradition (songs, narratives, legends, and orations), it will focus on different works by North American Aboriginal writers: poetry, drama, short stories and novels.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2211
The English Novel from 1800-1900
is a survey of representative texts from 1800-1900.
CR: the former ENGL 2200
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2212
The Twentieth-Century British Novel
is a survey of representative texts from 1900-2000.
CR: the former ENGL 2201
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2216
American Literature from 1776-1865
is a survey of American fiction, non-fiction, drama, and poetry from the Revolution to the Civil War era.
CR: the former ENGL 2214, ENGL 2215
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2217
American Literature from 1865-1945
is a survey of American fiction, non-fiction, drama, and poetry from the Civil War era to the end or the Second World War.
CR: the former ENGL 2213, the former ENGL 2214, ENGL 3215
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2218
American Literature since 1945
is a survey of American fiction, non-fiction, drama, and poetry from the end of the Second World War until the present.
CR: the former ENGL 2213, ENGL 3215
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2390
Introduction to Modern English Structures
is a practical introduction to the descriptive study of the English language with emphasis on syntax.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2400
History of the English Language to 1500
(same as Linguistics 2400) is a study of the early stages of the English Language: the Indo-European background; pronunciation and spelling, grammar, vocabulary and meaning in Old and Middle English.
CR: Linguistics 2400
PR: ENGL 2390 or the former Linguistics 2103
2450
Theatre
(same as the former English 3350) is an introduction to principles of directing and acting, through lectures, discussion and stage production.
AR: attendance is required
CR: the former English 3350
OR: three hours of workshops
2451
Physical Stage and Video Technique
(same as the former English 3351) is an introduction to the fundamentals and vocabulary of design, lighting and stagecraft and film/ video craft, including sound, properties, etc.
AR: attendance is required
CR: the former English 3351
OR: three hours of workshops
2600
Introduction to Middle English
is a study of the language and literature of the later medieval period, excluding Chaucer.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2811
Science Fiction and Fantasy
introduces the literary sub-genres of science fiction and fantasy. It examines the traditional canonical backgrounds from which popular literatures derive, studies the formulaic patterns and explores the place of science fiction and fantasy in popular culture.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2812-2820 (Excluding 2813 and 2815)
Special Topics
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2813
Reading Images
(same as Communication Studies 2813) introduces students to the field of visual culture and familiarizes them with both the vocabulary and the methodologies to examine images critically.
CR: Communication Studies 2813
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2815
Introduction to Literary Theory and Criticism
is an introduction to the study of contemporary theory and criticism with an emphasis on its application in the reading of literary texts.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2850
What is Film?
introduces students to the critical analysis of film, focusing on how its elements create style and meaning.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2851
Introduction to Film Form and Film Theory
develops students' visual literacy and introduces film theories focused on, for example, reproduction technologies and cultures of spectatorship.
PR: 6 credit hours in English at the 1000 level
2905
Introduction to Creative Writing
will introduce students to the basic techniques and tools in the writer’s tool box in order to write original fiction, non-fiction and poetry. This course will explore examples of literature from these three genres and give students the opportunity to participate in peer-assessment and workshop critiques in order to develop the necessary skills for critical reading and creative writing.
PR: 6 credit hours of English including ENGL 1090 or the former 1080, or permission of the instructor
3001
Satire
is a study of satire from classical times, examining major forms of satiric expression such as the monologue, the parody and the long narrative.
CR: ENGL 3245
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3002
Medieval Books
(same as Medieval Studies 3000, History 3000, Religious Studies 3000) is an examination of the development and role of the manuscript book during the Middle Ages. Topics covered will include book production and dissemination; authors, scribes and audiences; and various kinds of books (e.g. glossed Bibles, anthologies, books of hours, etc.) and their uses.
CR: Medieval Studies 3000, History 3000, Religious Studies 3000
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3006
Women Writers of the Middle Ages
(same as Medieval Studies 3006 and Gender Studies 3001) will study selections from the considerable corpus of women's writings in the Medieval period, as well as issues which affected women's writing. All selections will be read in English translation.
CR: Medieval Studies 3006 and Gender Studies 3001
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3009
Literature and the Environment
examines literary writing concerned with relationships between humans and the nonhuman world. Possible topics include human-animal relationships; Indigenous relationships to the land; social justice and environment; traditions of environmental writing in different time periods, locations, and genres; writing ecological catastrophe; imagining the Anthropocene.
PR: 6 credit hours in Critical Reading and Writing courses
3021
Medieval and Tudor Drama
is a study of the development of pre-Shakespearean drama, including representative cycle plays, morality plays, moral interludes, comedies, tragedies, folk plays, and royal entries.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3022
English Renaissance Drama
is a study of the development of English drama (excluding Shakespeare) from 1580 to 1642.
CR: ENGL 4317
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3100
The Poem Close Up
explores in detail a wide range of poetry, using one or more of a variety of methods, contemporary and traditional, designed to lead an understanding of the thematic and technical of individual poems.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3130
The English Novel to 1800
is a study of eighteenth-century English novels by such authors as Burney, Defoe, Fielding, Manley, Richardson, Sterne and Smollett.
CR: the former ENGL 2210
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3152
Canadian Literature to 1918
is a study of the development of Canadian literature from its beginnings to the end of World War I.
CR: ENGL 3145, 3147, or the former 3150
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3153
Canadian Literature, 1918-1945
- inactive course.
3155
Newfoundland Literature
is a study of literature from the island of Newfoundland with emphasis on representative writers since 1900.
CR: ENGL 2155
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3156
Modern Canadian Drama
Drama is a study of a number of representative plays which illustrate the development of modern drama and theatre in Canada.
CR: ENGL 4307
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3157
Canadian Literature 1945-1970
is a study of the development of Canadian literature from 1945 to 1970.
CR: ENGL 3148, the former ENGL 3146, the former ENGL 3151, the former ENGL 3154
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3158
Canadian Literature 1970 to the Present
is a study of recent developments in Canadian literature.
CR: ENGL 3148, the former ENGL 3146, the former ENGL 3151, the former ENGL 3154
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3160
Empire and After: Introduction to Post-Colonial Writing
offers a broad overview of works which responds to the global phenomenon of British imperialism, and its persistent international consequences. Utilizing a cross-continental comparative frame, the course addresses the question: what happens when cultures collide? All sections of this course follow International Studies guidelines available at www.mun.ca/hss/IS.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3161
Australian Literature
focuses on contemporary writing by established Australian authors. It pays particular attention to the after effects of colonialism and the formulation of national identities.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3172
Irish Poetry
focuses on major Irish poets, mainly of the twentieth century.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3175
Irish Literature
focuses on major Irish writers in at least two genres.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3190
Scottish Literature
is a study of representative Scottish poetry and prose from the eighteenth to the twenty-first century including selected works by such writers as Boswell, Burns, Hogg, Scott, Stevenson, Spark, and Rankin.
CR: ENGL 3192
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3200
Shakespeare
is a study of tragedies and romances such as Romeo and Juliet, Julius Caesar, Hamlet, Othello, King Lear, Antony and Cleopatra, Macbeth, Pericles, The Winter’s Tale, The Tempest.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3201
Shakespeare
is a study of comedies and histories such as Love’s Labour’s Lost, The Taming of the Shrew, A Midsummer Night’s Dream, The Merchant of Venice, Much Ado About Nothing, As You Like It, Twelfth Night, Measure for Measure, 1 Henry IV, 2 Henry IV, Henry V.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3260
American Drama
is a study of plays by dramatists from a range of periods, organized by theme.
CR: ENGL 4308
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3261
American Prose Fiction
is a study of novels and/or short fiction from various periods in American history, organized by theme.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3262
American Poetry
is a study or poetry and verse from various periods in American history, organized by theme.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3263
American Cultural Traditions
focuses on the literature produced within a particular political or cultural community in the United States, such as African-American, Hispanic, Asian, Indigenous, feminist, LGBTQ, proletarian, and/or socialist.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3265
Hardboiled Fiction
investigates the rich literary history of hard-boiled fiction through representative texts and critically explore how hardboiled aesthetic practices continue to get nuanced in relation to changing socioeconomic contexts.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3266-3274
Special Topics in American Literature
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3460
Folklore and Literature
(same as Folklore 3460) examines the interrelationships among folklore forms and literary genres, the influence of oral traditions on written literatures, and consider the theoretical issues raised by these interrelationships. The primary emphasis is on the interpretation of literature from the perspective of folk tradition.
CR: Folklore 3460, the former ENGL 4450, and the former Folklore 4450
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3500
Introduction to Old English Language and Literature
introduces students to the basic elements of Old English grammar and vocabulary through the practice of translating one or more texts from Old English into modern English and the study of the Old English corpus in modern translations.
CR: the former ENGL 250A/B
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level, or enrollment in the Certificate in Ancient Languages
3600
Chaucer
is a study of representative poems.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3710-3729
Special Topics in English: Harlow
is available only as part of the Harlow Campus semester.
PR: permission of the instructor
3811
Reading The Lord of the Rings
considers the various ways the text has been read; as escapist fantasy, as a moral guide, as a political treatise, as a religious tract, as ecological doctrine.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000-level
3812-3829 (Excluding 3813, 3816, 3817, 3819, 3820 and 3828)
Special Topics
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000-level
3813
Theories of National Cinema
3817
Writing and Gender II
draws on a variety of writing to examine questions related to the study of gender. Possible topics may include the changing constructions of gender and the intersections of gender with race, class, nationality and sexuality.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3819
The Gothic
offers an introduction to the Gothic mode in a selection of texts from the eighteenth century to the present. Topics covered may include the Gothic’s recurrent themes of sin, sex, violence, and religion; its subversive response to dominant cultures and historical contexts; and its philosophical roots in sensibility, horror, and the sublime.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3820
Poetry of Newfoundland and Labrador
focuses on the poetry of Newfoundland and Labrador. While the work of early writers will be considered, the emphasis is on the poetry of the twentieth century and of our own century.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000-level
3828
The Middle Ages and the Movies
(same as Medieval Studies 3828) explores the ways medieval sources are represented in modern films, and how modern cultural and political concerns influence how these medieval sources are presented. Through a selection of medieval films and their historical and literary inspirations, we will see how films shape our present-day concepts of history, identity, freedom, knowledge, and creativity.
CR: Medieval Studies 3828
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000-level
3830
Women Writers
is a course setting women writers in the context of literary history.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3840-3870 (Excluding 3843, 3844 and 3848)
Special Topics
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3843
Introduction to Comics
will familiarize students with the study of comics. This course will examine a large selection of comics and current theoretical debates surrounding the relation between word and image, in general, and the workings of graphic narrative, in particular.
CR: ENGL 2244
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3844
Science Fiction - The Golden Age and Beyond
will examine the development of science fiction from its beginnings to the present day. It will consider some of the major authors, theories, forms and concerns that have been the focus of the genre.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
3848
The Western
introduces one of the world's most iconic and instantly recognizable genres. This course explores the fictional frontiers of the Wild West through classics and variants of the genre, showcasing examples that both establish and question myths of the West. In situating the texts alongside historical developments and changing attitudes, the course also situates them regionally along East-West/North-South axes, considering too the Western's position in Western literature.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000-level
3900
Introduction to Creative Writing: Fiction
is conducted as a workshop using models of contemporary writing and the students' own work. Each student will be required to submit work regularly.
CR: credit may be obtained for only two of ENGL 3900, 3901, and 3905
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
3901
Introduction to Creative Writing: Poetry
is conducted as a workshop using models of contemporary writing and the students' own work. Each student will be required to submit work regularly.
CR: credit may be obtained for only two of ENGL 3900, 3901, and 3905
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
3902
Introduction to Creative Writing: Playwriting
is conducted as a workshop using models of contemporary dramatic writing and the students’ own work. Each student will be required to submit work regularly.
CR: the former ENGL 3842
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
3903
Introduction to Creative Writing: Nonfiction
is conducted as a workshop using models of contemporary writing and the students’ own work. Each student will be required to submit work regularly.
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
3904
Writing Place
is conducted as an online workshop for writers interested in exploring the possibilities for engaging with place through writing creative non-fiction.
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
3910
Investigative Writing
will permit students to learn to draft and edit short investigative pieces; and they complete an article or essay, and an investigative project that attends to ethics guidelines, research, documentation, interviewing protocols, and writing and editing for a specific context. The course is conducted as a seminar using the students’ own work. Each student will be required to submit work regularly. Some work may be done collaboratively.
PR: Normally, submission of a portfolio specified by the instructor and permission of the instructor. Class size will be limited.
3911
Writing Satire
uses models of contemporary satire as a basis for students’ own work. Guest satirists will be invited to meet with students who will write satirical sketches, articles and/or plays based on their own experiences in response to current affairs and topical items of interest. Students will engage in at least one collaborative project.
PR: Normally, submission of a portfolio specified by the instructor and permission of the instructor. Class size will be limited.
3912
Songwriting
uses models from early ballads to contemporary hits and near-misses as a basis for students’ own work. Guest songwriters will be invited to meet with students to discuss their compositions. Students will analyse song lyrics, write their own songs and collaborate on a major class project. The ability to sing or play a musical instrument or to read or write sheet music, while desirable, is not required.
3913
Speechwriting
(same as Communication Studies 3913) develops the student’s ability to speak on all occasions, formal and informal, expected and unexpected. Students will deliver speeches of varying types and lengths on a regular basis throughout the semester.
CR: Communication Studies 3913
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 1000-level
3920
Reviewing
permits students to analyse and practice reviewing of three kinds: (a) performance; (b) film, TV, video; c) books.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
4000
English Literature and History of Ideas I
is a study of European thought and culture as they affect the history and development of English literature from the Middle Ages to the eighteenth century.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4001
English Literature and the History of Ideas II
is a study of European thought and culture as they affect the history and development of English literature from the eighteenth century to the present.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4010
Sixteenth-Century English Literature
focuses on the prose and poetry of representative authors of the period and provides a critical overview of the literary, historical, social, political, and religious context.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4030
Seventeenth-Century English Literature
focuses on the prose and poetry of representative authors of the period and provides a critical overview of the literary, historical, social, political, and religious context.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4040
Restoration and Early Eighteenth-Century British Literature
is a study of selected works by such authors as Dryden, Swift, Pope, Fielding, and Lady Mary Wortley Montagu.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4041
Later Eighteenth-Century British Literature
is a study of selected works by such authors as Boswell, Burney, Johnson, Smollett, and Sterne.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4050
British Romanticism I
is a study of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century texts in their social, political, and cultural contexts, with particular focus on the first generation of Romantic writers.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4051
British Romanticism II
is a study of late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century texts in their social, political, and cultural contexts, with particular focus on the second generation of Romantic writers.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4060
Victorian Literature I
is a study of selected works by such writers as Carlyle, Dickens, Tennyson, the Brownings, and the Brontës.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4061
Victorian Literature II
is a study of selected works by such writers as Thackeray, Gaskell, George Eliot, Arnold, and the Rossettis.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4070
British Literature: Decadence and After
is a study of late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century texts in their social, historical, and cultural contexts.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4071
British Modernisms
is a study of representative texts from 1920-1945 in their social, historical, and cultural contexts.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4080
British Postmodern Literature and Beyond
is a study of representative texts from World War II to the present in their social, historical, and cultural contexts.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4100
Critical Theory I
is a survey of critical approaches to literature, from Plato to the end of the nineteenth century. Students are advised to take this course towards the end of their program.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4101
Critical Theory II
is a survey of critical approaches to literature in the twentieth century. Students are advised to take this course towards the end of their program.
CR: ENGL 4105
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4210
Shakespeare's English History Plays
is an advanced course focusing on such plays as King John, Richard II, 1 Henry IV, 2 Henry IV, Henry V, 1 Henry VI, 2 Henry VI, 3 Henry VI, Richard III, Henry VIII.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4211
Shakespeare's Roman and Greek Plays
is an advanced course focusing on such plays as Titus Andronicus, Julius Caesar, Antony and Cleopatra, Troilus and Cressida, Coriolanus, Timon of Athens, Cymbeline.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4271
Topics in Early American Literature and Culture
is an advanced seminar in early American literature focused on a key issue, concept, literary movement, or author.
CR: the former ENGL 4251, the former ENGL 4260
PR: 3 credit hours at the 3000 level
4272
Topics in Contemporary American Literature and Culture
is an advanced seminar in contemporary American literature focused on a key issue, concept, literary movement, or author.
CR: the former ENGL 4261, the former ENGL 4270
PR: 3 credit hours at the 3000 level
4275-4285
Special Topics in American Literature
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4300
Modern Drama I
examines representative plays from Ibsen to the present day, principally of the realist tradition.
CR: ENGL 3275
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4301
Modern Drama II
examines representative twentieth-century plays from the traditions of expressionism, surrealism, and the theatre of the absurd.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4302
Contemporary British Drama
is a study of representative dramatic works of contemporary British drama.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4400
Directing
is the analysis, production plans and execution of selected projects.
AR: attendance is required
PR: ENGL 2451 (or the former ENGL 3351) or permission of the instructor. Admission priority will be given to the student in the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique.
4401
Producing the Play
is a full semester working with a selected play, to culminate in public performance. Students will be required to participate fully in all aspects of the production, except direction, which will be the responsibility of the instructor.
AR: attendance is required
PR: admission priority will be given to the student in the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique
4403
Etymology-History of English Words
- inactive course.
4421
English Dialectology II
(same as Linguistics 4421) is field-work and transcription; modern linguistic geography; structuralist dialectology; occupational dialects; other recent approaches.
CR: Linguistics 4421
PR: the former ENGL 4420, 3 credit hours in English at the 2000 level
4422
Style in Literature
is about how your writing compares to other people's. This course is an opportunity to understand the meaning not only of what you write, but also how. The meaning is sometimes political on a large scale, so we will also learn various methods of measuring styles.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4500
Advanced Old English Language and Literature
is a detailed study of one or more major texts in Old English, depending on student interest.
PR: ENGL 3500, 3 additional credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4600
Chaucer and His Contemporaries
is an in-depth study of some of the major writers of the fourteenth century.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level. ENGL 2600 or 3600 is recommended.
4601
Medieval Romance Literature
is a study of representative texts of the medieval romance genre from the twelfth to the fifteenth century.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4605-4615
Special Topics in Medieval Language and Literature
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4810
Angry Young Adaptation
explores post-war, mid-twentieth-century literary works and their filmic adaptations that capture the socio-economic frustrations of the working class (mostly youth) in England, as well as their anger-fuelled ideological commitments to socialist ideals and the anarchistic undermining of figures of institutional authority.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4811-4818 (Excluding 4817)
Special Topics
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4817
Utopias and Dystopias in Literature
is a study of representative literary utopias and dystopias, both classic and modern.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4819
Imagining Islands
examines how island spaces are conceived in both historical and contemporary literary texts. Figured as utopias and dystopias, paradises and penitentiaries, islands have long proved a rich and malleable imaginative terrain for creative writers.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4821
Canadian Literature: Imagining Worlds
is a study of some of the main concepts in Canadian culture up to World War II as they affect the history and development of Canadian Literature.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4822
Canadian Literature: Making it New
is a study of some of the main concepts in Canadian culture since World War II as they affect the history and development of Canadian Literature.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4843
Graphic Memoir
examines a broad spectrum of graphic memoirs taking into account theoretical developments in both comics' studies and autobiographical studies.
CR: ENGL 3841
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4850
Contemporary Canadian Poetry
is a seminar course in contemporary Canadian poetry. Students will have the opportunity to study collections by six English Canadian contemporary poets - not just new work by established older writers, but also first collections by younger writers. The work of poets from across Canada will be chosen.
CR: ENGL 3148
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4851
Canadian Exploration Literature
will examine Canada’s early exploration and travel literature and show how it has shaped our contemporary fiction. Early texts may be studied from an anthology of exploration writings, such as Germaine Warkentin's Canadian Exploration Literature: An Anthology. Several contemporary novels will also be studied and may include Wayne Johnston's The Navigator of New York and John Steffler's The Afterlife of George Cartwright.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4852-4860
Special Topics in Canadian Literature
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 levels
4900
Book History and Print Culture I
is an introduction to bibliographical and textual studies to 1800. Areas covered may include the book as a material object; the history of the book; manuscripts; the spread of printing; the hand-press period; editing of texts; the evolution of the library; origins of intellectual property; freedom of the press; aspects of literary detection, forgery and plagiarism.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4901
Book History and Print Culture II
is an introduction to bibliographical and textual studies from 1800 to the present day. Areas covered may include the book as a material object; the history of the book; machine-press period; industrialization of printing; globalization of the book trade; intellectual property and copyright; electronic book; digital literacy; digital literatures.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4910
Advanced Creative Writing: Fiction
is a workshop for students who wish to write publishable literary fiction. Students will be expected to produce at least 15,000 words during the semester. Regular participation is also required.
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
4911
Advanced Creative Writing: Poetry
is conducted as a workshop uses models of contemporary writing and the students' own work. This course is designed to develop further the technical skill of those students who have reached a high level of achievement in the introductory creative writing course in poetry, English 3901 (or who have a body of work of exceptional accomplishment) and to help them move towards publication in literary journals and chapbooks.
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
4912
Advanced Creative Writing: Playwriting
is conducted as a workshop using models of contemporary dramatic writing and the students' own work. Each student will be required to submit work regularly.
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
4913
Advanced Creative Writing: Nonfiction
is conducted as a seminar using models of contemporary writing and the students’ own work. Each student will be required to submit work regularly.
PR: Normally, admission to this course will be based on the instructor's evaluation of the student's writing in the form of a writing portfolio submitted in the weeks prior to the beginning of the course (refer to the Diploma in Creative Writing). Class size will be limited.
4914
Advanced Editing
is editing for the workplace: An intensive course in drafting and editing. Students will be expected to work both individually and collaboratively.
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 3000 level
4920-4930
Special Topics in Creative Writing
will have topics to be studied announced by the Department.
PR: Normally, submission of a portfolio specified by the instructor and permission of the instructor. Class size will be limited.
4999
Essay for Honours Candidates
is required as part of the Honours program.
5000
Instructional Field Placement
is a 3 credit hour course which occurs upon completion of course work in the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique. The curriculum emphasis is on the application of acquired skills. Continuing the project-oriented structure built into the practical courses, students will be placed with existing projects in the professional communities of film, television, theatre or video.
AR: attendance is required
CH: 3
PR: ENGL 2450, 2451 (or the former 3350, 3351) and 4400, and two of ENGL 4401 and Communication Studies 3816 (or the former ENGL 3816) and Communication Studies 4402, (or the former ENGL 4402) with an overall average of 75% in these courses. Restricted to students in the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique. Admission is by application to the Program Coordinator, normally at least three months before the beginning of the placement, and is limited to students who at the time of admission have completed the six courses listed above with an overall average of at least 75% and who already hold a first degree or are in their final year of a degree program as confirmed by the Office of the Registrar.
UL: can be used for credit only towards the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique
A tentative list of upcoming Communication Studies course offerings can be found at www.mun.ca/hss/courses.php.
Communication Studies courses are designated by CMST.
2000
Critical Approaches to Popular Culture
considers critical issues and approaches in the study of popular culture. It will explore the ways in which everyone is both a user of and is used by popular culture. A variety of critical approaches to studying popular culture will be examined: Production, Texts, Audience, and History.
2001
Introduction to Communication Theory
provides an introduction to theoretical approaches to organization, use and manipulation of language, including semiotics, performativity, mass and group communications, sociolinguistics and interpersonal communication. We will examine notions of influence, rhetoric, social judgment, deception, subject formation, globalization and cultural hybridity within the field of communications.
PR: prior completion of CMST 2000 is encouraged
2813
Reading Images
(same as English 2813) introduces students to the field of visual culture and familiarizes them with both the vocabulary and the methodologies to examine images critically.
CR: English 2813
PR: 6 credit-hours in English at the 1000-level
3000
Emerging Media: Social Media Platforms
explores the historical, technological, economic and social dynamics associated with the rise of social media.
PR: English 1090 or permission of the instructor
3001
Media and Urban Life
explores the theoretical, representational, and experiential intersections between modern media and urban cultures. The course will foreground how recent media theory has been shaped by important theoretical works in the study of urban societies.
3010-3020
Special Topics in Communication Studies
will have topics to be studied announced by the Program Coordinator.
3816
Television Production
(same as the former English 3816) is an introduction to the principles of television production.
AR: attendance is required
CR: the former English 3816
PR: English 2451 (or the former English 3351). Admission priority will be given first to students in the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique and then to students in the Major in Communication Studies.
3913
Speechwriting
(same as English 3913) develops the student’s ability to speak on all occasions, formal and informal, expected and unexpected. Students will deliver speeches of varying types and lengths on a regular basis throughout the semester.
CR: English 3913
PR: 3 credit hours in English at the 1000-level
4000
Advanced Communications Theory
engages communication theories, such as interpersonal, organizational, intercultural, or international communication, seeking to understand how and why mediated communication works have found their explanatory power to be useful. The course will aim to analyze various communication theories, apply communication theories to everyday life, write a theoretical literature review, and form sound hypotheses or focused research questions to advance theory.
PR: CMST 2000 and 2001 and 9 additional credit hours chosen from Program and Regulations, Elective Courses, List A or B
4001
Seminar in Mass Communication and Visual Culture
examines the ways visual culture shapes and is shaped by communication forms and processes.
4002
Media and the Environment
explores the representational, technological, industrial, and socio-political dynamics associated with ecocritical media studies.
4010-4020
Special Topics in Communication Studies
will have topics to be studied announced by the Program Coordinator.
4402
Producing the Documentary
(same as the former English 4402) is a full semester working on a selected project, to culminate in the creation of a completed video. Students, working in groups, established by the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique Program Coordinator, will be required to participate in all aspects of production.
AR: attendance is required
CR: the former English 4402
PR: English 2451 (or the former English 3351) and CMST 3816. Admission priority will be given first to students in the Diploma in Stage and Screen Technique and then to students in the Major in Communication Studies.