Select the Course Number to get further detail on the course. Select the desired Schedule Type to find available classes for the course. |
ENGL 100 - Introduction to Literary Structures |
This course provides an introduction to the reading of the three major genres: poetry, fiction, and drama. The course introduces the students to the basic structural principles and rhetorical strategies of literary texts by observing structural and rhetorical theory applied to specific poems, fictions, and plays.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 102 - Introduction to Poetry |
This course provides an introduction through a detailed examination of a range of poetic texts. Students are taught how to construct an argument, and how to assemble and present an academic essay. There is regular practice in writing well. The course includes library research and an oral presentation, and may also include computer skills.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 103 - Introduction to Fiction |
This course provides an introduction to the reading of fiction through a detailed examination of a range of narrative texts (e.g., the novel, short fiction).
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 104 - Introduction to Film |
This course provides an introduction to the study of film through a detailed examination of a range of films.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 120 - Introduction to Canadian Indigenous Literatures |
This course offers an introduction to the study of Canada's Indigenous literatures, including traditional oral narratives, drama, poetry, and fiction.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 170 - Writing and Communication Skills |
Students will be taught how to construct an argument, and how to assemble and present an academic essay. There will be regular practice in writing well. The course includes library research and an oral presentation, and may also include computer skills.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam |
ENGL 200 - Gender and Literary Theory |
This course provides an introduction to critical analyses of gender and their implications for literature. Students will gain an overview of some current topics in gender theory and apply these to contemporary texts.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam |
ENGL 201 - Digital Humanities |
This course provides an introduction to the growing use of computer technology in the humanities. Classes incorporate work on the computing platforms available to students at UNBC through a survey of theories, methods, and tools in the field of digital humanities. Topics include text analysis, text encoding and markup, data mining and databases, information visualization concepts, classification systems, metadata, and approaches to online publishing. Each student is required to maintain a website and use it to reflect their understanding of topics addressed in class.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, World Wide Web |
ENGL 205 - Fiction |
This course examines selected trends in the development of the novel or short story, or of a particular mode or genre of representation. See the English Department handbook for details. (Students may have already received credit for ENGL 203-3 or ENGL 204-3, but not both).
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture |
ENGL 209 - Introduction to Television Studies |
This course introduces students to the academic study of television. Individual instructors may choose to focus on fiction or non-fiction or include both.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam, World Wide Web |
ENGL 210 - Women and Literature: A Survey |
A survey of works of poetry and fiction written by women in English from the Renaissance to the present. The course will consider feminist theory and criticism in relation to these works.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam |
ENGL 211 - Survey of English Literature I |
This course provides a survey of literature in English from the medieval period (c. 10th century) to the late 18th century.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video, World Wide Web |
ENGL 212 - Survey of English Literature II |
This course provides a survey of literature in English from the late 18th century to the present.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video, World Wide Web |
ENGL 260 - A Survey of Children's Literature |
This course provides an historical survey tracing literature written for children in texts as varied as The Arabian Nights, and Salman Rushdie’s Haroun and The Sea of Stories.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 270 - Expository Writing |
This course offers lectures and workshops in the study and craft of non-fictional prose.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 271 - Introduction to Creative Writing |
This course offers introductory lectures and workshops in the craft of writing fiction, poetry, and/or drama.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 280 - Shakespeare |
This course examines selected Shakespearean plays. Some of Shakespeare’s non-dramatic poetry may be included. One play by a contemporary of Shakespeare (e.g., Webster, Jonson) may also be considered.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 281 - Introduction to Renaissance Literature |
This course provides an introduction to the literature of the English Renaissance in the major genres (poetry, prose and drama).
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 282 - Introduction to Restoration and 18th Century Literature |
This course examines selected works of poetry, prose and drama of the Restoration and 18th century, including authors such as Congreve, Dryden, Pope, Swift, Johnson, Behn and early Jane Austen.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 283 - Introduction to Romantic Literature |
This course examines the English Romantic poets: Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley and Keats. Attention will be paid to women Romantic writers such as Mary Shelley, and the later work of Jane Austen.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 284 - Introduction to Victorian Literature |
This course examines selected texts of poetry, fiction and non-fiction by authors such as Thackerary, George Eliot, Dickens, Charlotte Bronte, Robert Browning, Tennyson and Christina Rossetti.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 285 - Modern British Literature |
This course examines Modernism in Britain, focusing on the period around the First World War (1900-1930) and concentrating on the following prose writers: Joyce, Lawrence, Woolf, and Forster.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 298 - Special Topics in Literature or Visual Media |
This course covers introductory-level material in areas that reflect faculty expertise. The course content may change with each offering. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours if the material is substantially different.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture |
ENGL 300 - Theory |
This course examines the development of critical theory from Aristotle to the present. Students are introduced to influential literature theories in an historical context, from the classical to the modern.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 309 - Intermediate Studies in Film or Television |
This course undertakes an extensive examination of a range of film or television genres. Individual instructors may choose to focus on film or television or include both.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 320 - Indigenous Literature in Canada and the United States |
This course focuses on the contemporary writing in English of Indigenous people in Canada and the United States. It examines the implications of colonialism and the strategies that writers use to decolonize, redefine and affirm their identities, history and culture.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video, World Wide Web |
ENGL 331 - Genres in Canadian Literature |
This course focuses on a single genre in Canadian literature such as the short story, the novel, drama, poetry, or non-fiction prose. See the English Department handbook for details.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 340 - Postcolonial Literature |
This course examines literature in English written in one or more of the following regions: Africa, the Caribbean, India, Australia, New Zealand. The course offers an introduction to postcolonial literatures, their definitions of culture, and their relation to the British Empire.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, World Wide Web |
ENGL 350 - Comparative Literature |
This course provides an examination of works in world literature, written in English and other languages, in the context of various literary periods and genres. Romanticism, French naturalism, postcolonial literatures.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 381 - Renaissance Literature |
This is an advanced version of the 200-level course, with a particular emphasis on the interaction between the visual and written art forms.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 382 - Restoration and 18th Century Literature |
This course provides an intensive study of two or three authors or of a major genre, form or theme of the period.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 383 - Romantic Literature |
This course provides an intensive study of two or three authors or of a major genre, form or theme of the period.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 384 - Victorian Literature |
This course provides an intensive study of two or three authors or of a major genre, form or theme of the period.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam, Audio/Video, World Wide Web |
ENGL 386 - 19th Century Literature in the United States |
This course provides a study of American writing in its historical contexts. The course may include Colonial literature, Contact literature, literature of the American Renaissance, African-American slave narratives, and transcriptions of Native oral literature.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 390 - Language |
This course examines the structure and development of the English language from its beginnings to the present, with close reference to literary texts.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 400 - Contemporary Theory |
This course provides an advanced study of current theoretical modes, including feminism and gender theory, deconstruction, postcolonial theory, discourse analysis, new historicism and Marxist theory, psychoanalytic theory, and cultural studies. The course includes an investigation of the critical positions of contemporary theorists.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 409 - Special Topics in Film or Television Studies |
This course offers an intensive examination of an area or genre of film or television. Individual instructors may choose to focus on film or television or include both. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Self-Directed, Final Exam, Seminar |
ENGL 410 - Contemporary Women's Literature |
This course considers contemporary woemn writers and their work, emphasizing their cultural diversity and considering them in the context of feminist theory. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 420 - Special Topics in Indigenous Literature |
This course looks at contemporary Indigenous writers and their work. Writers may include Thomas King, Gerald Vizenor, Leslie Silko, Louise Erdrich and others. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the material is substantially different.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video, World Wide Web |
ENGL 430 - Special Topics in Canadian Literature |
This is an advanced course in contemporary, multicultural Canadian literature. Authors may include Rohinton Mistry, Rudy Wiebe, Aritha van Herk, Joy Kogawa, Marlene Nourbese Philip and others. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video, World Wide Web |
ENGL 431 - Northern BC Literature |
This advanced course in Northern BC Literature focuses on authors such as Barry McKinnon, Eden Robinson, Brian Fawcett, George Stanley, Jacqueline Baldwin, and Ken Belford. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 440 - Special Topics in Postcolonial Literature |
This is an advanced version course in the main issues of postcolonial literature, such as postcolonial nationalism and English versus native languages. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 444 - Internship |
This course may be repeated for credit to a maximum of six credit hours.
Credits: 2.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Internship |
ENGL 450 - Special Topics in Comparative Literature |
This is an advanced version of the 300-level course, focusing on a specific genre, theme or period. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 460 - Special Topics in Children's Literature |
This is a special topics course in children's literature and culture. See the English Department handbook for details. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 470 - Creative Writing: Poetry |
This course included lectures and workshops in the craft of writing poetry. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 471 - Creative Writing: Fiction and Creative Non-Fiction |
This course includes lectures and workshops in the craft of writing fiction and/or creative non-fiction. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, World Wide Web |
ENGL 480 - Science Fiction |
This course studies the structures and motifs of science fiction and fantasy. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 483 - Special Topics in Romantic Literature |
This course investigates a particular aspect of Romantic Literature. The focus may be on the works of a specific author or school of authors, a literary genre, or a particular social or theoretical concern. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Final Exam, Audio/Video, Seminar, World Wide Web |
ENGL 484 - Special Topics in Victorian Studies |
This course investigates a particular aspect of Victorian Literature. See the English Department handbook for details. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 485 - Special Topics in Modern and Contemporary Literature in the United States |
This course provides a study of American writing since 1900, with an emphasis on American cultural contexts. The course may focus on a specific author or authors, on a particular genre, theme or region, or on ethnic and minority literature. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with the permission of the instructor and the Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Final Exam, Seminar, World Wide Web |
ENGL 486 - Literature of the Fantastic |
This course examines various periods and aspects of fantastic literature. When appropriate, the course includes film and graphic arts as well as literary texts. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 491 - Special Topics in Renaissance Literature |
This course examines various aspects of Renaissance literature and art. The focus could be on the works of a specific author, a genre, or theoretical consideration. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 493 - Cultural Studies |
This is a special topics course in cultural studies with a focus on an interdisciplinary approaches. See the English Department handbook for details. This course may be repeated to a maximum of 6 credit hours with permission of the instructor and Department Chair if the subject matter of the course differs substantially.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 498 - Special Topics in Literature |
Consult the Department Chair for details.
Credits: 3.000 TO 6.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 499 - Independent Study in Literature |
Consult the Program Chair for details.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Undergraduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed |
ENGL 600 - Advanced Contemporary Theory |
This course offers advanced study of current theoretical modes, including feminism and gender theory, deconstruction, postcolonial theory, discourse analysis, new historicism and Marxist theory, psychoanalytic theory, and cultural studies. The course includes an investigation of the critical positions of contemporary theorists.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 609 - Advanced Studies in Film or Television |
This course offers advanced study in film or television.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Self-Directed, Final Exam, Seminar |
ENGL 610 - Advanced Studies in Women and Literature |
This course investigates contemporary women writers and their work, emphasizing their cultural diversity and considering them in the context of feminist theory. Writers may include Nadine Gordimer, Joy Kogawa, Amy Tan and Louise Erdrich.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 620 - Advanced Studies in Indigenous Literature |
Drawing on postcolonial and cultural theories, this course examines contemporary Indigenous literatures written in English.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Audio/Video, World Wide Web |
ENGL 630 - Advanced Studies in Canadian Literature |
This course examines multi-cultural and cross-cultural expressions in modern and contemporary Canadian literature. Authors studied may include Margaret Laurence, Hugh McLennan, Rohinton Mistry, Rudy Wiebe, Aritha van Herk, Joy Kogawa, Marlene Nourbese Philip.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, World Wide Web |
ENGL 631 - Advanced Studies in Northern BC Literature |
This course in Northern BC Literature offers advanced study of authors such as Barry McKinnon, Eden Robinson, Brian Fawcett, George Stanley, Jacqueline Baldwin, and Ken Belford.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Self-Directed, Final Exam, Seminar |
ENGL 640 - Advanced Studies in Postcolonial Literature |
This course undertakes an investigation of the central issues of postcolonial literature, including postcolonial nationalism, colonial mimicry, imperial versus native languages, and the political and social responsibility of the writer.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam |
ENGL 650 - Advanced Studies in Comparative Literature |
This advanced course in Comparative Literature focuses on texts written in English or English translation. Special topics may include comparative studies of a genre, theme, period or region. Writing which crosses borders or the writing of specific cultural groups may also be included.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 660 - Advanced Studies in Children's Literature |
This course offers advanced study in children's literature and culture.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Final Exam, Audio/Video, Seminar |
ENGL 670 - Advanced Creative Writing - Poetry |
This course offers advanced lectures and workshops for learning the craft of writing poetry.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 671 - Advanced Creative Writing - Fiction and Creative Non-Fiction |
This course offers advanced lectures and workshops in the craft of writing fiction and/or creative non-fiction.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, World Wide Web |
ENGL 680 - Advanced Studies in Science Fiction |
This course offers advanced study of the structures and motifs of science fiction and fantasy.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 683 - Advanced Studies in Romantic Literature |
This course investigates a particular aspect of Romantic Literature. The focus could be on the works of a specific author or school of authors, a literary genre, or a particular social or theoretical concern.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Final Exam, Audio/Video, Seminar, World Wide Web |
ENGL 684 - Advanced Studies in Victorian Literature |
This course offers special study of an author (or authors), theme or genre in Victorian literature. Possible authors include George Eliot, Dickens, or the Brontes. Possible topics include social realism, psychological realism, violence and domestic realism, fictional autobiography, Victorian gothic or female self-expression.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 685 - Advanced Studies in Modern and Contemporary Literature in the United States |
This advanced course in American writing since 1900 emphasizes American cultural contexts. The course may focus on a specific author or specific authors, on a particular genre, theme or region, or on ethnic and minority literature.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Final Exam, Seminar, World Wide Web |
ENGL 686 - Advanced Studies in Literature of the Fantastic |
This course explores various periods and aspects of fantastic literature. When appropriate, the course will include film and graphic arts as well as literary texts.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 690 - Bibliography |
This course offers an introduction to the conventions of literary bibliography, as well as electronic bibliography and document retrieval. Where possible, the course is related to another graduate course being taken concurrently by the student.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 691 - Advanced Studies in Renaissance Literature |
This course examines various aspects of Renaissance literature and art. The focus could be on the works of a specific author, a genre, or theoretical considerations.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam |
ENGL 693 - Advanced Cultural Studies |
This course introduces students to the interdisciplinary methodologies of cultural studies, with a focus on definitions of culture and the imbrications of race, class, and gender. It explores the themes of postmodernism, popular culture, historical cultural formations, social history, and/or the relation between politics and culture.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 698 - Advanced Topics |
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Final Exam, Audio/Video |
ENGL 699 - Advanced Independent Study in Literature |
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Lecture, Self-Directed |
ENGL 700 - Studies in Literature, Culture and Place |
This course investigates theories and representations of culture and place in literary studies. Authors studied may include Homi K. Bhabha, Edward Said, and Raymond Williams. The course may explore intersections of culture and place across literary periods and nationalities, in contemporary popular culture, and in contemporary theory.
Credits: 3.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Self-Directed, Final Exam, Seminar |
ENGL 770 - Major Research Paper/Creative Project |
In this course, English MA students choosing the course-based MA path complete a 25-30-page (7500-8500-word) research paper or a comparable creative project. Although the major paper or creative project is not as extensive as a thesis or creative thesis, it offers students the experience of extended research or creative work. This is a PASS/FAIL course.
Credits: 12.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Masters Thesis, Masters Project |
ENGL 799 - English MA Thesis |
Under the guidance of a supervisor, students are required to produce and defend an academic thesis of approximately 100 pages in length. At the discretion of the Department, students may complete a creative thesis that meets the requirements outlined in the English (MA program) section of the Graduate Calendar. The thesis is intended to require approximately 12 months of full-time work. This is a PASS/FAIL course.
Credits: 15.000 Levels: Graduate Schedule Types: Masters Thesis |