Find Your Course
Subject Course Section Course Title Course Description Instructor Files Term
ENGL 100C 001 Drama

An introduction to dramatic literature through the detailed examination of a range of dramatic texts.

Chad Wriglesworth Winter 2018
ENGL 101A 001 Introduction to Literary Studies

An introduction to the study of literature, covering such areas of enquiry as literary history, genre, criticism, analysis, and theory.

Veronica Austen Winter 2018
ENGL 108F 001 The Rebel

A study of various works of literature in which the protagonist is a rebel against existing norms. The course will examine a number of rebel types and concepts, moral implications, and final outcomes either in successful realization or in tragic defeat.

Alysia Kolentsis Winter 2018
ENGL 109 001, 002 Introduction to Academic Writing

The course will explore a variety of issues in academic writing such as style, argument, and the presentation of information. Frequent written exercises will be required.

Sylvia Terzian, Andrew Deman Winter 2018
ENGL 119 001, 002, 003, 004, 005 Communications in Math and Computer Science

This course aims to build students' oral and written communication skills to prepare them for academic and workplace demands. Working independently and in collaboration with others, students will analyze and produce various written and spoken forms of communication. Projects and assignments will draw on materials for Mathematics and Computer Science students.

Mark Spielmacher, Sylvia Terzian, Andrew Deman Winter 2018
ENGL 200B 002 Survey of British Literature

An historical survey of major figures, types, and trends in British literature from the late 18th century to the present.

Norm Klassen Winter 2018
ENGL 201 001 The Short Story

This course deals with the history and techniques of the short story, with emphasis upon works by such British, American, and Canadian writers as Henry James, James Joyce, D.H. Lawrence, Ernest Hemingway, and Alice Munro.

Chad Wriglesworth Winter 2018
ENGL 208B 001 Science Fiction

 

Various examples drawn, for instance, from Utopian and anti-Utopian science fiction, social science fiction, "gadget" science fiction, parapsychology, and alternate worlds and beings will be considered. Some attention will be given to the historical development of the genre.

Andrew Deman Winter 2018
ENGL 208N 001 Sex and Marriage in Literature

An examination of changing attitudes toward sex and marriage as those attitudes are expressed in literary works written in English during the various periods of literary production from the medieval period to the modern age.

Tristanne Connolly Winter 2018
ENGL 251B 001, 002 Criticism 2

An introduction to the theorizing of literary and non-literary texts. Emphasizing contemporary theories, the course will focus on the text, the reader, and culture.

Norm Klassen, Chad Wriglesworth Winter 2018