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Untitled - University of New Orleans

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ENGL 4501 English Lit 16th Century<br />

3 cr.<br />

A survey <strong>of</strong> the prose and verse <strong>of</strong> the earlier Renaissance in<br />

England including works by Thomas More, Wyatt, Surrey, Sidney,<br />

Spenser, Marlowe, Raleigh, and Shakespeare.<br />

ENGL 4501G English Lit 16th Century<br />

3 cr.<br />

A survey <strong>of</strong> the prose and verse <strong>of</strong> the earlier Renaissance in<br />

England including works by Thomas More, Wyatt, Surrey, Sidney,<br />

Spenser, Marlowe, Raleigh, and Shakespeare.<br />

ENGL 4516 Beginning <strong>of</strong> English Drama<br />

3 cr.<br />

The development <strong>of</strong> English drama to Shakespeare.<br />

ENGL 4516G Beginning <strong>of</strong> English Drama<br />

3 cr.<br />

The development <strong>of</strong> English drama to Shakespeare.<br />

ENGL 4521 Shakespeare<br />

3 cr.<br />

The earlier plays, their background, with some attention to Shakespeare’s<br />

life and time.<br />

ENGL 4521G Shakespeare<br />

3 cr.<br />

The earlier plays, their background, with some attention to Shakespeare’s<br />

life and time.<br />

ENGL 4522 Shakespeare<br />

3 cr.<br />

The later plays, with particular emphasis on the author’s<br />

development.<br />

ENGL 4522G Shakespeare<br />

3 cr.<br />

The later plays, with particular emphasis on the author’s<br />

development.<br />

ENGL 4601 English Literature <strong>of</strong> 17 Cent<br />

3 cr.<br />

A survey <strong>of</strong> the literature <strong>of</strong> the later Renaissance in England,<br />

including works by the major prose writers and by the metaphysical,<br />

Cavalier, and devotional poets: Bacon, Hobbes, Donne, Jonson,<br />

Herrick, Herbert, Milton, and Marvell.<br />

ENGL 4601G English Literature <strong>of</strong> 17 Cent<br />

3 cr.<br />

A survey <strong>of</strong> the literature <strong>of</strong> the later Renaissance in England,<br />

including works by the major prose writers and by the metaphysical,<br />

Cavalier, and devotional poets: Bacon, Hobbes, Donne, Jonson,<br />

Herrick, Herbert, Milton, and Marvell.<br />

ENGL 4616 Drama <strong>of</strong> Shakespearean Age<br />

3 cr.<br />

Shakespeare’s contemporaries and immediate successors to 1642.<br />

ENGL 4616G Drama <strong>of</strong> Shakespearean Age<br />

3 cr.<br />

Shakespeare’s contemporaries and immediate successors to 1642.<br />

ENGL 4621 Milton<br />

3 cr.<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> the poems with emphasis on Paradise Lost, Paradise<br />

Regained, and Samson Agonistes and an examination <strong>of</strong> various<br />

prose works.<br />

ENGL 4621G Milton<br />

3 cr.<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> the poems with emphasis on Paradise Lost, Paradise<br />

Regained, and Samson Agonistes and an examination <strong>of</strong> various<br />

prose works.<br />

ENGL 4696 Washington Center Internship<br />

6 cr.<br />

The Washington, D.C. Internship Program is <strong>of</strong>fered in cooperation<br />

with the Washington Center for Internships and Academic Seminars.<br />

Students <strong>of</strong> junior-level or higher standing and a grade-point<br />

average <strong>of</strong> 2.5 or better are eligible to participate in the Program.<br />

The program is conducted in Washington, D.C. and consists <strong>of</strong> an<br />

internship <strong>of</strong> four-and-a-half workdays per week, a three-hour<br />

course one night a week, and a major research paper. Participants<br />

can earn 12 credit hours during a fall or spring semester (nine<br />

hours in summer).<br />

ENGL 4696G Washington Center Internship<br />

6 cr.<br />

The Washington, D.C. Internship Program is <strong>of</strong>fered in cooperation<br />

with the Washington Center for Internships and Academic<br />

Seminars. Students <strong>of</strong> junior-level or higher standing and a gradepoint<br />

average <strong>of</strong> 2.5 or better are eligible to participate in the Program.<br />

The program is conducted in Washington, D.C. and consists <strong>of</strong><br />

an internship <strong>of</strong> four-and-a-half workdays per week, a three-hour<br />

course one night a week, and a major research paper. Participants<br />

can earn 12 credit hours during a fall or spring semester (nine<br />

hours in summer).<br />

ENGL 4698 Washington Center Research<br />

3 cr.<br />

The Washington, D.C. Internship Program is <strong>of</strong>fered in cooperation<br />

with the Washington Center for Internships and Academic Seminars.<br />

Students <strong>of</strong> junior-level or higher standing and a grade-point<br />

average <strong>of</strong> 2.5 or better are eligible to participate in the Program.<br />

The program is conducted in Washington, D.C. and consists <strong>of</strong> an<br />

internship <strong>of</strong> four-and-a-half workdays per week, a three-hour<br />

course one night a week, and a major research paper. Participants<br />

can earn 12 credit hours during a fall or spring semester (nine<br />

hours in summer).<br />

ENGL 4698G Washington Center Research<br />

3 cr.<br />

The Washington, D.C. Internship Program is <strong>of</strong>fered in cooperation<br />

with the Washington Center for Internships and Academic Seminars.<br />

Students <strong>of</strong> junior-level or higher standing and a grade-point<br />

average <strong>of</strong> 2.5 or better are eligible to participate in the Program.<br />

The program is conducted in Washington, D.C. and consists <strong>of</strong> an<br />

internship <strong>of</strong> four-and-a-half workdays per week, a three-hour<br />

course one night a week, and a major research paper. Participants<br />

can earn 12 credit hours during a fall or spring semester (nine<br />

hours in summer).<br />

ENGL 4701 Early 18th Century Literature<br />

3 cr.<br />

Prose and poetry from the Restoration to the death <strong>of</strong> Pope with<br />

emphasis on Dryden, Pope, and Swift.<br />

ENGL 4701G Early 18th Century Literature<br />

3 cr.<br />

Prose and poetry from the Restoration to the death <strong>of</strong> Pope with<br />

emphasis on Dryden, Pope, and Swift.<br />

ENGL 4702 Later 18th Century Literature<br />

3 cr.<br />

Prose and poetry from the death <strong>of</strong> Pope to 1798 with emphasis on<br />

Johnson and his circle.<br />

ENGL 4702G Later 18th Century Literature<br />

3 cr.<br />

Prose and poetry from the death <strong>of</strong> Pope to 1798 with emphasis on<br />

Johnson and his circle.<br />

ENGL 4715 18th Century English Novel<br />

3 cr.<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> the development and characteristics <strong>of</strong> the English novel<br />

from its beginnings through the time <strong>of</strong> Austen.<br />

ENGL 4715G 18th Century English Novel<br />

3 cr.<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> the development and characteristics <strong>of</strong> the English novel<br />

from its beginnings through the time <strong>of</strong> Austen.<br />

ENGL 4716 Restoration & 18th C Engl Drma<br />

3 cr.<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> English drama from the later seventeenth century to<br />

the end <strong>of</strong> the eighteenth century with some attention to developments<br />

in staging.<br />

ENGL 4716G Restoration & 18th C Engl Drma<br />

3 cr.<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> English drama from the later seventeenth century to<br />

the end <strong>of</strong> the eighteenth century with some attention to developments<br />

in staging.<br />

ENGL 4801 Prose Poetry Romantic Period<br />

3 cr.<br />

Writers <strong>of</strong> the preromantic period; Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge,<br />

and other writers <strong>of</strong> the period.<br />

ENGL 4801G Prose Poetry Romantic Period<br />

3 cr.<br />

Writers <strong>of</strong> the preromantic period; Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge,<br />

and other writers <strong>of</strong> the period.<br />

<strong>University</strong> <strong>of</strong> <strong>New</strong> <strong>Orleans</strong>/243

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