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~EGULAR SESSION - University of Oregon

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154 COLLEGE OF LIBERAL ARTS<br />

*Eng 107,108,109. World Literature. 3 hours each term.<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> the literary and cultural foundations <strong>of</strong> the Western world through<br />

the analysis <strong>of</strong> a selection <strong>of</strong> masterpieces <strong>of</strong> literature, ancient and modern,<br />

read in chronological order. The readings include continental, English, and<br />

American works. Ball, Benoit, Candelaria, Fraser, Gibson, Gregory, Hodges,<br />

McKnight, Mariels, Yeatman.<br />

Eng 201, 202, 203. Shakespeare. 3 hours each term.<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> the important plays-eomedies, histories, and tragedies. Required for<br />

majors. Black, Candelaria, Thelma Greenfield, Hodges, Horn, Johnson,<br />

McCloskey, McNeir, Maveety, Moll, Oswald, Strange, Svendsen.<br />

Eng 253, 254, 255. Survey <strong>of</strong> American Literature. 3 hours each term.<br />

American literature from its beginnings to the present day. Hodges, Svendsen.<br />

UPPER-DIVISION COURSES<br />

Eng 301. Tragedy. 3 hours.<br />

A study <strong>of</strong> the nature <strong>of</strong> tragedy and <strong>of</strong> tragic expression in various literary<br />

forms. Hodges, Wegelin.<br />

Eng 303. Epic. 3 hours.<br />

The heroic spirit in Western European literature, with emphasis on English<br />

literature. J. C. Sherwood, Strange.<br />

Eng 304. Comedy. 3 hours.<br />

The comic view in both dramatic and nondramatic forms. Main emphasis on<br />

English masters, but with attention also to classical and continental writers.<br />

Principal theories <strong>of</strong> the comic and <strong>of</strong> comic literary forms and types. Horn.<br />

Eng 305. Satire. 3 hours.<br />

Satire, or criticism through ridicule, as a major type <strong>of</strong> literary expression.<br />

Examples from various literary forms-dramatic, narrative, and poetic-and<br />

from ancient and foreign literatures as well as English. Special emphasis on<br />

contemporary satire. Oswald.<br />

Eng 306, 307. The Literature <strong>of</strong> the English Bible. 3 hours each term.<br />

Study <strong>of</strong> the literary qualities <strong>of</strong> the English Bible, with some reference to its<br />

influence on English and American literature. Bartel, Maveety.<br />

Eng 320, 321,322. English Novel. 3 hours each term.<br />

From Richardson and Fielding to the present. Black, Hynes.<br />

Eng 323. American Satire. 3 hours.<br />

Satire in American literature; its nature, development, and significant contributions<br />

to the interpretation <strong>of</strong> American life. McCloskey, Oswald.<br />

Eng 391, 392, 393. American Novel. 3 hours each term.<br />

Development <strong>of</strong> the American novel from its beginnings to the present.<br />

McCloskey, Nolte.<br />

Eng 394, 395, 396. Twentieth-Century Literature. 3 hours each term.<br />

A critical survey <strong>of</strong> British, American, and some European literature from<br />

1890 to the present; significant works <strong>of</strong> poetry, drama, and fiction studied in<br />

relation to intellectual and historical developments. Cadbury, Hynes, Moore,<br />

Nolte, Weatherhead.<br />

Eng 403. Thesis. Hours to be arranged.<br />

Eng 405. Reading and Conference. Hours to be arranged.<br />

UPPER-DIVISION COURSES CARRYING GRADUATE CREDIT<br />

Eng 407. Seminar. (G) Hours to be arranged.<br />

Eng 411,412,413. English Drama. (G) 3 hours each term.<br />

The development <strong>of</strong> English dramatic forms from the beginnings to Sheridan.<br />

Horn, Strange.<br />

• See page 153, note (t).

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