Undergraduate Course Listing
Please visit the Academic Timetable to see which courses are presently being offered and in which location(s). Not all courses listed below run every term or in all locations. For specific details about program requirements and degree regulations, please refer to the Academic Calendar.
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ENGL-1001H: Truth, Lies, and Storytelling
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
When we tell stories, whether in song, poetry, drama, film, or prose, are we telling lies? How do literary fictions in any genre engage, reflect, distort, or heighten the truth? Can words get in the way of the truth? These questions will provide entrances into the texts in this course.
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ENGL-1003H: Revolution
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Revolution is variously defined as a) a drastic and far-reaching change in ways of thinking and behaving, b) the overthrow of a government by those who are governed, and c) rotation: a single complete turn. This course looks at how authors create and respond to the revolutions that turn our world upside down and then, sometimes, back around again.
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ENGL-1005H: Love and Hate
Offered:
- Online
The subject of a million popular songs and poems, all great films, and all of Shakespeare's tragedies, love and hate still defeat us. This course looks at how love and hate are represented in poetry, popular song, drama, and fiction and asks, if "love alters not," why is it that "love will tear us apart"?
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ENGL-1851H: The Writing Life: An Introduction to Creative Writing
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
An overview of writerly inspiration, perspiration, and contemplation, this course considers the creative process that leads to literary texts within and across a variety of genres, periods, and personalities. Readings and assignments will include not only literary texts, but also essays on writing and the writing life.
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ENGL-2001H: Reading Literature: A Practical Introduction
Offered:
- Durham GTA
An introduction to critical practice and to the assumptions underlying a wide range of approaches to literature. Explores British, American, Canadian, and postcolonial works, and draws on parallels between literary and non-literary language and between literature and other forms of expression. Emphasis is placed on learning through writing. Offered only at Trent University Durham GTA.
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ENGL-2020H: Digital Humanities: New Tools, Human Stories
Offered:
- Peterborough
Digital Humanities is the fusion of digital tools with humanities research and scholarship. Students learn how to bring a solid grounding within the humanities to technological innovations and development, engaging with the use of digital resources and their application in different ways grounded in the fields of the Humanities. Prerequisite: 3.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: HIST-2020H
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ENGL-2150Y: Studies in Shakespeare
Offered:
- Peterborough
An examination of Shakespeare's dramatic career through the study of representative works spanning the period from the early comedies to the last plays. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 2150Y or 2151H for credit.
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ENGL-2151H: Studies in Shakespeare
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
An examination of Shakespeare's dramatic career through the study of representative works spanning the period from the early comedies to the last plays. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 2150Y or 2151H for credit.
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ENGL-2609H: Contagion
Offered:
- Online
Explores intersections between medicine and literature with particular attention to the representation of outbreaks and pandemics in historical and contemporary fiction, graphic novels, dystopian works, and film. What does it mean to narrate contagion? What might fictions of contagion teach us about our communities, our priorities, and our (in)humanity? Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-2703H: Literature and Social Justice
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Studies a range of works from different periods and genres that raise moral questions and ethical dilemmas concerning issues of social justice involving race, ethnicity, class, gender, age, and other variables. Considers literature's power to evoke the plight of the socially disadvantaged, and the implications for social change. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: GESO-2703H
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ENGL-2707H: Popular Fiction
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Explores the diverse forms, history, social functions and concerns of popular genre fiction. Our study of romance, crime, adventure, horror, fantasy, and speculative fiction considers especially the gendering of affective reading practices, as well as issues of cultural capital, literary taste, and the relation between elite and commercial writing. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 2706Y or 2707H for credit.
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ENGL-2709H: Graphic Fiction
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
A survey of graphic fiction and its subgenres. Topics may include the graphic novel, superheroes, comix, and manga. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-2751H: Literature and Sports
Offered:
- Peterborough
The main goal of this course is to examine the various literary renditions of the world's most popular sports. Discover, for instance, hockey's dependence on violence, football's ties to war culture, and baseball's troubling national fantasies--all by reading an eclectic collection of plays, poems, novels, and short stories. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-2803H: How Poetry Works
Offered:
- Peterborough
Surveying poetry from a variety of literary periods, this course examines the mechanics and cultural significance the genre. How does poetry work? What work does it do? Learn about the devices, modes, strategies, and contexts that make a poem meaningful. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 2802Y or 2803H for credit.
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ENGL-2805H: How Drama Works
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Surveying drama from a variety of literary periods, this course examines the mechanics and cultural significance the genre. How does drama work? What work does it do? Learn about the devices, modes, strategies, and contexts that make a play meaningful. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 2804Y or 2805H for credit.
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ENGL-2807H: How Fiction Works
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Surveying fiction from a variety of literary periods, this course examines the mechanics and cultural significance the genre. How does fiction work? What work does it do? Learn about the devices, modes, strategies, and contexts that make a piece of fiction meaningful. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 2806Y or 2807H for credit.
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ENGL-2809H: Stage and Screen
Offered:
- Durham GTA
Examines the relationship between theatre and cinema, exploring the limitations of both genres through studying plays that have been made into films. Documentary, television and digital formats are also considered. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-2811H: Children's Literature: Poetry, Picture Books, and Plays
Offered:
- Durham GTA
Focuses on poetry, stories, picture books, and theatre for children: the emphasis will be placed upon oral narratives, graphic culture, and performance. Texts include nursery rhymes, Where the Wild Things Are, Peter Pan, and Disney's Pinocchio. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-2851H: Introductory Prose Writing Workshop
Offered:
- Peterborough
An introduction to the practice of writing prose, both fiction and non-fiction, this course asks students to experiment with a variety of contemporary prose forms. The course will benefit both those interested in pursuing writing careers and those intending to be teachers who hope to incorporate creative writing in their teaching practices. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits including ENGL 1851H (or permission of the department). Not open to students with credit for ENGL 2859H.
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ENGL-2853H: Introductory Poetry Writing Workshop
Offered:
- Peterborough
A broad introduction to the practice of writing poetry, this course asks students to experiment with poetic creation in a variety of contemporary modes, forms, and contexts. Weekly writing and editing tasks are required, as is a careful consideration of poetic concepts, modes of working, assigned readings, and poetics. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits including ENGL 1851H (or permission of the department). Not open to students with credit for ENGL 2859H.
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ENGL-2855H: Introductory Creative Non-Fiction Workshop
Offered:
- Durham GTA
This introductory class on creative non-fiction exposes students to the variety of texts grouped in this genre (personal essay, memoir, journalistic essay, case study, and hybrids), through discussion, practice, and workshop. Students consider issues such as audience, literary strategies, diction, voice, tone, and ethical responsibilities to living subjects. Prerequisite: 0.5 ENGL credit. ENGL 1851H is strongly recommended. Offered only at Trent University Durham GTA.
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ENGL-2859H: Introductory Creative Writing Workshop
Offered:
- Durham GTA
An introduction to the practice of writing prose and poetry, this course asks students to experiment with a variety of contemporary forms. The course will benefit both those interested in pursuing writing careers and those intending to be teachers who hope to incorporate creative writing in their teaching practices. Prerequisite: 0.5 ENGL credit. ENGL 1851H is strongly recommended. Offered only at Trent University Durham GTA. Not open to students with credit for ENGL 2851H or 2853H.
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ENGL-3127H: Arthurian Legend
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
The Legend of King Arthur and his court has captivated writers and audiences for more than 1000 years. This course covers the Arthurian Legend from its inception up to the present day. Topics covered include courtly love, magic, religion, chivalry, identity, gender, and race in Arthurian material. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-3155H: Sex and Politics in Elizabethan Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
Popular and aristocratic literary forms collided and intermixed in the English Renaissance, producing some of the greatest poetry and drama in English, and fascinating experiments in the new genre of prose fiction. We examine a range of Renaissance bestsellers, considering how writers and editors courted the reading public. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-3205H: Modern Laughter
Offered:
- Peterborough
Compares late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century satire with that of the late twentieth and early twenty-first. Authors such as Lord Rochester, Aphra Behn, Jonathan Swift, Mart Montagu, Alexander Pope, and John Gay are studied alongside comedians such as Lenny Bruce, Richard Pryor, Joan Rivers, George Carlin, Lewis CK, Sarah Silverman, and Amy Schumer. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-3209H: The First Media Revolution
Offered:
- Peterborough
Examines both the rapid evolution of print media from 1660 through to the later eighteenth century brought about by the two-person printing press, and the new genres made possible by this technology: newspapers and magazines, pamphlets, encyclopaedias, cookbooks, comic books, engravings and cartoons, printed music, board games, maps and, of course, novels. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: MDST-3209H
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ENGL-3251H: The Romantics
Offered:
- Peterborough
A study of the "Romantic revolution" and its aftermath in politics, mores, philosophy, religion, and aesthetics. Romantic writers include Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, the Shelleys, Keats, Austen, and others (such as Rousseau, Burke, Wollstonecraft). Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3250Y or 3251H for credit. Not open to students with credit for ENGL 3253H.
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ENGL-3305H: Modern American Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
An examination of American literature from the flourishing of modernism in the 1920s to contemporary voices and trends. The texts are interpreted as products of American culture, and also as examples of literary genres or aesthetic movements which have a complex history and development within and outside of American literary circles. Prerequisite: 4.0 univeristy credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3304Y or 3305H for credit.
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ENGL-3307H: In the Borderlands: Latino/Latina US Literature
Offered:
- Durham GTA
Looks at the fiction of American writers of Latina/Latino backgrounds whose work addresses issues of maturation and the experience of living outside the dominant culture, and attempts to express the uniqueness of their experience in the United States through innovative narrative techniques. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3306Y or 3307H for credit.
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ENGL-3309H: African American Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Although African American slaves were denied many civil liberties, including access to literacy, an African American literacy culture nonetheless emerged. This course examines that literary culture through its engagement with and contestation of canonical American literary texts. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3308Y or 3309H for credit.
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ENGL-3407H: Victorian Literature and Society
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
The Victorian era (1837-1901) was one of upheaval, witnessing widespread industrialization and urbanization, as well as profound shifts in education, class structures, voting rights, belief systems, and popular entertainment. This course examines a range of Victorian texts from different genres to understand the ways that writers responded to, reflected, and contributed to these changes that continue to affect our world. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Not open to students with credit for ENGL 3402Y or 3403H.
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ENGL-3411H: Modern British Literature: History, Politics, Culture
Offered:
- Durham GTA
Examines the echoes of Empire and "Englishness" in twentieth-century British literature, and traces the emergence of a distinctly post-Empire sensibility in contemporary British culture. Emphasis is placed on the two world wars, the collapse of Empire, the "rise" of the working class, and "new" colonial voices. Prerequisite: 4.0 univeristy credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3410Y or 3411H for credit.
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ENGL-3413H: Modern British Literature: Literary Movements and Genres - Modernism and Its Aftermath
Offered:
- Peterborough
Modernism was the twentieth century's most influential literary movement. Its repudiation of the modes of thought and art that preceded it worked to reconfigure our ideas of what literature is or can be. This course examines British High Modernism and its various legacies, most importantly anti-modernist and post-modernist approaches. Prerequisite: 4.0 unversity credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3412Y or 3413H for credit.
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ENGL-3451H: Contemporary African Fiction
Offered:
- Peterborough
In Ghana, Nigeria, Kenya, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and South Africa, an Anglophone African literature has emerged to address issues of neo-colonialism, national identity, the violence of civil war, the failure of democracy, and the effects of globalization. We examine both the politics and aesthetics of this literature. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-3481H: Indigenous Fiction
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Considers the expectations and functions of narrative, and examines the ways in which the fictions of Indigenous authors draw on, extend, and defy white European literary traditions, and incorporate narrative methods of their own traditions. Fictions by authors in both Canada and the United States will be included. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: CAST-3481H, INDG-3481H
This course meets the Indigenous Course Requirement.
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ENGL-3483H: Indigenous Poetry
Offered:
- Peterborough
Considers the range of contemporary poetry by Indigenous authors from Canada and the United States, and the poems' relations to traditional language forms and to literary traditions and genres. It begins with a brief study of "orature" and songs, and includes a discussion of one nineteenth-century exemplar. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: CAST-3483H, INDG-3483H
This course meets the Indigenous Course Requirement.
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ENGL-3505H: Where is Here? An Examination of Space and Place in Canadian Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
An examination of Canadian literature's attention to geographic and social spaces, from nature's landscapes to a city's underworlds to suburbia's sprawling expanse. Drawing on a range periods, genres, voices, and styles, this course investigates Canadian literature's unique desire to map the nation's geographies in order to contend with historical legacies and imagine possible futures. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3504Y or 3505H for credit.
Cross-listed: CAST-3505H
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ENGL-3509H: Twenty-First Century Canadian Literature
Offered:
- Durham GTA
An overview of developments in Canadian literary culture since the year 2000, this course examines how contemporary Canadian writing challenges CanLit's traditional notions of regionalism, multicultural inclusivity, gender performance and identity, community, feminism, white settler cultures, Indigenous reconciliation, cultural appropriation, nationalism, and various subjectivities. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: CAST-3509H
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ENGL-3601H: Modern Theory and Criticism
Offered:
- Peterborough
Examines some of the major critical approaches to literature and interpretation in the twentieth century: formalism, structuralism and semiotics, reader-response criticism, new historicism, psychoanalytic criticism, deconstruction, and feminism. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Not open to students with credit for ENGL 3600Y.
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ENGL-3603H: Is This Thing Any Good?: Literary Theory Before 1900
Offered:
- Peterborough
This course addresses literary and aesthetic theory from Aristotle's time until 1900. It addresses the various principles, suppositions, and standards which have been used in discussions of aesthetic and literary merit over the centuries, and interrogates the judgments and pre-judgments that tend to be involved whenever aesthetic determinations are made. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Not open to students with credit for ENGL 3600Y.
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ENGL-3605H: Race, Ethnicity, and Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
An introduction to critical theories on race, ethnicity, and national culture as they relate to literary theory, criticism, and production. Topics may include racialized identities and difference, power, intersectionality, bodies, decolonialism, Indigenous Knowledge, whiteness, and literature from a range of traditions. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits. Students may take only one of ENGL 3604Y or 3605H for credit.
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ENGL-3609H: SickLit
Offered:
- Peterborough
We read works that imagine disease, cure, and convalescence as gendered modes, asking how literature exposes pathologization and how authors rewrite illness beyond pathology. We focus on the regulation imposed by cultural and social understandings of "sickness" and the resistance posed by authors to medicalization. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: GESO-3609H
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ENGL-3704H: Queer Lit
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
Examines literary and cultural representations of queerness through historical, theoretical, and aesthetic approaches. What does it mean for a text to be "queer"? How do sexual identities intersect with racial, ethnic, and religious ones? What can explorations of queerness as an identity category tell us about identity itself? Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
Cross-listed: GESO-3704H
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ENGL-3707H: Literature and Globalization
Offered:
- Online
A study of literature and theory exploring the political, economic, cultural, and existential effects of globalization. With an emphasis on contemporary texts, approaches may focus on energy, cosmopolitanism, migration, technology, and environmentalism among others. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits.
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ENGL-3709H: Literatures of Girlhood
Offered:
- Peterborough
Studies selected girlhood bodies and narratives as they have developed within the contexts of Canadian and global literature and popular culture. Focusing on the negotiation of girlhood bodies and narratives through a variety of spaces and over diverse borders, this course considers relationships between Canadian and global girlhoods. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits including 1.0 ENGL credit or permission of the instructor.
Cross-listed: CAST-3709H, GESO-3709H
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ENGL-3851H: Intermediate Fiction Workshop
Offered:
- Durham GTA
A writing-intensive workshop in original contemporary fiction, this course offers student writers an opportunity to deepen, extend, and enhance their current creative writing practices using a variety of fictional forms. Weekly writing, editing, reading, and live conversational critiques are required. Prerequisite: 4.0 university credits including ENGL 2851H or 2859H (or permission of the instructor, with portfolio submission). Students may take only one of ENGL 3850Y or 3851H for credit.
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ENGL-3853H: Intermediate Poetry Writing Workshop
Offered:
- Peterborough
Aimed at poets already engaged in an ongoing poetic writing practice, this course asks students to complete weekly, original poetry writing in a variety of contemporary modes, complemented by ongoing readings and discussions of poetry and poetics and the development of peer editing skills. Prerequisite: Prerequisite: ENGL 2853H or 2959H (or permission of the instructor, with portfolio submission).
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ENGL-3901H: Reading Course
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
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ENGL-4020D: Honours Thesis
Offered:
- Peterborough
A double credit in which instruction in research methods leads to a thesis of about 15,000 words. The department deadline for a thesis abstract and bibliography (signed by the thesis supervisor) is May 1 of the student's third year. See www.trentu.ca/english for details.
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ENGL-4040Y: Practicum Course
Offered:
- Peterborough
Designed to permit students, under the direction of a faculty member and with the approval of the department, to apply their skills in written and oral communication as well as their understanding of the role and function of literary culture to practical endeavours. See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits, including 2.0 credits at the 3000 level, a minimum cumulative average of 70%, and permission of the department. Students must obtain the agreement of a faculty member to supervise the course and apply for permission to enrol prior to the commencement of the session in which the course will be offered. Students may take only one of ENGL 4040Y or 4041H for credit.
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ENGL-4151H: Advanced Studies in Shakespeare
Offered:
- Online
See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits (or permission of the department). Students may take only one of ENGL 4150Y or 4151H for credit.
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ENGL-4209H: Materiality and Text in the Digital Age
Offered:
- Peterborough
What happens to the study of the materiality of texts when a screen replaces the paper or parchment, and the stability of the written or printed signs is no longer guaranteed? Topics include paratexts and metadata, archival theory, the Digital Humanities, hypertexts, technology, and the book as fetish. Prerequisite: 14.0 university credits with a minimum cumulative average of 80% and permission of the instructor.
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ENGL-4301H: Studies in American Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits (or permission of the department). Students may take only one of ENGL 4300Y or 4301H for credit.
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ENGL-4501H: Studies in Canadian Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits (or permission of the department). Students may take only one of ENGL 4500Y or 4501H for credit.
Cross-listed: CAST-4501H
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ENGL-4601H: Studies in Critical Approaches to Literature
Offered:
- Peterborough
See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits (or permission of the department). Students may take only one of ENGL 4600Y or 4601H for credit.
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ENGL-4651H: Crip Theory
Offered:
- Peterborough
Literary scholars and disability activists reclaimed the term "crip" to explore overlaps between queer and disability cultures in neoliberal contexts. The course considers the emergence and continued relevance of crip theories, including crip authorship, disability justice, critical accessibility, and crip making. Prerequisite: 8.0 university credits. Not open to students with credit for GESO 3651H.
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ENGL-4801H: Advanced Studies in Genre
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits (or permission of the department). Students may take only one of ENGL 4800Y or 4801H for credit.
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ENGL-4803H: Advanced Studies in Modern Poetry
Offered:
- Peterborough
See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits (or permission of the department). Students may take only one of ENGL 4802Y or 4803H for credit.
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ENGL-4807H: Studies in Fiction
Offered:
- Peterborough
See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits (or permission of the department). Students may take only one of ENGL 4806Y or 4807H for credit.
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ENGL-4850Y: Advanced Seminar in Creative Writing
Offered:
- Durham GTA
Concentrating on literary prose, poetry, and/or creative non-fiction, this course requires student writers to engage actively in the creation of new works, peer discussions, critiques, and analyses of assigned literary readings. All writing for the course must be created for the literary page rather than the stage, microphone, or gallery. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits including 1.0 credit from ENGL 2851H, 2853H, 2855H, 2859H, 3850Y/3851H, 3853H, or 3855H; or permission of the instructor. Students may take only one of ENGL 4850Y or 4851H for credit.
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ENGL-4851H: Advanced Seminar in Creative Writing
Offered:
- Peterborough
Concentrating on literary prose, poetry, and/or creative non-fiction, this course requires student writers to engage actively in the creation of new works, peer discussions, critiques, and analyses of assigned literary readings. All writing for the course must be created for the literary page rather than the stage, microphone, or gallery. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits including 1.0 credit from ENGL 2851H, 2853H, 2855H, 2859H, 3850Y/3851H, 3853H, or 3855H; or permission of the instructor. Students may take only one of ENGL 4850Y or 4851H for credit.
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ENGL-4857H: The Play's the Thing
Offered:
- Peterborough
This course offers students practical experience in creating live theatre in collaboration with Peterborough's Electric City Players. Students may explore on-stage and back-stage opportunities, and will help realize a production of a play and engage in community educational outreach along the way. Enrolment requires the approval of the instructor. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits and permission of the instructor. Strongly recommended: ENGL 2150Y/2151H or 2152Y/2153H.
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ENGL-4901H: Reading Course
Offered:
- Peterborough
- Durham GTA
The course allows the student to select, with the approval of the department, an area for research study which is then pursued under the direction of a member of the department. Students must obtain the agreement of a faculty member to supervise the course and must apply for admission to enrol prior to the commencement of the session in which the course will be offered. See trentu.ca/english for details. Prerequisite: 4.0 ENGL credits, including 2.0 credits at the 3000 level, and a cumulative average of 70% or higher in all courses taken (or permission of the department).