E N G L I S H
Notes
- Not all courses are offered within an academic year. Please consult with the Department of English Language and Literature regarding current course offerings.
- Many courses are also taught at St. Jerome's University.
- "R"courses are administered by Renison University College, and several of the other courses are also taught there.
Course ID: 011581
Introduction to Rhetorical Studies
This course introduces students to rhetoric: the art of persuasion. The history, theory, practice, and impacts of rhetoric will be considered. Students will analyze persuasive artifacts including propaganda, advertisements, political texts, and scientific communications. Students will also act as rhetors (users of rhetoric) to craft persuasive arguments.
Course ID: 011395
Rhetoric in Popular Culture
This course examines the role of persuasion in contemporary society by focusing on one or more topic areas: film, television, video games, comic books, music, fashion, etc. Students will explore the topic area(s) in depth using a variety of rhetorical theories and methods.
Course ID: 015552
Horror
A study of the contemporary horror genre in literature and film. Topics may include the history of horror, the construction of fear, and the development of horror archetypes. Authors and creators may include H.P. Lovecraft, Shirley Jackson, George Romero, and Stephen King.
Course ID: 015165
Popular Potter
This course examines all seven of J.K. Rowling's Harry Potter novels.
Course ID: 015492
Literature and Medicine
How can literature help us understand the body, illness, and healing? The course considers the perspectives of patients and medical practitioners across a range of works, including poetry, fiction, medical texts, and other nonfiction.
Also offered at St. Jerome's University
Course ID: 005054
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.
Course ID: 011175
Communications in Mathematics & 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.
Prereq: Honours Mathematics students
Course ID: 005061
Written Academic English
Designed specifically for students for whom English is not the first language, this writing skills course provides instruction in grammar, sentence and paragraph structure, elements of composition, and academic essay writing, including a focus on theme, development of central ideas, exposition, and argumentation.
[Note: Not open to fluent writers of English.]
(Cross-listed with EMLS 129R)
Course ID: 005064
The Use of English
This course examines the use of English in a variety of contexts (colloquial, scientific, legal, political, commercial, journalistic, literary, etc.) to increase critical awareness of the language and help students write more clearly and effectively.
Course ID: 005068
Shakespeare
Designed for students in all faculties, the course examines some of Shakespeare's comedies, history plays, and tragedies. Shakespeare's variety and flexibility in developing characters and dramatic structures are stressed, as are significant themes.
[Note: No previous work in Shakespeare is required.]
Course ID: 015735
Communication in the Engineering Profession (AE, CIVE, ENVE, GEOE)
In this course students in Architectural, Civil, Environmental, and Geological Engineering will enhance oral and written communication competencies in contexts relevant to the engineering profession.
Prereq: Architectural, Civil, Environmental, and Geological Engineering students.
Antireq: GENE 199 taken fall 2017 or fall 2018
(Cross-listed with SPCOM 191)
Course ID: 015736
Communication in the Engineering Profession (COMPE, ELE, MGTE)
In this course students in Computer, Electrical, and Management Engineering will enhance oral and written communication competencies in contexts relevant to the engineering profession.
Prereq: Computer, Electrical, and Management Engineering students.
Antireq: GENE 191
(Cross-listed with SPCOM 192)
Course ID: 015737
Communication in the Sciences
In this course students will enhance oral and written communication competencies in contexts relevant to the life sciences and physical sciences.
[Note: This course requires department consent to enrol and to drop or swap the course. Please consult the Science Undergraduate Office who administer this course.]
Department Consent Required
Prereq: BSc students in the Faculty of Science.
Antireq: SCCOM 100
(Cross-listed with SPCOM 193)
Course ID: 005069
English Literatures 1
An introduction to the diverse forms and voices of literature written in English from the Middle Ages to the late 18th century, focussing on key writers and works, including works by women and people of colour. Students will explore literary techniques, historical and cultural contexts, and the question of the canon.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005070
English Literatures 2
An introduction to the diverse forms and voices of literature written in English from the late 18th century to the present, focussing on key writers and works from Britain and North America, and including works by women and people of colour. Students will explore literary techniques, historical and cultural contexts, and the question of the canon.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 016340
English Literatures 3
An introduction to literature written by people of colour and Indigenous and Black authors. Using a postcolonial and anti-racist framework, this course examines historical and contemporary issues of race, racism, and colonialism in a variety of literary texts.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005072
The Bible and Literature 1
A study of the major stories, themes, and literary characteristics of the Old Testament of the King James Bible (also known as the Hebrew Scripture), and of its influence on other English literature.
Course ID: 011680
Designing Digital Images and Interaction
This course draws on multiple theoretical perspectives to introduce students to the fundamental principles of multi-modal communication design in its social context. Students will analyze, design, and produce images and interactivity for use in a variety of digital platforms, including e-learning and business applications.
Prereq: Honours English students.
Antireq: GBDA 101
(Cross-listed with DAC 201)
Course ID: 011681
Designing Digital Video
This course introduces students to the principles of designing time-based multi-modal communication in a social context. Students will analyse, design, and produce video for use in a variety of digital platforms, including e-learning and business applications.
Antireq: GBDA 201, 202
(Cross-listed with DAC 202)
Course ID: 005078
The Canadian Short Story
The short story is Canada's most vibrant literary form. Students will examine short stories from the 19th century to the present. Topics to be covered may include national, regional and Indigenous identity, mythology, multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism, as well as explorations of contemporary social justice issues.
Course ID: 011769
Writing Lives
This course studies the ways the self is constructed through text by examining a variety of life-writing approaches, organized from youth to old age, along with theories of identity, memory, gender, narrative, cultural studies, and autobiography as a genre.
Course ID: 005082
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.
Course ID: 015124
Gothic Monsters
A study of monstrosity, fear, terror, and horror in the gothic mode from its origins to the present, with attention to the ways various genres (from the novel to new media) represent gothic sexualities, genders, politics, and aesthetics.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005086
Arthurian Legend
The story of Arthur and his knights of the Round Table will be discussed as it is treated at various times in various works and genres. Such matters will be considered as the character of Arthur, the concept of Camelot, and the Fellowship of the Round Table.
Course ID: 005087
Detective Fiction
A study of the detective novel, the novel of crime, the thriller, the novel of intrigue, and of espionage with texts drawn from various time periods and national literatures. The course includes the examination of critical approaches to the form of detective fiction.
Course ID: 009249
Race and the Literary Tradition
How have ideas of race been represented, transmitted, and resisted in the canon of literature in English over the centuries? Topics may include the invention of race, Eurocentrism and imaginative geography, racial beauty myths, internalized racism, and issues of gender, sexuality, and colonialism.
(Cross-listed with GSJ 208L)
Course ID: 015063
Advanced Academic Writing
This course will explore relationships between audience, situation, purpose, and form in academic writing in the disciplines. Students will explore the rhetorical features of knowledge creation across fields of study. They will practice situated inquiry and argumentation through a variety of research-based written exercises, including a significant research project in a field of their choice.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 015086
Genres of Creative Writing
This course introduces students to both contemporary and historical forms of creative writing. Students will explore genres of poetry, prose, and/or drama through their own writing. Students will also investigate the culture of publishing, learn key revision strategies, and workshop the writing of their peers to develop their critical abilities.
Course ID: 005095
Genres of Technical Communication
This course explores writing, presentation, and design across various genres of technical communication, with a primary focus on printed and/or online computer documentation. Other assignments might include white papers, product specifications, help-desk communication, etc.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005096
Genres of Business Communication
This course explores the genres of communication in business and other organizations. Students will study and produce instances from several of the following: reports (of several kinds), letters, email messages, marketing materials, public relations materials, and any other types of organizational communication.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 014911
Grant Writing
The course covers researching, organizing, drafting, and editing proposals and applications for government grants for organizations. Topics may include interviews with domain experts, working with proposal guidelines and checklists, establishing milestones and expectations, using past proposals as models, treating individual sections as separate sub-genres, and creating coherence and flow in the final draft.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 009890
Arts Writing
A study of the various forms, processes, and modes of publication of professional writing in the arts. The course will consider both free-lance writing and writing within institutional contexts. Practice in research, writing, and editing will be emphasized.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 010336
Legal Writing
A study of the principles, processes, and various forms of writing used in the practice of law and drafting of legislation. The history and structure of legal writing, including current debates about plain language, will be examined.
(Cross-listed with LS 291)
Course ID: 014912
Technical Editing
This course will introduce students to practices and tools of technical editing, such as language and format editing, verification and fact-checking, style guide consistency, discourse appropriateness, and the use of profession-specific software.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 014998
First Nations, Metis, and Inuit Literatures
This course examines literary works in a variety of genres by First Nations, Metis, and Inuit authors in Canada. Students will study the literature in relation to key concepts that recur in Indigenous literary criticism such as land, teaching, and respect.
(Cross-listed with GSJ 211)
Course ID: 016074
The Pleasure of Poetry
This course is an introduction to the enjoyment of poetry: what we like about it, what makes it fun, and how we can enjoy it more. Students will have an opportunity to expand their understanding of poetry. A range of poems will be sampled, and students will have opportunities to share poems that they like.
Course ID: 016455
Graphic Narrative
A study of graphic narrative (such as comics, graphic novels, and alternative modes) from the eighteenth century to the present. This course addresses issues such as the history and formal conventions of the medium as well as the unique rhetoric of comics-based storytelling. Topics of interest may include graphic memoir, multimodality, cross-cultural influence, and the comics-as-literature movement.
Course ID: 015145
Migration, Diaspora, and Exile in Muslim Narratives
This course examines Muslim narratives written in the diaspora, such as from North America or the United Kingdom. It investigates the diversity of Islamic culture and expression in diasporic contexts, exploring an array of experiences and issues written from various sociocultural locations.
(Cross-listed with SI 240R)
Course ID: 015146
Sacred Spaces and Human Geographies in Muslim Literary Expressions
Using the Muslim dimension as a central theme, this course explores the social, cultural, and political implications to be found in a range of postcolonial literatures from Africa, South Asia, and the Middle East. Students investigate issues such as identities, nationalism and politics, cultural memory, and sacred space and place.
(Cross-listed with SI 241R)
Course ID: 016054
Literature, Rhetoric, and the Visual Arts
This course will study literature and rhetoric in dialogue with the visual arts, including potential materials such as paintings, photography, illustrations, sculpture, monuments and memorials, installation art, multimedia and digital media. Course material will draw on a variety of literary and rhetorical genres, historical periods, and forms of visual art.
Course ID: 016055
Literature, Rhetoric, and Music
This course explores the cultural, historical, and aesthetic relationships between literature, rhetoric, and music. Course materials may draw on a range of historical periods and themes, as well as a variety of literary, lyrical, and musical genres. Attention will be paid to ways that literary, rhetorical, and musical arts exist in artistic dialogue.
Course ID: 016409
Introduction to Black Canadian Writing
An analysis of Black writing and cultural achievement in Canada. Theoretical and literary texts will be studied to explore how contributions from this field have helped to shape Canada from the 18th century to the present.
Prereq: Level at least 2A or students pursuing the Diploma in Black Studies or the Diploma in Fundamentals of Anti-Racist Communication
(Cross-listed with BLKST 244)
Course ID: 015350
Literature for an Ailing Planet
Can the humanities change how cultures relate to environments and the natural world? This course surveys environmental thought in works of literature and in popular culture.
(Cross-listed with ERS 288)
Also offered at St. Jerome's University
Course ID: 005120
Literary Theory and Criticism
What exactly are we doing when we study literature? By examining a selection of critical methods and theoretical approaches, this course will enhance understanding of the many different emphases, values, and priorities critics bring to literature, and the many available perspectives on what constitutes literature's significance.
Prereq: Level at least 2A.
Antireq: ENGL 251A, ENGL 251B
Course ID: 011370
Irish Literature
A study of modern and contemporary Irish literature in English. This course will introduce students to a range of Irish writing in its often turbulent historical and cultural context. The international dimensions of Irish writers and their work will be explored.
Course ID: 016381
Manga
Manga is graphic narrative from Japan that draws on complex historical contexts, global influences, and stylistic conventions in order to create a unique storytelling medium. By studying manga texts such as Dororo, Akira, and Deathnote, students in this course will be encouraged to think critically about visual narrative, cultural values in a global marketplace, and literature as a concept.
(Cross-listed with EASIA 262R)
Course ID: 014901
Literatures of Migration
This course explores the literatures and cultures of diasporic and immigrant communities in North America, such as African, Asian, Caribbean, Middle Eastern, and Latin American. Topics to be covered may include memory, race, hybridity, home, and belonging.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 014899
Global Literatures
How have cultural exchange, border crossings, and globalization shaped English language and literature? In this course students will discuss literary and cultural productions from around the world and explore themes such as colonialism, transnationalism, and globalization.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005122
Rhetorical Theory and Criticism
This course provides a survey of the multidisciplinary field of rhetorical studies. In addition to introducing key concepts, theoretical frameworks, and critical debates, this course examines the role of rhetoric in a range of academic disciplines and social contexts.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 014790
Introduction to Critical Game Studies
This course introduces students to the field of humanities-based game studies. Topics may include the debate between ludological (rules-based) and narratological (story-based) approaches, procedural studies, platform and software studies, gamification, games and adaptation studies, and games as rhetorical objects.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 014791
Social Media
This course surveys the popular social media landscape and charts scholarly approaches, both methodological and theoretical, to understanding and analyzing social media texts. Topics to be addressed may include memes, social networks, fan communities and texts, digital identity, and other emergent social media forms.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 011682
Special Topics in Digital Design
In this course students will learn advanced digital design theory. They will participate in workshops with professional designers, develop specialized digital materials, and contribute signature work to their digital portfolio.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of four times.]
(Cross-listed with DAC 300, SPCOM 300)
Course ID: 013106
Designing with Digital Sound
In this course students will be introduced to sound analysis and production. Students will learn to record, edit, and implement sound in a variety of linear and non-linear media forms, with emphasis on film and video games.
Antireq: DAC 301
(Cross-listed with DAC 203)
Course ID: 005124
Old English Language and Literature
An introduction to the English language in its earliest form, and study of selected prose and poetry from pre-Conquest England in the original language, with attention to historical, cultural, and religious contexts.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005125
The Age of Beowulf
A study of the earliest English literature in translation. The heroic epic Beowulf will be studied in depth, along with a selection of Old English poetry and prose, such as lyrics, riddles, and historical and religious writing.
Prereq: Level at least 2B
Course ID: 005126
Introduction to Linguistics
Introduction to linguistics and the principles of linguistic analysis through an examination of English phonology, forms, syntax, and discourse.
Course ID: 005129
The History of the English Language
This course explores the history of the English language, from Anglo-Saxon dialects ("Old English"), through the combining of Anglo-Saxon and Norman French, its evolution in medieval and early modern Britain, up to its transformation within multilingual and multicultural contexts. The course examines not only the evolving vocabulary and grammar of the language, but also its social history.
Course ID: 005136
Critical Discourse Analysis
This course provides an introduction to the theory and practice of critical discourse analysis (CDA), the close study of language and its effects in social context. Students will learn to apply discourse-analytical tools to a wide range of texts, conversations, images, and other artifacts.
Course ID: 015493
Race and Resistance
An examination of how contemporary literary and cultural texts represent, reconfigure, and resist ideas of race. Analyzing literature, film, art, popular culture, and social movements, this course covers major debates in critical race theory and anti-racist practices.
(Cross-listed with GSJ 307)
Also offered at St. Jerome's University
Also offered at Renison University College
Course ID: 005133
Rhetoric, Classical to Enlightenment
A study of rhetorical theories from antiquity through the Renaissance to the 18th century, with an emphasis on how these theories reflect changing attitudes towards language, society, and the self.
Prereq: Level at least 2A.
Antireq: ENGL 309B
Course ID: 005135
Contemporary Rhetoric
An examination of contemporary rhetorical theory and its relationships to criticism, interdisciplinary studies, and digital applications.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005137
Speech Writing
The analysis, writing, and editing of speeches. This course considers how genre and style impact the creation, reception, and implications of meaning. Students practice writing, as form and style, in the construction of arguments and other genres of speech making.
Prereq: Level at least 4A English Rhetoric and Professional Writing or English Rhetoric, Media, and Professional Communication
(Cross-listed with SPCOM 323)
Course ID: 011393
The Discourse of Dissent
A study of the social, historical, and rhetorical dimensions of collective action. Topics may include health and welfare movements, civil rights and anti-war protests, and environmentalism.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
(Cross-listed with HIST 309, GSJ 309, SPCOM 434)
Course ID: 005141
Non-Chaucerian Middle English Literature
Non-Chaucerian English writings during the later Middle Ages; the Middle English romance, including "Sir Gawain and the Green Knight"; alliterative literature, such as "Piers Plowman"; and representative examples of Middle English non-Chaucerian verse.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005145
Early Canadian Literatures
This course examines a selection of pre-1920 Canadian texts concerning first contact, imperialism, colonization, incipient nationhood, and early multi-racial immigration that participate in the ongoing invention of Canada.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005147
Modern Canadian Literature
This course focuses on the varied ways in which 20th-century writers of poetry and prose participate in the shaping of Canadian literary culture, with emphasis on the literature of the middle decades.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Also offered at Renison University College
Course ID: 005150
Contemporary Canadian Literature
This course examines Canadian Literature written in the latter decades of the 20th century and into the 21st century. Literary works are studied in relation to relevant contemporary social, cultural and political topics, such as nationalism, indigeneity, multiculturalism, and diaspora.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 011392
History and Theory of Pre-Internet Media
This course explores the social, political, and cultural contexts and consequences of media technologies such as newspapers, photography and film, radio, recorded music, television, and early computing.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 011583
Postcolonial Literature of the Americas
This course examines postcolonial literature in English from Canada, the U.S., and the Caribbean. Through study of both written and oral genres, we will discuss how language practices adapt to and are created in colonial and postcolonial contexts. Topics may include diaspora and migration, nationalism, gender, neo-colonialism, and multiculturalism.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 016059
Modern and Contemporary American Drama
This course explores traditions and experiments in American drama through an analysis of American plays, especially those from the 1940s to the present, in their historical, textual, and theatrical contexts.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 015723
Topics in Creative Writing
This course will focus on a selected genre, approach, creative method, or other aspect of creative writing. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of two times.]
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Also offered at St. Jerome's University
Course ID: 005156
Creative Writing 2
This course is designed to assist advanced creative writers in developing a body of work in one or more genres by means of supervised practice, discussions of craft, and peer critiques.
[Note: Admission by portfolio review]
Instructor Consent Required
Prereq: Level at least 3A and ENGL 335
Course ID: 010339
American Literature to 1860
A study of developments in early American Literature. Texts may be drawn from Anglo-European movements such as gothicism and romanticism; captivity narratives and other colonial writings; African American, Native American, and other minority traditions; sentimental and domestic fiction; and American forms such as the frontier romance, and other minority literatures.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005157
American Literature 1860-1910
A survey of literary developments in America from the Civil War through the turn of the 20th century, including significant movements of the period such as realism, regionalism, and naturalism; the New Woman's writing and other developments in women's literatures; popular forms such as the Western; and minority literatures.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005159
American Literature in a Global Context
A study of the ways in which movements of peoples and cultures have shaped American literature. Topics may include colonialism, immigration and migration, literary influence across borders and languages, nativism and internationalism, racial and ethnic styles and exchanges.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 015354
Global Asian Diasporas
This course explores the literature and culture from one or more global Asian diasporas, with particular emphasis on cultures of East Asian origin. Topics may include identity, transnationalism, imperialism, war, labour, migration, and popular culture.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
(Cross-listed with EASIA 346R)
Course ID: 005162
American Literature Since 1945
A study of the movements of American Literature following the second world war. The course will consider the formal and cultural diversity of writing in this period, with attention to topics such as avant-garde experiment, the persistence of realism, counter-cultural politics, feminism and literature, postmodernism, and the emergence of minority writers in the mainstream.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 010196
American Poetry Since 1850
A study of poems, poets, ideas, and movements, contributing to the growth of a distinctive American poetry from Whitman and Dickinson to the 21st century. Texts will be drawn from popular and avant-garde contexts, as well as the literary mainstream.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005165
Seventeenth-Century Literature 2
An intensive study of Milton's epic, Paradise Lost, in its historical and literary contexts.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005166
Shakespeare 1
A study of the plays written before 1599-1600, excluding Julius Caesar.
Prereq: Level at least 2A.
Antireq: DRAMA 386
(Cross-listed with THPERF 386)
Course ID: 005167
Shakespeare 2
A study of the plays written after 1599-1600, including Julius Caesar.
Prereq: Level at least 2A.
Antireq: DRAMA 387
(Cross-listed with THPERF 387)
Course ID: 010197
Shakespeare in Performance at The Stratford Festival
A historical, theoretical, and analytical introduction to Shakespeare's plays in performance, both on stage and screen, this course focuses on specific problems and decisive issues of past productions and of those in the current Stratford Festival season.
[Note: This is a block course that meets in Stratford for two weeks in May, and may be taken with ENGL 367, as the two courses are offered at complementary times. The course is offered as part of a consortium with faculty from five universities. Students are required to arrange their own transportation to Stratford.]
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005168
Selected Studies
Designed to provide an in-depth study of problems and/or authors selected by the instructor. Students interested in initiating such courses are encouraged to do so by bringing their ideas to the attention of individual instructors.
Department Consent Required
Course ID: 005169
Selected Studies
Designed to provide a study in-depth of problems and/or authors selected by the instructor. Students interested in initiating such courses are encouraged to do so by bringing their ideas to the attention of individual instructors.
Department Consent Required
Course ID: 016172
Voice and Text at the Stratford Festival
Taught by faculty and Stratford Festival coaches, this practical course invites students to explore acting techniques and exercises to develop their stage voice with a particular focus on Shakespeare's plays. This is a block course that meets in Stratford for two weeks in May, and may be taken with ENGL 364, as the two courses are offered at complementary times. The course is offered as part of a consortium with faculty from five universities. Students are required to arrange their own transportation to Stratford.
Prereq: Level at least 2A.
Antireq: ARTS 390 taken spring 2019 or spring 2020
Course ID: 014969
Professional Communications in Statistics and Actuarial Science
This course introduces students to oral and written communication in the fields of statistics and actuarial science. With emphasis on the public presentation of technical knowledge, the ability to give and receive constructive feedback, and communication in a collaborative environment, this course helps students develop proficiencies in critical workplace skills. This course is writing intensive and includes extensive collaborative assignments.
[Note: Students are encouraged to complete this course by their 4A term. Offered: F,W,S]
Department Consent Required
Prereq: At least 70% in one of EMLS 101R, 102R, EMLS/ENGL 129R, ENGL 109, SPCOM 100, 223; one of STAT 331, 371, ACTSC 331; Actuarial Science or Statistics major students
(Cross-listed with MTHEL 300)
Also offered at St. Jerome's University
Course ID: 005175
Information Design
The theory and practice of design for print and digital media, including the study of design concepts such as space, colour, typography, interactivity, immersion, motion, and presence. Students produce designs using professional software tools.
Prereq: Level at least 2B
Course ID: 005176
Visual Rhetoric
This course introduces students to the study of images from a rhetorical perspective, including the interaction of texts and images in such professional writing fields as advertising, book illustration, technical documentation, journalism, and public relations. Issues may include visual and textual literacy, the semiotics and rhetoric of design, and the ideological basis of social communication.
Prereq: Level at least 2B
Course ID: 011683
Digital Design Research Project
Students work in small groups under the supervision of a faculty researcher on an ongoing, large-scale, digital design project.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of four times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A
(Cross-listed with DAC 400)
Course ID: 012357
Language and Politics
This course explores how language shapes and is shaped by the unequal distribution of power in modern societies. The role of language will be considered in, for example, the maintenance of sexual difference, the establishment and maintenance of national identity, and the conflict between social classes. The reading will consist of literary and theoretical texts, the latter including such writers as Bourdieu, Bakhtin, Foucault, Cameron, Lakoff, Ngugi wa Thion'go, and Paulin.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005177
Writing for the Media
This course examines the genres and strategies of both journalism and public relations. With a strong orientation towards rhetorical and linguistic theories, this course will cover audience concerns from both within and outside organizations.
Prereq: Level at least 3A
Course ID: 005178
The Discourse of Advertising
This course introduces students to writing and editing advertising copy. Students will also be introduced to models of discourse and rhetorical analysis of advertising texts. Assignments include creating a portfolio of advertising copy and an extensive analysis of sample advertising discourse.
Prereq: Level at least 3A
Course ID: 005179
The Rhetoric of Digital Design: Theory and Practice
Students apply a variety of analytic perspectives - design discourse, multimodal discourse, rhetorical theory, social semiotics - to the design and production of a major digital project (or compilation of projects) using professional software and hardware tools.
Prereq: Level at least 3A
Course ID: 011394
Rhetoric of Argumentation
This course studies the discursive, social, and rhetorical principles of argumentation, including topics such as evidence, reasoning, and the organization and presentation of arguments. Scholars studied may include Richard Whatley, Jurgen Habermas, Stephen Toulmin, Chaim Perelman, Lucie Olbrecht-Tyteca, Kenneth Burke, and Pierre Bourdieu.
Prereq: Level at least 3A
Course ID: 014558
Eighteenth-Century Women Writers
A selection of writing by women such as Behn, Finch, Montagu, Fielding, Edgeworth, and Austen. Topics may include the culture of sensibility, romance and the gothic, and the interaction of women's writing with discourses of race and colonialism.
Prereq: Level at least 3A.
Antireq: WS 410F
(Cross-listed with GSJ 410)
Course ID: 016058
Eighteenth-Century Literature: Sex, Satire, and Sentiment
A selection of writing embracing the themes of sex, satire, and sentiment that characterize the Restoration and 18th century. Authors may include Behn, Swift, Finch, Pope, Defoe, and Radcliffe.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 016057
Eighteenth-Century Literature and Media
A study of oral, printed, and popular media and literature (such as ballads, fiction, and newspapers) in the Restoration and 18th century. Topics may include the role of women in the rise of print culture, the social role of popular print forms, and the literary reception of new media technologies.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 016056
Transnational Feminisms and Contemporary Narratives
This course examines the dialogue between transnational feminist theories and literary practices. Drawing on a range of literary and media genres from the late 20th and early 21st centuries, this course considers the historical developments, as well as contemporary contexts (e.g., migration, globalization), that gave rise to the framework of transnational feminism and its negotiations with Anglo-American and European feminist literary theories.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005190
Literature of the Victorian Age 1
A critical study of early to mid-Victorian literature, including authors such as Carlyle, Arnold, Tennyson, the Brontės, Elizabeth Barrett Browning, Robert Browning, Gaskell, Ruskin, and Dickens. Topics may include liberty, work, gender, class, imperialism, and poetry.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005191
Literature of the Victorian Age 2
A critical study of mid to late Victorian literature, including authors such as Christina Rossetti, Dante Gabriel Rossetti, George Eliot, Newman, Hopkins, Michael Field, Wilde, and Hardy. Topics may include the "Woman Question," the crisis in religious faith, and aestheticism.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005192
Early Literature of the Modernist Period in the United Kingdom and Ireland
A study of the literatures of the United Kingdom before and after World War I, including such writers as Conrad, Forster, Hopkins, Mansfield, Shaw, Synge, Wilde, and Yeats.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 005193
Literature of the Modernist Period in the United Kingdom and Ireland
A study of the literatures of the United Kingdom and Ireland from World War I to World War II, including such writers as Auden, Eliot, Isherwood, Joyce, Lawrence, Orwell, West, and Woolf.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 011584
Postcolonial Literatures
This course examines postcolonial literature (fiction, poetry, and drama) from Africa, Australia, Britain, India, New Zealand, and Pakistan. Topics may include the range of creative forms and language use in texts; indigeneity and migration; intersections of gender, sexuality, and race; and resistance, nationalism, and history.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
(Cross-listed with GSJ 463)
Course ID: 005195
Contemporary Critical Theory
Contemporary critical theory offers an array of competing constructions of text and culture. This course examines several topics in recent critical theory, such as gender, race, subjectivity, textuality, and popular culture.
Prereq: Level at least 3A
Course ID: 005196
History of Literary Criticism
An historical survey of major critical texts and movements from the Greek and Roman classics to the New Criticism of the mid-20th century, examining different critical theories and practices in a context of cultural changes.
Prereq: Level at least 3A
Course ID: 011773
Adapting Literary Works
Focusing on modern and contemporary adaptation of works of literature in English, this course examines the problems, possibilities, and principles of representing such works in other literary forms and in other media.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 014913
Research Methods in Technical Communication
This course teaches students the practice and theory of research methods in the field of technical and professional communication. Topics may include resource validity and renewal cycles, data-gathering techniques and analytics, interview techniques for subject-matter experts, rapid research skills, and user-experience design.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 009976
Topics in the History and Theory of Language
A special study of a selected topic in the history and theory of language. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors
Course ID: 009979
Topics in Literatures Medieval to Romantic
A special study of a selected topic, author, genre, or period in Medieval to Romantic literatures. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors
Course ID: 014485
Topics in Literatures Romantic to Modern
A special study of a selected topic, author, genre, or period in Romantic to Modern literatures. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors
Course ID: 014486
Topics in Literatures Modern to Contemporary
A special study of a selected topic, author, genre, or period in Modern to Contemporary literatures. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors
Course ID: 015553
Topics in Literature and Rhetoric
A special study of a selected topic in literature and rhetoric. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors
Course ID: 014487
Topics in the History and Theory of Rhetoric
A special study of a selected topic in the history and theory of rhetoric. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors
Course ID: 014488
Topics in Professional Writing and Communication Design
A special study of a selected topic in professional writing and communication design. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors
Course ID: 014489
Topics in Forms of Media and Critical Analysis
A special study of a selected topic in forms of media and critical analysis. Please see course instructor for details.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of 10 times.]
Prereq: Level at least 3A English majors