Texas Tech University Summer I & 4000 Level Courses in English

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Texas Tech University Summer I 2014 3000 & 4000 Level Courses in English Department of English Lubbock, Texas 79409-3091 806-742-2501 English 3307.D01 CallNumber 35511 Restoration & 18 th Century British Literature CourseSubtitle No description available. Please contact teacher. THURS 6-8:50PM Jennifer Snead jennifer.snead@ttu.edu English/Philosophy 204 English 3324.170, 172, D82 Nineteenth Century American Literature Course not offered in Lubbock this semester. These sections are being taught in Fredericksbury/Kerrville, Highland Lakes (Marble Falls) and via distance out of Fredericksburg. English 3325.D01 CallNumber 35510 Modern and Contemporary American Literature The Modern Literature of Settlement W 6-8:50PM Matt Hooley Settlement is a sign of American modernity, and it is an engine of modern American cultural and political growth. Settlement is an ideological formation (Winthropian, Jeffersonian, etc.) that weds certain political principles (property, citizenship, and education, among others) to a set of moral imperatives. It is also a historical tool, a way of marking the difference between the American past and the present (see Turner s Frontier Thesis for example). And finally, settlement is a

matt.hooley@ttu.edu English/Philosophy 312B profound and personal experience: one that we remember, that we may strive to reproduce, or wish to forget. Settlement is a modern phenomenon (perhaps unsurprisingly) laden with contradictions and hypocrisies. To settle is to generate a measure of security, familiarity, identity, and privacy. But of course the spaces of settlement are also the sites of the most horrifying violence, estrangement, othering, and invasion that are possible in modern America. For this reason, such spaces have long fascinated American writers. Writers who ask how and why structures of safety and intimacy so often make room for the violation of safety and intimacy? Why we continue to invest in a set of ideals that seem so dangerous, so volatile? And: but what alternatives exist? Is it even possible to imagine an America not organized by the political, cultural, ideological, and economic force of settlement? In this course, we ll read four texts that directly confront these questions, albeit in very different cultural theaters. We ll attend to the ways that the philosophical/political contradictions endemic to the idea of American settlement have produced some of the most interesting aesthetic shifts in American literary history. How, for instance, shifting notions of labor, gender, citizenship, and race change how we tell stories about growing up American. At the same time, we ll investigate that ways the literature has reshaped American political experiences of settlement and domesticity. How the stories we tell change the way we think about, and live out, the idea of settlement. To this end, our main course texts will be paired, occasionally, with historical or theoretical readings that will enrich and complicate our analytical work. And even more importantly, we will constantly work between the imagined/invented ideas of settlement in our texts and those that we ourselves have lived. Textbook List: Kate Chopin, The Awakening. Dover Thrift Editions, 1993 ISBN-10: 0486277860, ISBN-13: 978-0486277868 Toni Morrison, Beloved. Vintage, 2004 ISBN-10: 1400033411, ISBN-13: 978-1400033416 Sandra Cisneros, The House on Mango Street. Vintage, 1991 ISBN-10: 0679734775, ISBN-13: 978-0679734772 Marilynne Robinson, Housekeeping. Picador, 2004 ISBN-10: 0312424094, ISBN-13: 978-0312424091 English 3337.001 Modern and Contemporary World Literature Fulfills the Multicultural requirement. Cancelled March 26, 2014. English 3337.D01

Modern and Contemporary World Literature Fulfills the Multicultural requirement. Cancelled June 2, 2014. English 3351.001 CallNumber 20761 Creative Writing Genre: Fiction M-F 12-1:50PM Katie Cortese katie.cortese@ttu.edu English/Philosophy 312G Notes: Prerequisite: Two sophomore English courses or, if a student s major does not require those courses, completion of English courses required by the student s major. May be repeated once, under a separate genre, from Fall 2002. If course taken prior to Fall 2002, may not be repeated. This course has the dual focus of (1) reading, analyzing, and discussing published stories and craft essays on fiction technique, and (2) writing, workshopping, and revising several short-short stories and one longer, literary story. Students will introduce an assigned story, post daily responses, offer critiques, and complete other tasks as assigned. Attendance is mandatory, though two classes may be missed without penalty. Email for more information. Reading List: Bird by Bird: Some Instructions on Writing and Life by Anne Lamott The Best American Short Stories 2013, Elizabeth Strout, Editor; Heidi Pitlor, Series Editor PDFs as assigned English 3351.180 CallNumber 25580 Creative Writing Genre: Poetry TBA TBA Notes: Prerequisite: Two sophomore English courses or, if a student s major does not require those courses, completion of English courses required by the student s major. May be repeated once, under a separate genre, from Fall 2002. If course taken prior to Fall 2002, may not be repeated. Offered in Junction, May 14-29, 2014, this class focuses on the lyric poem. For more information email john.poch@ttu.edu or visit http://www.depts.ttu.edu/junction/ John Poch john.poch@ttu.edu English/Philosophy 312F when in Lubbock English 3365 Professional Report Writing Notes: Prerequisite: Junior standing. The purpose of English 3365 is to prepare you for writing as a professional person. It focuses on gathering information and presenting it to specific audiences. The

assignments include a library/internet guide, an annotated bibliography, a recommendation report, a progress report, a proposal, and an oral report. You will learn uses, purposes, conventions, and structures for the reports and the proposal. You will also learn strategies for producing such documents, including analyzing purpose, gathering data, managing time, and revising. You will also develop your options, including visual and oral presentation and formatting verbal texts, for presenting information. You will review grammar and principles of effective style. All of your work will be on topics of your choosing, preferably related to your major or intended career. For further information please contact the teacher. Instructor Section Day Time Call Number Amber Leigh Lancaster amber.lancaster@ttu.edu English/Philosophy 408 001 M-F 10-11:50AM 20767 English 3381.D21 CallNumber 34830 Literature of the Fantastic TUES 6-8:50PM James Whitlark james.whitlark@ttu.edu jswhitlark@yahoo.com English/Philosophy 464 when in town Notes: Prerequisite:6 hrs of 2000-level English. Today if you count together all the volumes of fantasy, horror, science fiction, as well as those in the "fiction" and "young adults" sections of bookstores that include magic or futuristic technology, you will usually find that the majority of literature available is literature of the fantastic. How did this develop? We shall be examining important texts in the rise of the fantastic and what they show us about the way our imaginations create. Students will be expected to complete two papers on short stories, novels or movies; a midterm and a final. Texts: All the texts will be available free online. English 3388 Film Genres: Avant- Garde, Documentary, and Narrative Cancelled March 26, 2014. English 3389.001 CallNumber 201487 Short Story Living Dead M-F 10-11:50AM Mary Mullen Notes: Prerequisite: 6 hrs of 2000-level English. This upper-level English course on the modern short story considers how death lives on in short fiction as we examine key genres of the short story: the detective story, the ghost story, the vampire tale, gothic stories, as well as realist, naturalist, and modernist stories. We will move from strange deaths that need to be explained to ghostly hauntings that trouble the division between life and death to more commonplace deaths that question our assumptions about reality, memory, and everyday life. In the process, we will read stories from different time periods

mary.mullen@ttu.edu English/Philosophy 421 (the nineteenth-century to the present) that represent different places (America, England, Ireland, South Africa, Haiti, India) including stories by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Edgar Allan Poe, Sherwood Anderson, James Joyce, Jamaica Kincaid, Nadine Gordimer, Tim O Brien, Alice Walker, James Baldwin, Edwidge Danticant, among others. Students will learn both the distinguishing features of the short story as a genre and its range. English 4300 Individual Studies in English Notes: Prerequisite: 6 hrs of 3000-level English. May be repeated once when topics Course number normally used for individual/independent studies arranged between an English professor and a student. Students must have already completed a course with the instructor. The instructor is not obligated to agree to supervise the independent study. The student will normally have a topic in mind and will approach the instructor for feasibility. A form, which may be picked up in EN 211C, must be filled out and approved by the Chair of the English Department. The form is then delivered to 211C and the advisor enrolls the student. The teacher submits the grade to the Chair for posting. English 4378 Internship in Technical Communication Notes: Prerequisite: Junior or senior standing, ENGL 3365, declared specialization in technical communication, and approval of director of technical communication. Course number used for internships in technical writing. Internship proposals may be submitted to the director of the Technical Communication program, Dr. Thomas Barker (thomas.barker@ttu.edu, 742-2500 ext 2779, EN 363E) on a form that may be obtained from him. Courses not offered this semester. English 3302: Old and Middle English Literature English 3304: Medieval and Renaissance Drama English 3305: British Renaissance Literature English 3308: Nineteenth Century British Literature English 3309: Modern & Contemporary British Literature English 3323: Early American Literature English 3324: Nineteenth Century American Literature Note: This course is being offered by Fredericksburg/Kerrville and offered to Highland Lakes (Marble Falls) and via distance, but not to Lubbock students. English 3335: Ancient and Medieval World Literature English 3336: Early Modern World Literature English 3351: Creative Writing Note: A section of this course is being taught in Junction in the Maymester, but NOT in Summer I. English 3360: Issues in Composition English 3362: Rhetorical Criticism English 3366: Style in Technical Writing English 3367: Usability Testing English 3368: World Wide Web Publishing of Technical Information English 3369: Information Design

English 3372: History of the English Language English 3373: Modern English Syntax English 3382: Women Writers English 3383: Bible as Literature English 3384: Religion in Literature English 3385: Shakespeare English 3386: Literature and Science English 3387: Multicultural Literatures of America English 3389: Short Story English 3390: Literatures of the Southwest English 3391: Literature and War English 4301: Studies in Selected Authors English 4311: Studies in Poetry English 4312: Studies in Drama English 4313: Studies in Fiction English 4314: Studies in Nonfiction English 4315: Studies in Film English 4321: Studies in Literary Topics English 4342: Studies in Literary Theory English 4351: Advanced Creative Writing English 4360: Studies in Composition English 4365: Special Topics in Technical Communication English 4366: Technical and Professional Editing English 4367: Developing Instructional Materials English 4368: Advanced Web Design English 4369: Interaction Design English 4371: Language and Community English 4373: Studies in Linguistics English 4374: Senior Seminar English 4380: Professional Issues in Technical Communication