Fall 2024 Course Descriptions: Waterbury Campus

Fall 2024


Each semester the faculty for the Department of English provide course descriptions that build upon the University's catalog descriptions. These individually crafted descriptions provide information about variable topics, authors, novels, texts, writing assignments, and whether instructor consent is required to enroll. The details, along with reviewing the advising report, will help students select course options that best meet one's interests and academic requirements.

The following list includes Undergraduate courses that are sequenced after the First-Year Writing requirement and will change each semester.

1000-Level Courses

1616W: Major Works of English and American Literature

Prerequisites:  ENGL 1007 or 1010 or 1011 or 2011.

1616W | MW 1:25-2:40 | Falco, Daniela

The UConn undergraduate catalogue lists ENGL 1616W as a course that “includes important works from the major genres and historical periods since Beowulf”; that is exactly what we will be doing in this course: we will read notable British and American works of literature, while we will also get acquainted (or re-acquainted) with three literary genres: poetry, drama, and fiction (both short stories and novels).

The poems we will read come from hundreds of years of poetry, with authors such as William Shakespeare, George Herbert, John Donne, John Milton, Andrew Marvell, William Wordsworth, John Keats, Alfred, Lord Tennyson, William Blake, Walt Whitman, Robert Frost and T. S. Eliot—to name a few. 

We will read two plays: Hamlet by William Shakespeare and A Raisin in the Sun by American playwright Lorraine Hansberry, and two novels, 1984 by George Orwell, and Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston. Short stories written by (among others) Kate Chopin, D. H. Lawrence, James Joyce, John Updike, Mark Twain, Edgar Allan Poe, and Ernest Hemingway will complete our reading list.

Although the course is listed as Lecture, lecturing will not be the main mode of instruction in this course; rather, the course will unfold as a seminar to which students are invited and expected to come prepared as active participants in their own learning process—having done their reading thoroughly, and being ready to get involved dynamically in class discussions and activities.

Course requirements: ENGL 1616W has its specific writing requirement, established by GEOC: minimum 15 pages / 4,500 words of revised, polished writing; in this course three 5-6 page papers, one per genre, will fulfill this requirement. In addition, class participation, reading responses, reading quizzes, and a final exam will be computed into the final grade.

2000-Level Courses

2100: British Literature I

Prerequisites: ENGL 1007 or 1010 or 1011 or 2011.
  • General Education Requirement:
    • Content Area One (Arts & Humanities - Literature)
  • English Major Requirements:
    • 2021-2023 Plans: Core Category: Early Literary, Cultural, and Linguistic History or one of Four Additional Courses
      • Meets one requirement for the Literary Histories and Legacies Track
  • Meets one of NEAG’s Secondary Education British Literature Requirements

2100 | MW 11:15-12:30 | Falco, Daniela

According to its catalog description, ENGL 2100 covers "British literature, medieval through 18th century. Intended to provide preparation for more advanced courses in British literature. Strongly recommended for English majors"--but also open to non-English majors who are welcome.

Assigned readings will include poetry, drama, and prose—to name just a few: Beowulf, Sir Gawain and the Green Knight, medieval drama, some of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, Thomas More’s Utopia, and also works by William Shakespeare (Othello, selected sonnets), Christopher Marlowe (Dr. Faustus), and Jonathan Swift (Gulliver’s Travels).

Although the course is listed as Lecture, lecturing will not be the main mode of instruction in this course; rather, the course will take place as a seminar, to which students are invited and expected to come well prepared as active participants in their own learning process—having done their reading thoroughly, and being ready to get involved dynamically in class discussions and activities.

Course requirements: active participation in class discussions, quizzes, three short 1.5-2-page reading responses (assigned as homework), one 5-6-page literary analysis term paper, and midterm and final exams.

2207: Empire and U.S. Culture

Prerequisites: ENGL 1007 or 1010 or 1011 or 2011.

Also offered as: AMST 2207HIST 2207

  • General Education Requirements:
    • Content Area One (Arts & Humanities - History)
    • Content Area Four (Diversity & Multiculturalism - USA)
  • English Major Requirements:
    • 2021-2023 Plans: One of Four Additional Courses or
      • Meets one requirement for the Literature, Antiracism, and Social Justice track

2207 | Tu 3:30 - 6:00 | Reardon, Tina 

 

2214: African American Literature

Prerequisites: ENGL 1007 or 1010 or 1011 or 2011.

Also offered as: AFRA 2214

  • General Education Requirements:
    • Content Area Four (Diversity & Multiculturalism - USA)
  • English Major Requirements: 
    • 2021-2023 Plans: Core Category: Antiracism, Globality, and Embodiment (Group 1) or one of Four Additional Courses
      • Meets one requirement for the Literature, Antiracism, and Social Justice Track
      • Meets one requirement for the Literary Histories and Legacies Track
  • Meets one of NEAG’s Secondary Education Multicultural Literature requirements

2214| TuTh 2:00 - 3:15 | Sommers, Sam 

 

2600. Introduction to Literary Studies

Prerequisites: ENGL 1007 or 1010 or 1011 or 2011. 

This course is required of all English majors and should be taken within a semester of declaring the major or at its next offering. This course is offered at all campuses, but only once a year at each Regional campus. 


2600 | MW 9:30 - 10:45 | Islam, Najnin

2635E: Literature and the Environment

Prerequisites: ENGL 1007 or 1010 or 1011 or 2011. 
  • General Education Requirements:
    • Content Area One (Arts & Humanities - Literature)
    • Environmental Literacy Requirement
  • English Major Requirements:
    • 2021-2023 Plans: One of Four Additional Courses
      • Meets the Literary Genres or Methods requirement for the Creative Writing Track
      • Meets the Cultural, Genre, and Media Studies requirement for the English Teaching Track
      • Meets one requirement for the Literature, Antiracism, and Social Justice Track
      • Meets one requirement for the Literature of Place and Environment

2635E | MW 1:25 - 2:40 | Islam, Najnin

4000-Level Course

4101W: Advanced Study: British Literature

Prerequisites: ENGL 1007 or 1010 or 1011 or 2011; at least 12 credits of 2000-level or above English courses or consent of instructor; open to juniors or higher.

This course is blocked by Department Consent to prioritize students graduating in fall 2024 from a regional campus and for spring 2025, or summer 2025 from one of the following campuses: Avery Point, Hartford, Waterbury.


4101W| M 11:15 - 12:30 hybrid, online synchronous | Carillo, Ellen 

This capstone course for English majors focuses on one of the most famous and influential female and modernist writers, Virginia Woolf. Woolf’s major contributions to literary modernism and beyond include her novels, diaries, essays, talks, and reviews. We will read Woolf’s writing in order to better understand its ideological underpinnings, as well as the thematic and aesthetic characteristics that mark her works. Woolf’s writing will also give us insight into literary modernism’s historical and cultural contexts. Beyond Woolf’s own writing, we will discuss critical commentary on Woolf’s novels and read two contemporary novels, Assembly and The Hours, to see how more recent authors have (re)interpreted her writing.  

 In order to meet the “W” requirement of the course, significant time will be devoted to writing instruction. The major assignment of the course will be a research-driven essay, which will be preceded by a research proposal and an annotated bibliography.