A) Old English Literature, B) Medieval Literature, C) 16th Century, D) 17th Century, E) 18th Century, F) English Romantic Period, G) Victorian Period, H) 20th Century, I) Drama, J) Novel, K) Poetry, L) Nonfiction, M) American Literature, N) A Literary Problem, O) Literature of the Renaissance, R) Race and Racial Theories. The precise topics and methods of each section vary. Barring duplication of subject, course may be repeated for credit. For details, see course descriptions available in the English department. (Not offered every year.) Special fee on some topics.
Section Comments: Special Topic: Digital Literature
Repeat Rule: May be repeated up to 2 times.
Attributes: Writing Intensive Course
Additional Course Details:
Spring 2025 Special Topic: Digital Literature
As literature and literary analysis move into the digital age, we look to apply traditional literary components and analysis, as well as expand and shift these to fit multiple genres of electronic literature and other multimodal texts. This course will bring together theory, analysis, and production through the in-depth study of multimodal literacies, digital rhetoric, and electronic literature. Students will gain an understanding of multimodal affordances, media theory, and the analysis of digital works, including immersive and embodied narrative spaces, such as installation art and augmented and virtual realities. The course will center around the medium as message, and how “born-digital” texts rely on multimodal affordances to convey their meaning; students will discuss and consider how and why author/composers utilize multiple modes, informing their own media choices. This course includes a course blog for responses to the texts we are reading and will provide hands-on exploration of various digital platforms each week, leading to students choosing the medium for their final digital project.
- This course satisfies the Literature After 1800 requirement for English Majors.
- This course satisfies a Post-1800 Literature requirement for English Literature, English: TBD majors, English/Journalism, English/Law 3+3 Majors.
- This course may count as one of two upper-level Literature courses required for English Teaching Majors.
- In Spring 2025 this course may count as one of three classes with a 'Digital Humanities' (DH) component by English: TBD majors.