ELIT3080-C1 American Lit Before 1865 (Fall 2014)

Course Details

This course satisfies part of the Communication Skills graduation requirement.

This section is Communication Skills intensive. Communication Skills I-V must be completed before taking this course.

Program Requirements

Session, Dates: 1 (08/25/2014 - 12/13/2014)
Days: T R
Time: 12:15 - 01:30 pm
Location: Moon Campus
Room: Hale Center 101
Seats Available: 10 Seats
Credits: 3

Course Description

This course examines the historical growth, philosophical premises, and literary techniques of important writers in American literature up through the Civil War. Students read a wide, diverse range of literature, such as Native American, Spanish American, and African American literatures, in the genres of fiction, essays, poetry, journals, autobiographies, and slave narratives. Students also study aesthetic and intellectual movements such as Neo-classicism, Romanticism, and Transcendentalism. The course focuses on historical development with emphasis on the American Renaissance of the 1850's. Students investigate print, internet resources, and electronic databases and write literacy research essays in MLA format.

Prerequisites: COSK2220 or COSK2225 and any ELIT course

Course Materials

About the Instructor(s)

Sylvia A. Pamboukian, Ph.D.
Director, University Honors Program
Honors Program

University Professor of English
Arts and Humanities

pamboukian@rmu.edu
412-397-6450 phone
412-397-6468 fax
Wheatley Center 234
Profile