Enrollment and waitlist data for current and upcoming courses refresh every 10 minutes; all other information as of 6:00 AM.
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
Subject: English (UG) (ENGL)
CRN: 41378
In Person | Lecture
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 207
Old Core Requirements Met:
UG Core Literature/Writing
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
Faith and Praxis Minor or Cert
Writing Intensive
David Lawrence, David Williard
This course, team-taught by a historian and a literary scholar, focuses on the long struggle of African Americans for justice and equality in the U.S. Analyzing literary and historical texts, students in this course will learn about and engage in research on African American history and culture. Utilizing historical, literary, and cultural approaches, this interdisciplinary course will immerse students into an exploration of the African American experience from multiple perspectives using dual disciplinary frameworks. For example, students may study Richard Wright’s NATIVE SON, but would read the text within the historical and cultural framework of the Great Migration, connecting Wright’s text not just to other literary texts, but situating it within an historical and cultural context vital to the novel’s creation and essential for its interpretation. The writing load for this course is a minimum of 15 pages of formal revised writing. This course satisfies a WAC Writing Intensive requirement and an Integrations in the Humanities requirement.
4 Credits
09/08 - 12/22 | ||||||
M | T | W | Th | F | Sa | Su |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
10:55 am |
Subject: History (HIST)
CRN: 40216
In Person | Topics Lecture 2
St Paul: Murray-Herrick Campus Center 207
2020 Core Requirements Met:
Integ/Humanities
Other Requirements Met:
Writing Intensive
David Williard, David Lawrence
This course, team-taught by a historian and a literary scholar, focuses on the long struggle of African Americans for justice and equality in the U.S. Analyzing literary and historical texts, students in this course will learn about and engage in research on African American history and culture. Utilizing historical, literary, and cultural approaches, this interdisciplinary course will immerse students into an exploration of the African American experience from multiple perspectives using dual disciplinary frameworks. For example, students may study Richard Wright’s NATIVE SON, but would read the text within the historical and cultural framework of the Great Migration, connecting Wright’s text not just to other literary texts, but situating it within an historical and cultural context vital to the novel’s creation and essential for its interpretation. The writing load for this course is a minimum of 15 pages of formal revised writing. This course satisfies a WAC Writing Intensive requirement and an Integrations in the Humanities requirement.
4 Credits