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Class Detail:
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FA 2012
English Language and Literature
ENGLISH
124
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Academic Writing and Literature
Section
013
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Course Note:
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This course studies the intersection between critical thinking and persuasive writing, and, using literary texts as the point of reference, takes as its goal the development of the student's skill at writing cogent expository and argumentative prose.
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Credits:
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4
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Requirements & Distribution:
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FYWR
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Waitlist Capacity:
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unlimited
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Consent:
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With permission of instructor.
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Repeatability:
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May not be repeated for credit.
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Primary Instructor:
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Brakefield,Russell
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(real time availability for all sections)
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This course focuses on developing coherent and effective academic writing, specifically in response to literary work. Students will read a number of different genres and styles and explore the benefits of critical reading and thinking in an attempt to foster successful writing skills. By engaging with materials that address ideas of identity and its relationship to landscapes— physical, physiological, technological, rhetorical—students will further develop their skills of reading comprehensively and analytically as a way of understanding how arguments are formed. Readings in this course will cover a range of topics, often with emphasis on individual and group identities and their relationship to place, landscape, and movement. Primary texts will include contemporary fiction, nonfiction, and poetry and will be supplemented with multi-media material and craft based essays. Along with extrapolating and developing strategies for successful writing, students will also be asked to contextualize themes of assigned readings in regards to cultural and personal relevance. An important aspect of this class will be community based learning and discussion as well as progression and revision of work throughout the semester. While the majority of the course work for this class will be writing, students will also be evaluated on their completion of assigned readings and in class activities, as well as participation. Students should expect to gain a proficiency in college level academic writing, critical thinking, and craft analysis.
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Course Syllabi
Syllabi are available to current LSA students. IMPORTANT: These syllabi are provided to give students a general idea about the courses, as offered by LSA departments and programs in prior academic terms. The syllabi do not necessarily reflect the assignments, sequence of course materials, and/or course expectations that the faculty and departments/programs have for these same courses in the current and/or future terms.
Search for Syllabus
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Textbooks/Other Materials (data maintained by department in Wolverine Access)
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ISBN: 0982580819
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The universe in miniature in miniature, Author: Somerville, Patrick, 1979-, Publisher: Featherproof Books 2010
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Required
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ISBN: 0374292191
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Everything ravaged, everything burned, Author: Tower, Wells, 1973-, Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux 2009
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Required
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ISBN: 0307265439
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The road, Author: McCarthy, Cormac, 1933-, Publisher: Alfred A. Knopf 2006
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Required
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ISBN: 0691122903
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The imaginative argument : a practical manifesto for writers, Author: Frank L. Cioffi., Publisher: Princeton University Press 2005
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Required
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