LIT 111 - Amer Lit Since Mid 1800’s Credits: 3 Lecture Hours: 3 Lab Hours: 0 Practicum Hours: 0 Work Experience: 0 Course Type: Core Examines American poetry, prose, drama and fiction from the mid-1800s through contemporary writing, continuing the exploration of the history and development of American literature. Students study written works from a variety of genres, styles, racial and ethnic backgrounds and, through this critical survey, develop a deeper understanding of the main issues and movements shaping American culture in the first half of the twentieth century. Emphasizes major literary works and their social and cultural contexts. Competencies
- Apply college-level reading skills to poetry, prose, fiction, and drama
- Read a variety of poems, prose, fiction, and plays from 1865 to the present
- Demonstrate understanding of genre distinctions
- Apply terminology appropriate to reading literary texts
- Use effective reading techniques such as rereading, annotating, close reading, paraphrasing, and summarizing
- Analyze literature by focusing on textual, structural, and thematic elements
- Explain the relationship between literary form and content
- Discuss connections between authors and texts
- Examine the relationships between literary texts and historical contexts
- Analyze literature through the application of one or more critical approaches, such as Formalism, Marxism, Feminism and Gender Studies, Mythological, Psychological, Cultural Studies, and others
- Interpret poetry, prose, fiction, and drama using elements of literary criticism
- Interpret poetry, prose, fiction, and drama in context
- Discuss how multiple interpretations exist simultaneously
- Interpret literature using one or more critical approaches, such as Formalism, Marxism, Feminism and Gender Studies, Mythological, Psychological, Cultural Studies, and others
- Evaluate literatures continuing relevance to the human condition
- Review the role of diverse voices including Native American, African American, Asian, Caribbean, Latin, Spanish and other people of color from the mid-1800’s to contemporary literature
- Correlate assigned texts with current events, global contexts, and material from other disciplines
- Reflect on how texts shape identities
- Create effective writing to demonstrate understanding of course goals
- Demonstrate awareness of academic conventions for organization, audience, research, and language
- Generate writing as an active process, using planning, drafting, revising, and editing
- Produce written analyses or interpretations
- Integrate standard college-level documentation practices
- Understand definitions and consequences of plagiarism
- Identify reasons for documentation
- Integrate sources effectively within the given context
- Document sources using MLA style
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