Literature and Creative Writing Minor

Minor Requirements

16 credits

Of the 16 credits required below, at least 4 credits must be at the 3000 level.

Creative Writing (8 credits)

Complete 8 credits from the following:

ENGL-2710Introduction to Literary Fiction Workshop

4 credits

ENGL-2720Introduction to Poetry Writing

4 credits

ENGL-2725Songwriting Workshop

4 credits

ENGL-2730Intro to Creative Nonfiction Workshop

4 credits

ENGL-3660Advanced Craft: Race and Sexualities

4 credits

ENGL-3760Advanced Literary Fiction Workshop

4 credits

ENGL-3770Advanced Poetry Workshop

4 credits

ENGL-3780Advanced Creative Nonfiction Workshop

4 credits

ENVS-2012Winter Wilderness Experience

4 credits

Studies in LIterary History (8 credits)

Complete 8 credits from the following:

ENGL-2010Closely Reading Poems

4 credits

ENGL-2030Thiefmaking and Thieftaking

4 credits

ENGL-2035Women's Voices in British Literature

4 credits

ENGL-2110African-American Literature

4 credits

ENGL-2115Prose & Cons: American Prison Literature

4 credits

ENGL-2120Literature of the American West

4 credits

ENGL-2125Native American Fiction

2 credits

ENGL-2130Visions of Environment

4 credits

ENGL-2140American Roots Music

2 credits

ENGL-2165Topics in American Literature

4 credits

ENGL-2200Topics in British Literature

4 credits

ENGL-2250Regionalisms in British Literature

4 credits

ENGL-2310Introduction to Postcolonial Literature

4 credits

ENGL-2320The Literature of Immigrants

4 credits

ENGL-2410Asia Through Its Movies

2 credits

ENGL-2420WWI and Modern Literature

4 credits

ENGL-3120Advanced Topics in American Literature

4 credits

ENGL-3155Seminar: Adrienne Rich

4 credits

ENGL-3200Advanced Topics in British Literature

4 credits

ENGL-3225Ghosties and Ghoulies

4 credits

ENGL-3230The Brontës

4 credits

ENGL-3350Advanced Postcolonial Literature

4 credits

ENGL-3530London Literature/Art/History

4 credits

ENGL-3550The Prison Experience

4 credits

Outcomes

Upon successful completion of this minor, students will be able to:

  1. Describe how elements of texts, such as language, form, and purpose, inform their overall meaning or aesthetic achievement;
  2. Demonstrate how texts reflect or complicate political, social, and cultural implications within original and trans-historical contexts; and
  3. Analyze how communities engage questions of justice, power, and aesthetics through texts.