ENGL 2111

Herbert James Draper - "Ulysses and the Sirens"
World Literature 1, explores various forms of non-English “literary” discourse since the first epic, through the mid-seventeenth century. We will focus on textual studies of the major genres of this period, epic and tragedy, how those genres influenced later literary works, and how they portray “humanist” issues throughout the history of several national literary traditions.
World Literature 1 will show the continued relevance of just why ancient works are still paramount to knowing ourselves as “humans.” Major works covered could include the epics Gilgamesh, the Iliad, and the Odyssey; tragedies by Sophocles, Euripides, Aeschylus, and Aristophanes; rhetoric by Aristotle, Plato, and Cicero; poetry by Ovid and Dante; and works by Machiavelli. Since any survey course has much more literature than one semester-long class can cover, we will attempt to cover only a couple works in detail, rather than many works only cursorily.
Sections
- Summer 2010 First Session: 51282 ENGL 2111.45 MW 10a-2:40p WRC1-104
- Spring 2009 Online: 22246 ENGL 2111.45 T 8:15-10:45p WRC1-111
- Summer 2008: 50128 ENGL 2111.45 MW 10a-2:40p WRC
- Fall 2007 / Online (Second Session)
- Summer 2007
- Summer 2006
- Fall 2005
- Spring 2005 / Online
- Summer 2004
- Fall 2003, Second Session