Subject Course Section Course Title Course Description Instructor Files Term
ENGL 251 042, 043 Literary Theory and Criticism

What exactly are we doing when we study literature? By examining a selection of critical methods and theoretical approaches, this course will enhance understanding of the many different emphases, values, and priorities critics bring to literature, and the many available perspectives on what constitutes literature's significance.

 

Selected course outline available upon request to the Scheduling Sepcialist

David-Antoine Williams, Norm Klassen PDF icon ENGL 251-043_N.Klassen_Winter 2021.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 306A 041 Introduction to Linguistics

Introduction to linguistics and the principles of linguistic analysis through an examination of English phonology, forms, syntax, and discourse.

Elena Afros PDF icon ENGL 306A_E.Afros_Winter 2021_tentative.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 310B 041 Chaucer 2

A study of Geoffrey Chaucer's "Canterbury Tales".

Norm Klassen PDF icon ENGL 310B_N.Klassen_Winter 2021.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 332 041 Topics in Creative Writing: Decreation and Ekphrasis

This course will focus on a selected genre, approach, creative method, or other aspect of creative writing. Please see course instructor for details.

PDF icon ENGL 332_M.Deghani_Winter 2021.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 335 041 Creative Writing 1

Designed to assist students with an interest in developing their creative writing skills in various genres, this course consists of supervised practice, discussions of craft, and peer critiques.

PDF icon ENGL 335_L.Pike_Winter 2021.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 336 041 Creative Writing 2

This course is designed to assist advanced creative writers in developing a body of work in one or more genres by means of supervised practice, discussions of craft, and peer critiques.

 

Department Consent Required

PDF icon ENGL 336_H.Debling_Winter 2021.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 378 041, 042, 043, 044, 045, 046, 047, 048 Professional Communications in Statistics and Actuarial Science

This course introduces students to oral and written communication in the fields of statistics and actuarial science. With emphasis on the public presentation of technical knowledge, the ability to give and receive constructive feedback, and communication in a collaborative environment, this course helps students develop proficiencies in critical workplace skills. This course is writing intensive and includes extensive collaborative assignments.

 

Held with MTHEL 300

Mark Spielmacher, Andrew Deman, Jesse Hutchison, Diana Lobb PDF icon ENGL 378-MTHEL 300-041, 042_M.Spielmacher_Winter 2021.pdfPDF icon ENGL 378-MTHEL 300-043, 047_A.Deman_Winter 2021.pdfPDF icon ENGL 378-MTHEL 300-044_J.Hutchison_Winter 2021.pdfPDF icon ENGL 378-MTHEL 300-045_M.Lesiuk_WInter 2021.pdfPDF icon ENGL 378-MTHEL 300-046, 048_D.Lobb_Winter 2021.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 430A 041 Literature of the Romantic Period 1

An examination of the first generation of Romantic writers, including such authors as Barbauld, Blake, Wollstonecraft, Wordsworth, and Coleridge.

Tristanne Connolly PDF icon ENGL 430A_T.Connolly_Winter 2021.pdf Winter 2021
ENGL 460C 041 Literature of the Postwar Period in the United Kingdom and Ireland

A study of the literatures of the United Kingdom and Ireland after World War II, including such writers as Beckett, Greene, Larkin, Murdoch, Osborne, Pinter, and Spark.

 

Course outline available upon request to the Scheduling Sepcialist

David-Antoine Williams Winter 2021
FR 192A 082 French Language 1: Module 1

An intensive French Language course. Vocabulary enrichment and development of reading, writing, and oral expression.

 

CEL course outlines will be posted around midterms

Kerry Lappin-Fortin Winter 2021