ENGLISH


ENL 4220 Renaissance Literature: 16th Century.
 Credits: 3
Variable topics, 1485-1603, such as Spenser, the rise
of English prose, the development of English verse, the
age of sonnets, Elizabethan fiction. Consult depart-
ment for description of offering.

ENL 4221 Renaissance Literature: 17th Century.
SCredits: 3
Variable topics, 1603-1700, such as Milton, the evolu-
tion in English prose styles, sacred and secular lyrics,
the literature of paradox. Consult department for
description of offering.

ENL 4230 The Age of Dryden and Pope.
 Credits: 3
Selections from the best works of such writers as
Dryden, Congreve, Addison, Swift, and Pope.

ENL 4231 The Age of Johnson.
 Credits: 3
A study of the best works from Johnson, Boswell,
Reynolds, Goldsmith, Blake and others writing be-
tween 1740-1800.

ENL 4241 The Romantic Period.
 -Credits: 3
 Selections from the best works of such writers as Blake,
 Wordsworth, Coleridge, Scott, Shelley, and Keats.

 ENL 4251 Victorian Literature.
 Credits: 3
 Selections from such writers as Tennyson, Browning,
 and Arnold.

 ENL 4273 Twentieth Century British Literature.
 Credits: 3
 A variable topics course which may include major
 works of drama, poetry, or prose from twentieth cen-
 tury Britain.

'ENL 4311 Chaucer.
 Credits: 3
 Reading and critical study of Chaucer's poetry. Em-
 phasis will be on the Canterbury Tales or Troilus and
 Criseyde at the option of the instructor.

 ENL 4333 Shakespeare.
 Credits: 3
 Shakespeare: A study of selected verse and plays from
 throughout Shakespeare's career, including comedies,
 histories, tragedies, and romances.


 Hebrew Literature in Translation

 HBT 3200 Introduction to Modern Hebrew
 Literature. S.
 Credits: 3; Prereq: Two years of college Hebrew or
 the equivalent.
 Readings in modern Hebrew literary texts, both short
 fiction and poetry geared to the third-year level stu-
 dent. A study of the literature is emphasized though
 some language work is done to aid reading com-
 prehension. Tests are in Hebrew; language of instruc-
 tion is English. (Also offered by African and Asian
 Languages and Literatures; does not satisfy English ma-
 jor requirements.)

 HBT 3230 The Modern Hebrew Novel in Translation.
 F.
 Credits: 3
 Readings in 20th Century Hebrew novels in English
 translation. Topics include the conflict with tradition,
 the new settlement in Israel, the 1968 and later wars,
 the Kibbutz, Arab-Israeli relations, and the Israeli fami-
 ly. Novels by Brenner, Agnon, Yizhar, Amichai, Oz,
 and Yehoshua. (Also offered by African and Asian
 Languages and Literatures; does not satisfy English ma-
 jor requirements.)

 Linguistics

 ESL 2341 English as a Second Language.
 Credits: 3
 A composition course designed to teach the basics of
 expository writing. May be taken by foreign students
 as the equivalent of ENC 1101.


UIN 2340 English Grammar.
 Credits: 2
A course in the basics of traditional English grammar
designed as a complement to our composition and
creative writing courses, as a review for those students
who will take preprofessional exams, and'as a basic
course for students interested in improving their
knowledge of English. Does not satisfy the six-hour
General Education requirement in English.

LIN 3370 Modern English Structure.
 Credits: 3
A study of the grammar of current English from the
viewpoint of modern linguistics.

LIN 4100 History of the English Language.
 Credits: 3
The origins of the English language and its develop-
ment from prehistoric times to present.

Library Science

LIS 2001 Library Information, Resources, and
Strategies.
 Credits: 2
An introduction to U. F. libraries; research strategies;
and library resources, including FOCUS, the card
catalogs, sources relevant to undergraduate
coursework, computer searching, and selected sub-
ject area workshops. Does not satisfy 6-hour General
Education requirement in English.

LIS 2100 History of Books, Printing, and Libraries.
 Credits: 2
The book, the invention of printing, and the place of
libraries in the development of western culture. Does
not satisfy six-hour General Education requirement in
English.


Literature
(See also AMERICAN LITERATURE, ENGLISH-GEN-
ERAL, ENGLISH LITERATURE, LANGUAGE ARTS, and
ENGLISH EDUCATION for other literature courses.)

LIT 2110 Survey of World Literature: Ancient to
Renaissance.
 Credits: 3
 European literature from the ancients through the
 Renaissance. This course satisfies 3 hours of the
 General Education requirement in English or
 Humanities and the Communication-Computation
 Rule requirement.

 LIT 2120 Survey of World Literature: 17th Century
 to Modern.
 Credits: 3
 European literature from the seventeenth century to
 the present. This course satisfies 3 hours of the General
 Education requirement in English or Humanities
 and the Communication-Compiutation Rule
 requirement.

 LIT 3003 The Forms of Narrative.
 Credits: 3
 A close reading and critical analysis of representative
 forms and styles of narrative, with the major objec-
 tive of improving the student's ability to study narrative.
 structures and theories of narrative.

 LIT 3031 Studies in Poetry.
 Credits: 3
 A variable topics course providing an in-depth study
 of some particular genre such as the lyric, epic, son-
 net, or of developments in periods or literatures such
 as Medieval, American, or African.

 LIT 3041 Studies in Drama.
 Credits: 3
 A variable topics course providing an in-depth study
 of some particular genre such as comedy, tragedy, or
 of developments in periods such as the
 Elizabethan/Jacobean, Restoration and Modern.

 LIT 3043 Studies in Modern Drama.
 Credits: 3
 Representative selections from continental, British,
 and American playwrights.


LIT 3173 Jewish Literature.
 Credits: 3
A variable content course in aspects of the Jewish
literary experience, from the biblical narrative and
Talmudic tales to Yiddish and Hebrew literature and
the American Jewish novel.

LIT 3313 Modern Science Fiction.
 Credits: 3
An interdisciplinary approach to contemporary trends
in science fiction. Writers such as Orwell, Herbert,
Delany,'Vonnegut, and Miller are studied.

LIT 3353 Ethnic Literature.
 Credits: 3
A study of selected literature representative of various
ethnic groups in the United States, e.g., Native
American, Black, Jewish, Hispanic, or a concentration
on one of them.

LIT 3362 The Age of the Avant-Garde.
 Credits: 3
An examination of the revolutionary experimentalist
aspects of modern and contemporary culture, such as
cubism, surrealism, structuralism, and conceptualism.

LIT 3374 The Bible as Literature.
 Credits: 3
 A literary analysis from the Old and New Testaments,
 with emphasis upon poetry and narrative.

 LIT 3383 Women in Literature.
 Credits: 3
 A critical and thematic study of women in literature.
 A variable content course which may include fiction,
 poetry, or drama, English, American, or World
 Literature.

 SLIT 3400 Interdisciplinary Topics in Literature.
 Credits: 3
 Interdisciplinary studies of the vital relationship be-
 tween literature and the other creative arts, the other
 humanistic disciplines, or the sciences and
 technology. Topics will vary.

 LIT 3431 The Literature of Science.
 Credits: 3
 A close reading of major scientific works that have
 shaped man's view of the universe and his place in
 it. Included are works by such figures as Galileo,
 Harvey, Newton, Darwin, Freud, and Einstein.

 LIT 4194 African Literature in English.
 Credits: 3
 A critical and analytical study of representative Black
 African authors writing in English, notably Achebe,
 Awoonor, Ngugi, Aidoo, Soyinka, Armah, Ekwensi,
 Mphalele, and p'Bitek'.

 LIT 4320 Introduction to Folklore.
 Credits: 3
 Reading, discussion, and critical study of the types of
 folklore, with emphasis on folksong. Some attention
 to utilization by teachers and creative artists.

 LIT 4322 The Folktale.
 Credits: 3
 Reading folktales, a study of their types and
 characteristics, some attention to critical andscholarly
 study, and utiliztion of folktales by teachers and
 creative artists.

 LIT 4331 Children's Literature.
 Credits: 3
 Designed to arouse a genuine interest in children's
 books and to aid the student in obtaining a critical
 knowledge of the literature.

 LIT 4332 Literature for Young Children.
 Credits: 3
 An exploration of kinds and qualities of literature for
 the younger child, examining the child's first ex-
 perience with literature in oral forms, then moving on
 to picture and story books and poetry.

 LIT 4333 Literature for the Adolescent.
 Credits: 3
 A study of the types of literature read by adolescents,
 with emphasis upon the criteria for the choice of good