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Academic Catalog 2025-26

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Your search for courses · during 25SP · tagged with ENGL Tradition 2 · returned 4 results

  • AMST 269 Woodstock Nation 6 credits

    “If you remember the Sixties, you weren’t there.”  We will test the truth of that popular adage by exploring the American youth counterculture of the 1960s, particularly the turbulent period of the late sixties. Using examples from literature, music, and film, we will examine the hope and idealism, the violence, confusion, wacky creativity, and social mores of this seminal decade in American culture. Topics explored will include the Beat Generation, the Vietnam War, Civil Rights, LSD, and the rise of environmentalism, feminism, and Black Power. 

    Extra time

    • Spring 2025
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2, Writing Rich 2
    • AMMU Soundtracks America AMST Democracy Activism CAMS Extra Departmental CL: 200 level ENGL Historical Era 3 ENGL Tradition 2 AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity
    • AMST  269.00 Spring 2025

    • Faculty:Michael Kowalewski 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLaird 205 12:30pm-1:40pm
    • FLaird 205 1:10pm-2:10pm
  • ENGL 230 Studies in African American Literature: From the 1950s to the Present 6 credits

    We will explore developments in African American literature since the 1950s with a focus on literary expression in the Civil Rights Era; on the Black Arts Movement; on the new wave of feminist/womanist writing; and on the experimental and futuristic fictions of the twenty-first century. Authors to be read include Ralph Ellison, James Baldwin, Lorraine Hansberry, Malcolm X, Audre Lorde, Amiri Baraka, Ishmael Reed, Alice Walker, August Wilson, Charles Johnson, Ntozake Shange, Gloria Naylor, Suzan-Lori Parks, Kevin Young, and Tracy Smith.

    • Spring 2025
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis
    • AMST Democracy Activism CL: 200 level ENGL Historical Era 3 ENGL Tradition 2 AFST Literary Artistic Analysis AMST Production Consumption of Culture AMST Race Ethnicity Indigeneity ENCW English Literature
    • ENGL  230.00 Spring 2025

    • Faculty:Kofi Owusu 🏫 👤
    • Size:25
    • M, WLaird 206 12:30pm-1:40pm
    • FLaird 206 1:10pm-2:10pm
  • ENGL 255 The Poetics of Disability 6 credits

    Scholar Michael Davidson has suggested that “perhaps the closest link between poetry and disability lies in a conundrum within the genre itself: poetry makes language visible by making language strange.” In this class we will read a wide range of poets who tackle ideas of normalcy and “ability” by centering disability consciousness and culture. We will engage with poetry’s capacity as a genre to destabilize our assumptions and generate new imaginaries. Alongside contemporary U.S. poetry, we will study contemporary theory in the field of disability studies in order to better understand the critical conversations around the meaning, nature, and consequences of disability.

    • Spring 2025
    • IDS, Intercultural Domestic Studies LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis WR2, Writing Rich 2
    • ACE Applied CL: 200 level ENGL Historical Era 3 ENGL Tradition 2 ENCW English Literature
    • ENGL  255.00 Spring 2025

    • Faculty:Adriana Estill 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THLaird 205 3:10pm-4:55pm
  • ENGL 338 Dickinson, Moore, Bishop 6 credits

    An intensive study of lyric invention and innovation in the work of Emily Dickinson, Marianne Moore, and Elizabeth Bishop. Starting with formalist readings and historicizing the poetic subjects they pursued in common (self and society, loss and knowledge, nature, gender, the senses, the body), we will explore their practice, reception, and influence in relation to changing Modernist poetics, 1860 to 1970, and to specifics of place: Amherst, Brooklyn, Nova Scotia, Key West, and Brazil.

    • Spring 2025
    • LA, Literary/Artistic Analysis
    • Student has completed any of the following course(s): One English Foundations including (100) course with a grade of C- or better or received a score of 5 on the English Literature and Composition AP exam or received a grade of 6 or better on the English Language A: Literature IB exam AND 6 credits from English courses (100-399) not including Independent Studies and Comps with a grade of C- or better.

    • CL: 300 level ENGL Historical Era 2 ENGL Tradition 2 ENCW English Literature 300 Level
    • ENGL  338.00 Spring 2025

    • Faculty:Peter Balaam 🏫 👤
    • Size:15
    • T, THLaird 205 1:15pm-3:00pm

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2025–26 Academic Catalog

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Registrar: Theresa Rodriguez
Email: registrar@carleton.edu
Phone: 507-222-4094
Academic Catalog 2025-26 pages maintained by Maria Reverman
This page was last updated on 7 May 2026
Carleton

One North College StNorthfield, MN 55057USA

507-222-4000

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