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Discipline ID
06a6acf3-73c3-4ed3-9f03-6e1dafb7e2cb

COURSE DETAIL

WRITING POETRY
Country
United Kingdom - England
Host Institution
University of Sussex
Program(s)
University of Sussex
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English
UCEAP Course Number
155
UCEAP Course Suffix
N
UCEAP Official Title
WRITING POETRY
UCEAP Transcript Title
WRITING POETRY
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description
This course is a seminar and workshop for aspiring poets. Students read poetry and essays in preparation for class, but the chief activity is original creative work. For the purposes of this course, lively and respectful participation in group discussion is an essential part of the work, and students are assessed partly on the basis of generosity of attention to other students' work. By the end of the semester, students produce a short collection of poems, with the benefit of regular critical attention from fellow students and from the professor. The course concludes with a public poetry reading event on campus in which all students are invited to participate.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
Q3204
Host Institution Course Title
WRITING POETRY
Host Institution Campus
University of Sussex
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
English

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VARIETIES OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
Country
Spain
Host Institution
Complutense University of Madrid
Program(s)
Complutense University of Madrid
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Linguistics English
UCEAP Course Number
134
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
VARIETIES OF THE ENGLISH LANGUAGE
UCEAP Transcript Title
VARIETIES/ENGL LANG
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

This course explores the theoretical and practical concepts of the varieties of the English language around the world. It discusses traits of these varieties of English such as vocabulary, pronunciation, and grammar. Topics include: language, dialect, and accent; regulatory varieties and vernacular varieties; English as a native language, a second language, and a foreign language; dominant normative varieties-- American English and British English; other national varieties; vernacular varieties in the English-speaking world; English as a second language-- Africa and Asia; English as a foreign language for international communication; models of English for teaching foreigners.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
802247
Host Institution Course Title
VARIEDADES DEL INGLÉS
Host Institution Campus
Facultad de Filología, Campus de Ciudad Universitaria
Host Institution Faculty
Facultad de Filología
Host Institution Degree
GRADO EN ESTUDIOS INGLESES
Host Institution Department
Departamento de Filología Inglesa I, Grado en Estudios Ingleses

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AFRICAN AND CARIBBEAN LITERATURE
Country
New Zealand
Host Institution
University of Auckland
Program(s)
University of Auckland
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
115
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
AFRICAN AND CARIBBEAN LITERATURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
AFRICAN&CARIBBN LIT
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description
The Caribbean, by virtue of its geography and history, embraces cultural elements of Africa, India, Europe, and North America. This course focuses primarily on Caribbean and African societies in order to address a range of issues connected to these variously hybrid cultures: slavery, black identity and sexuality, nation/narration, home, and location/dislocation.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ENGLISH 346
Host Institution Course Title
AFRICAN AND CARIBBEAN LITERATURE
Host Institution Campus
Auckland
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
English

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FRENCH FEMINIST WRITING
Country
United Kingdom - England
Host Institution
King's College London
Program(s)
King's College London
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English
UCEAP Course Number
120
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
FRENCH FEMINIST WRITING
UCEAP Transcript Title
FRENCH FEMINST WRIT
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description
This course examines late 20th century feminist writing from literary, philosophical, political, and psychoanalytical perspectives. The first half of the course focuses on a "materialist" feminism anchored in the socialization process and its representation of various mediatic influences and social conventions. The second half examines texts with a more linguistic and psychoanalytic emphasis. The course explores feminist responses to the sociopolitical position of women in France and their critiques of Freudian psychoanalysis, capitalist economies, and Western philosophy. It examines the theory and practice of écriture féminine.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
6AAFF327
Host Institution Course Title
FRENCH FEMINIST WRITING
Host Institution Campus
King's College London
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
French

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CREATIVE WRITING PROSE FICTION
Country
United Kingdom - England
Host Institution
University of London, Queen Mary
Program(s)
University of London, Queen Mary
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English
UCEAP Course Number
124
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
CREATIVE WRITING PROSE FICTION
UCEAP Transcript Title
CREATIVE WRIT PROSE
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description

Through practice-based workshops and seminars, the course explores the methodologies of writing fiction from a writer's perspective, and focuses on form, structure, and narrative technique. The course is delivered through weekly creative writing exercises and immersion in a process of peer critique, as well as the critical analysis of sample texts.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ESH6043
Host Institution Course Title
CREATIVE WRITING PROSE FICTION
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
English

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SHAKESPEARE ON PAGE, STAGE, AND SCREEN
Country
United Kingdom - England
Host Institution
University of Cambridge, Pembroke College
Program(s)
Summer in Cambridge
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English
UCEAP Course Number
115
UCEAP Course Suffix
S
UCEAP Official Title
SHAKESPEARE ON PAGE, STAGE, AND SCREEN
UCEAP Transcript Title
SHAKESPEARE
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

A defining feature of Shakespeare’s creations is their capacity to be enjoyed and understood in strikingly different ways when encountered through different media. In this course students explore this protean quality by considering two great works in three distinct forms: as literature, in theatrical performance, and on film. The plays selected introduce students to the range of instruments in Shakespeare’s stylistic tool kit, and to the specific ways in which he used these. Students also learn what exactly, in the context of Shakespeare studies, we mean by "texts" and how these should be examined. Students also consider the kinds of meaning that are created when the same plays are enacted on the boards of the specific London theatre for which Shakespeare wrote and in which he envisaged them being staged. Students compare their own interpretations with the choices made in specific Globe productions and gain insights into original performance conditions. Finally, students explore how, in the 20th century, directors transformed the meanings of those same narratives through adapting them into the medium of cinema. This involves comparing dramatic language with filmic imagery, considering the transition from playscript to screenplay, and exploring how Britain’s most celebrated cultural export has been creatively reinterpreted in the US, Europe and Asia.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
Host Institution Course Title
SHAKESPEARE ON PAGE, STAGE AND SCREEN
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Arts and Humanities
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department

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READING THE NATION: AMERICAN LITERATURE
Country
Australia
Host Institution
University of Sydney
Program(s)
University of Sydney
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English
UCEAP Course Number
106
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
READING THE NATION: AMERICAN LITERATURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
NATION:AMERICAN LIT
UCEAP Quarter Units
6.00
UCEAP Semester Units
4.00
Course Description
This course studies a variety of American literary and visual texts to consider what it means to read "nationally". We first examine the rise of literary nationalism to look then at the ways in which exigencies of empire, race and ethnicity, and gender and sexuality, for example, have exerted pressure on the fantasy of a cohesive national culture. We also consider the transnational turn of recent decades to understand the nation's function in a global context.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ENGL2660
Host Institution Course Title
READING THE NATION: AMERICAN LITERATURE
Host Institution Campus
sydney
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
English

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WOMEN IN MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
Country
Ireland
Host Institution
Trinity College Dublin
Program(s)
Trinity College Dublin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Women’s & Gender Studies English
UCEAP Course Number
128
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
WOMEN IN MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
WOMEN/MEDIEVAL LIT
UCEAP Quarter Units
8.00
UCEAP Semester Units
5.30
Course Description

In the Canterbury Tales, Chaucer famously makes his Wife of Bath protest at the unfair ways women are represented by men. In this course students look at how women were actively involved in literary production in the medieval period, whether as patrons and audiences whose stated or perceived needs shaped particular compositions, or as themselves the authors of texts. The course begins with the female-voiced poems in the 10th-century Exeter Book and extend through the 15th century, covering texts in Latin, French, and English. 

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ENU44040
Host Institution Course Title
WOMEN IN MEDIEVAL LITERATURE
Host Institution Campus
Trinity College Dublin
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
English

COURSE DETAIL

INTERNSHIP AND WORKFORCE COURSE
Country
United Kingdom - England
Host Institution
UC Center, London
Program(s)
Business and Entrepreneurship in London
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Sociology Psychology Political Science Legal Studies Film & Media Studies English Education Economics Communication Business Administration
UCEAP Course Number
187
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
INTERNSHIP AND WORKFORCE COURSE
UCEAP Transcript Title
INTERNSHIP&COURSE
UCEAP Quarter Units
10.00
UCEAP Semester Units
6.70
Course Description

The Internship Workforce course provides students with an overview of working in the United Kingdom. The course looks at the changing organizational structures of work in Britain. It examines the social and economic changes that affect the workplace in the UK. Topics covered include: sociology of work, trade unions, oppression at work, generational changes at work, and the future of work. An internship while studying in London provides an opportunity to experience a “hands on” working situation and a different perspective on the workplace and working practices, while developing professional skills.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
Host Institution Course Title
INTERNSHIP AND WORKFORCE COURSE
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Accent

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HER OWN LIFE? THE POLITICS OF RELIGION AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE FEMALE SUBJECT 1650-1700
Country
United Kingdom - Scotland
Host Institution
University of Edinburgh
Program(s)
University of Edinburgh
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English
UCEAP Course Number
101
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
HER OWN LIFE? THE POLITICS OF RELIGION AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE FEMALE SUBJECT 1650-1700
UCEAP Transcript Title
POL/RELIGION:FEMALE
UCEAP Quarter Units
8.00
UCEAP Semester Units
5.30
Course Description
This course introduces students to a range of texts by early modern women writers and examines the extent to which they can be defined as auto/biographical. The course focuses on the significance of politics and religion in early modern women's attempts to construct a narrative of their "own" subjectivity.
Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ENLI10191
Host Institution Course Title
HER OWN LIFE? THE POLITICS OF RELIGION AND THE EMERGENCE OF THE FEMALE SUBJECT 1650-1700
Host Institution Campus
Edinburgh
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
English Literature
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