Program Overview
University Program Information
The provided context contains information about various university programs, including the 19th Century Novel course. Below is the extracted program information in a formal, polished tone.
Course Description
The 19th Century Novel course is a sequel to Eng 251 and examines two representative English novels from the classic period to understand the difference between 18th and 19th-century novels. The course explores why the novel held a dominant place in British culture and how various techniques and topics introduced in the 18th century persisted in the 19th century.
Course Aims
The course aims to:
- Interpret "realism" as a theory, cultural practice, and literary debate in the Victorian era.
- Identify and discuss the social context in which Victorian novels were produced and read.
- Recognize and discuss key novel genres, such as historical, sensation, bildungsroman, social problem, provincial, and imperial adventure.
- Understand how novels are built, what they are made of, and how they work to become better readers of modernity's most characteristic literary form.
Learning Outcomes
Upon completing the course, students will be able to:
- Understand the intellectual and social issues relevant to the 19th-century novel.
- Recognize the characteristics of the novel as a literary genre.
- Conduct research and utilize information from primary and secondary sources to support a valid thesis and argument.
- Think critically and analytically.
- Make sound analogies and comparisons between different novels and writers.
- Apply different critical approaches to the study of fiction.
Department of English
The Department of English offers a study plan that includes various courses, such as:
- Level 4: Poetry, Essay Writing, Linguistics 2, Phonetics, Introduction to the Literature of America, Foundations of the Political System in Islam, and Literary Studies.
- Level 5: Applied Linguistics, Language Acquisition, Romanticism, Shakespeare 1, Public Speaking, and Literary Studies.
- Level 7: Advanced Writing, History of English Language, Morphology & Syntactics, Linguistics 3, Discourse and Spoken Discourse, and Victorian Poetry.
- Level 8: Sociolinguistics, Transformational Grammar, Contemporary Poetry, Contemporary Play, Contemporary Novel in Britain, and History of Literary Criticism 2.
Other Departments
The university also has other departments, including:
- Department of Computer Science
- Department of Law
- Management Information Systems
College of [Name]
The college has various vice-dean offices, including:
- Vice-Dean's Office for Educational Affairs
- Vice-Dean's Office for Student Affairs
- Vice-Dean's Office for Development and Quality
- Vice-Dean's Office for Graduate Studies and Scientific Research
E-Learning
The university offers e-learning services, including:
- Organizational structure
- Duties
- Activities
