Course Offerings in English
Every English major at Grinnell receives a thorough grounding in the tools of literary analysis, studies the literary traditions of a variety of ages and places, and completes ambitious research projects. The department offers students a range of choices as they pursue those ends; the flexible curriculum allows students to read American, British, Irish, and postcolonial literatures from a variety of critical and theoretical perspectives. Within this curriculum, every English major develops his or her own questions and interests.
The major begins with a 100-level course in which students develop their analytical skills by paying close attention to texts and developing an awareness of contemporary approaches to literary study. The 200 level includes courses that introduce students to the practices of creative and argumentative writing; the traditions of American, African-American, ethnic American, British, Irish, and postcolonial literatures; and the theoretical tools of historical linguistics and gender studies. Those courses provide the necessary background for the three 300-level seminars that every English major completes. Courses at the 300 level require more advanced work in literary study and creative writing; these courses train students in advanced skills of self-directed research and writing.
To complement this intensive study of English as a discipline, English majors also complete at least intermediate study of a foreign language and one course that involves an interdisciplinary approach to humanistic inquiry. The English section of the course catalog offers more information about all these courses and details of the department’s major requirements.
| Current courses | |
| Fall 2011 | Spring 2012 |
| Past courses | |
| Fall 2010 | Spring 2011 |
| Fall 2009 | Spring 2010 |
| Fall 2008 | Spring 2009 |
| Fall 2007 | Spring 2008 |
| Fall 2006 | Spring 2007 |
| Fall 2005 | Spring 2006 |





