|
Ben Werner, Student Newspaper Editor
|
The coordinating committee of the XVI International Symposium of Latin American Indian Literatures calls for proposals for panels and individual presenters that will be accepted until July 15, 2003.
TOPICS IN AMERICAN LITERATURE I: African American Literature from Slavery to the Harlem Renaissance This course aims to trace the development of African American literature from the days of slavery through approximately 1945.
|
|
Steve Riggins, Software Deveoper
|
This course teaches students to analyze and discuss selected literary texts belonging to the major genres of Spanish-Peninsular and Spanish-American literatures using appropriate literary terms and language, and thereafter to generate research topics, use research tools and write research papers using a word processor and an appropriate style of presentation.
|
|
Chogyam Trungpa Gyatso, Tibetan Monk
|
These various oral literatures often captured the sublimity and mystery of life in the early Appalachian settlement period, and were given ample impetus by the struggle to survive in a literal (and to modern-day Americans, almost unfathomable) wilderness territory.
|
|
Bori Gonbutoren, Reindeer Herder
|
African-American Literature and Culture Explores the works of African-American writers from the Colonial period to the present and examines a variety of cultural constructs that have fundamentally shaped the African-American literary tradition.
|
|
Anita Ganesh, Poet
|
Literature Online is a virtual library of more than 350,000 works of English and American poetry, drama, and prose written between the 8th century and the present day.
African-American literature continually features moments of journey and places of refuge, literary images which produce a transition from rootlessness to rootedness for both the author and the protagonist.
African American Literature (3) I The study of novels, drama and poetry by leading Black writers.
|
|
Paddy McGuinness, Newsagent
|
American Irish Historical Society Celtic Studies Association of North America International Association for the Study of Irish Literatures (Univ.
|
|
Arthur Dawkins, Astro-physicist
|
It should be especially useful for students preparing for careers in elementary and secondary education who would be intere sted in developing and teaching a curriculum that includes the literature of the African diaspora in conventional English and American Studies courses.
This fact is of particular concern when reviewing the scholarly literature for discourse and documentation centered on the question of Native American and Precolonial African scientific and technological contributions and scientific traditions.
American physicians are taught about these drugs by Pharmaceutical company detail personnel who provide free samples and company generated literature and studies.
|
|
|