Mar 10, 2025  
College Catalog 2025-2026 
    
College Catalog 2025-2026
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ENGL 2725 - American Literature: 1865 to present

Credit Hours: 3.00


Prerequisites: ENGL 1190  or ENGL 1220 

This course presents a study of major cultural and literary developments since the end of the Civil War. It considers the literature of industrialization and urban growth, the role of the new immigrants, Realism and Naturalism, the world wars, the ethnic revival of the sixties, fragmentation in the nineties and after, and current political, social, and cultural concerns. Authors to be discussed may include Whitman, Twain, Wharton, Anderson, Hurston, Hemingway, Faulkner, Ellison, London, Frost, Ward.

Billable Contact Hours: 3

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OUTCOMES AND OBJECTIVES
Outcome 1: Upon completion of this course, students will be able to explain major literary movements, periods, and themes of American literature.

Objectives:

  1. Identify significant genres, themes, and literary devices in primary texts of American literature
  2. Analyze the significance of literary devices in primary texts of American literature

Outcome 2: Upon completion of this course, students will be able to develop an individual interpretation of a writer’s conception of the world and the system of values that accompanies it.

Objectives:

  1. Recognize and discuss a writer’s use of the common themes of a period or movement in American literature
  2. Evaluate the place of historical forces or events in a writer’s work
  3. Analyze the writer’s role in literary movements or the writer’s place in the historical development of American literature
  4. Discuss the socioeconomic and/or cultural background presented in the world of a writer’s work
  5. Compare multicultural aspects of the various worlds presented in works being studied, if relevant

Outcome 3: Upon completion of this course, students will be able to evaluate primary texts as aesthetic creations through the oral and/or written application of appropriate criteria.

Objectives:

  1. Argue for appropriate criteria for making an aesthetic judgment of a literary text.
  2. Apply criteria that are most relevant to a specific literary text.
  3. Express an aesthetic response to a literary text through the application of relevant criteria.

Outcome 4: Upon completion of this course students will be able to write essays that combine literary analysis with standard documentation format.

Objectives:

  1. Employ appropriate sources.
  2. Analyze an aspect of American literature.
  3. Synthesize the results of research and analysis of the literature.
  4. Document sources used according to standard format.

COMMON DEGREE OUTCOMES (CDO)
  • Communication: The graduate can communicate effectively for the intended purpose and audience.
  • Critical Thinking: The graduate can make informed decisions after analyzing information or evidence related to the issue.
  • Global Literacy: The graduate can analyze human behavior or experiences through cultural, social, political, or economic perspectives.
  • Information Literacy: The graduate can responsibly use information gathered from a variety of formats in order to complete a task.
  • Quantitative Reasoning: The graduate can apply quantitative methods or evidence to solve problems or make judgments.
  • Scientific Literacy: The graduate can produce or interpret scientific information presented in a variety of formats.
CDO marked YES apply to this course:
Communication: YES
COURSE CONTENT OUTLINE
  1. Definition: What are the identifiable literary characteristics of American literature since 1865?
  2. Reading the Literature.:
    1. Realism
    2. Naturalism
    3. Modernism
    4. Post‐WWII Literature
    5. Harlem Renaissance
    6. Postmodernism
    7. Experiments in Poetry
    8. Socially Relevant Drama
    9. Significant voices, styles and techniques in Contemporary Literature.
  3. The Writer’s System of Values.:
    1. Common Themes
    2. Historical Developments
    3. Shift to Experimental Literature
    4. Socioeconomic Backgrounds
    5. Multiculturalism
  4. The Writer’s Conception of the World:
    1. Satire as a Weapon
    2. Fragmentation of Literary Texts to Reflect the World
    3. Creation of New Forms

Primary Faculty
Young, James
Secondary Faculty
Amolsch, Rianna
Associate Dean
Ternullo, Annette
Dean
Pritchett, Marie



Primary Syllabus - Macomb Community College, 14500 E 12 Mile Road, Warren, MI 48088



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