Word: novelã
(lookup in dictionary)
(lookup stats)
Dates: all
Sort By: most recent first
(reverse)
...Condition,” and Humanities 16, “Existential Fictions: From Saint Augustine to Jean-Paul Sartre and Beyond”—were approved this semester during shopping period as Literature and Arts A bypasses.Two English courses, English 17x: “19th Century American Novel?? and English 166x: “The Postcolonial Classic” were approved this fall as Literature and Arts A bypasses, and African and African American Studies 20: “Introduction to African Languages and Cultures” was approved as a Foreign Cultures bypass.A GROWING PROCESSOn...
...prologue of Lauren Willig’s “The Deception of the Emerald Ring” is promising. Grandma is playing matchmaker for Harvard history graduate student Eloise Kelly, the novel??s intermittent first-person narrator...
...consider the novel??s ostensible climax: Santini must race to China in a supersonic jet-plane in order to halt a misguided preemptive strike on North Korea that could result in World War III. But before he arrives, we’re treated to 30 pages of refueling and bureaucratic bickering...
...deciding that classes like Science B-57, “Dinosaurs,” Literature and Arts B-48, “Chinese Imaginary Space,” and English 151, “The 19th Century Novel?? aren’t sufficiently relevant to be included in the general education curriculum, the committee runs the risk of trivializing a host of departments and a number of highly distinguished academics. Though it may be that the scope of some courses makes them better suited to the new Core, the committee seems to be specifically accusing these courses...
...suppose this excludes Literature and Arts B-48, “Chinese Imaginary Space, b”ut it does so little else. Does knowledge of Literature and Arts B-78, “Soundscapes” or English 151, “The 19-Century Novel?? count for relevance in life? The departments, of course, have not agreed. The administrators, predictably, seem terrified to say. And I, personally, lack both knowledge and experience to decide. Back in the spring, Assistant Dean of the College Stephanie H. Kenen hit the nail on the head: The review...