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        <title>MERLOT Search - materialType=Online%20Course&amp;category=2426</title>
        <link>http://www.merlot.org:80/merlot/</link>
        <description>A search of MERLOT materials</description>
        <copyright>Copyright 1997-2013 MERLOT. All rights reserved.</copyright>
        <pubDate>Sat, 25 May 2013 14:21:44 PDT</pubDate>
        <lastBuildDate>Sat, 25 May 2013 14:21:44 PDT</lastBuildDate>
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            <title>MERLOT Search - materialType=Online%20Course&amp;category=2426</title>
            <url>http://www.merlot.org:80/merlot/images/merlot.gif</url>
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            <title>Inanimate Alice</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=335105</link>
            <description>A teaching resource for digital literacy, stimulus for story telling and creativity that is FREE to download. It has been developed in partnership between BradField and the Specialist Schools and Academies Trust and its schools.Inanimate Alice the multi award-winning interactive audio-visual narrative from new-media production house the BradField Company (BradField) has been identified by Specialist Schools and Academies Trust (SSAT) as delivering compelling new media suitable for an education audience. Seen by over 1 million viewers (estimate), it is an aid to creativity in the classroom, assisting in story telling and literacy and can be a free and major contribution to the creative curriculum that has been welcomed by teachers accessing it.</description>
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            <title>11.225 Argumentation and Communication</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=554753</link>
            <description>This Communication and Argumentation seminar is an intensive writing workshop that focuses on argumentation and communication. Students learn to write and present their ideas in cogent, persuasive arguments and other analytical frameworks. Reading and writing assignments and other exercises stress the connections between clear thinking, critical reading, and effective writing.</description>
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            <title>21F.225 / 21F.226 Advanced Workshop in Writing for Science and Engineering (ELS)</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555355</link>
            <description>Analysis and practice of various forms of scientific and technical writing, from memos to journal articles. Strategies for conveying technical information to specialist and non-specialist audiences. Comparable to 21W.780 but methods designed to deal with special problems of advanced ELS or bilingual students. The goal of the workshop is to develop effective writing skills for academic and professional contexts. Models, materials, topics and assignments vary from semester to semester.</description>
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            <title>21L.004 Reading Poetry</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555242</link>
            <description>&quot;Reading Poetry&quot; has several aims: primarily, to increase the ways you can become more engaged and curious readers of poetry; to increase your confidence as writers thinking about literary texts; and to provide you with the language for literary description. The course is not designed as a historical survey course but rather as an introductory approach to poetry from various directions &#8211; as public or private utterances; as arranged imaginative shapes; and as psychological worlds, for example. One perspective offered is that poetry offers intellectual, moral and linguistic pleasures as well as difficulties to our private lives as readers and to our public lives as writers. Expect to hear and read poems aloud and to memorize lines; the class format will be group discussion, occasional lecture.</description>
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            <title>21L.012 Forms of Western Narrative</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555217</link>
            <description>This class will investigate the ways in which the formal aspects of Western storytelling in various media have shaped both fantasies and perceptions, making certain understandings of experience possible through the selection, arrangement, and processing of narrative material. Surveying the field chronologically across the major narrative genres and sub-genres from Homeric epic through the novel and across media to include live performance, film, and video games, we will be examining the ways in which new ideologies and psychological insights become available through the development of various narrative techniques and new technologies. Emphasis will be placed on the generic conventions of story-telling as well as on literary and cultural issues, the role of media and modes of transmission, the artistic significance of the chosen texts and their identity as anthropological artifacts whose conventions and assumptions are rooted in particular times, places, and technologies. Authors will include: Homer, Sophocles, Herodotus, Christian evangelists, Marie de France, Cervantes, La Clos, Poe, Lang, Cocteau, Disney-Pixar, and Maxis-Electronic Arts, with theoretical readings in Propp, Bakhtin, Girard, Freud, and Marx.</description>
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            <title>21L.315 Prizewinners</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555273</link>
            <description>This 6-unit subject gives students the opportunity to immerse themselves in the poetry of two living Nobel Laureates: the Caribbean poet, Derek Walcott, and the Northern-Irish poet, Seamus Heaney. We will begin and end the semester with their magnificent epic works: Heaney&apos;s translation of the Anglo-Saxon epic Beowulf, and Walcott&apos;s Omeros (a modern epic set in the West Indies). Between these major narrative poems, we will read a rich selection of their shorter poems, as well as some of their reflections in prose on what poetry does, on what other poets do, and what it means to write in English from the historical and political situation of Northern Ireland (for Heaney) or the Caribbean (for Walcott).</description>
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            <title>21L.435 / CMS.840 Shakespeare, Film and Media</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555148</link>
            <description>Filmed Shakespeare began in 1899, with Sir Herbert Beerbohm Tree performing the death scene from King John for the camera. Sarah Bernhardt, who had played Hamlet a number of times in her long career, filmed the duel scene for the Paris Exposition of 1900. In the era of silent film (1895-1929) several hundred Shakespeare films were made in England, France Germany and the United States, Even without the spoken word, Shakespeare was popular in the new medium. The first half-century of sound included many of the most highly regarded Shakespeare films, among them -- Laurence Olivier&apos;s Hamlet and Henry V, Orson Welles&apos; Othello and Chimes at Midnight, Kurosawa&apos;s Throne of Blood, Polanski&apos;s Macbeth and Zeffirelli&apos;s Romeo and Juliet. We are now in the midst of an extremely rich and varied period for Shakespeare on film which began with the release of Kenneth Branagh&apos;s Henry V in 1989 and includes such films as Richard Loncraine&apos;s Richard III, Julie Taymor&apos;s Titus, Zeffirelli and Almereyda&apos;s Hamlet films, Baz Luhrmann&apos;s William Shakespeare&apos;s Romeo + Juliet, and Shakespeare in Love. The phenomenon of filmed Shakespeare raises many questions for literary and media studies about adaptation, authorship, the status of &quot;classic&quot; texts and their variant forms, the role of Shakespeare in youth and popular culture, and the transition from manuscript, book and stage to the modern medium of film and its recent digitally inflected forms. Most of our work will involve individual and group analysis of the &quot;film text&quot; -- that is, of specific sequences in the films, aided by videotape, DVD, the Shakespeare Electronic Archive, and some of the software tools for video annoatation developed by the MIT Shakespeare Project under the MIT-Microsoft iCampus Initiative. We will study the films as works of art in their own right, and try to understand the means -- literary, dramatic, performative, cinematic -- by which they engage audiences and create meaning. With Shakespeare film as example, we will discuss how stories cross time, culture and media, and reflect on the benefits as well as the limitations of such migration. The class will be conducted as a structured discussion, punctuated by student presentations and &quot;mini-lectures&quot; by the instructor. Students will introduce discussions, prepare clips and examples, and the major &quot;written&quot; work will take the form of presentations to the class and multimedia annotations as well as conventional short essays. The methodological bias of the class is close &quot;reading&quot; of both text and film. This is a class in which your insights will form a major part of the work and will be the basis of a large fraction of class discussion. You will need to read carefully, to watch and listen to the films carefully, and develop effective ways of conveying your ideas to the class.</description>
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            <title>21L.470 Eighteenth-Century Literature: Versions of the Self in 18th-C Britain</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555152</link>
            <description>When John Locke declared (in the 1690 Essay Concerning Human Understanding) that knowledge was derived solely from experience, he raised the possibility that human understanding and identity were not the products of God&apos;s will or of immutable laws of nature so much as of one&apos;s personal history and background. If on the one hand Locke&apos;s theory led some to pronounce that individuals could determine the course of their own lives, however, the idea that we are the products of our experience just as readily supported the conviction that we are nothing more than machines acting out lives whose destinies we do not control. This course will track the formulation of that problem, and a variety of responses to it, in the literature of the &quot;long eighteenth century.&quot; Readings will range widely across genre, from lyric poetry and the novel to diary entries, philosophical prose, and political essays, including texts by Alexander Pope, Jonathan Swift, Mary Astell, David Hume, Laurence Sterne, Olaudah Equiano, Mary Hays, and Mary Shelley. Topics to be discussed include the construction of gender identities; the individual in society; imagination and the poet&apos;s work. There will be two essays, one 5-6 pages and one 8-10 pages in length, and required presentations.</description>
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            <title>21L.501 The American Novel</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555168</link>
            <description>This course explores the metaphorical, historical, social, and psychological value of ghosts in the American novel. Using the theme of &quot;haunting&quot; as a flashpoint for class discussion and a thematic center for our readerly attention, this course examines the American novel in the context of the various histories which might be said to haunt fictional characters in the American novel, to haunt the American novel itself, and ultimately to haunt us: America&apos;s colonial past, its slave past, and other memorable and painful chapters in its past.</description>
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            <title>21L.501 The American Novel</title>
            <link>http://www.merlot.org/merlot/viewMaterial.htm?id=555200</link>
            <description>The theme for this class is &quot;American Revolution.&quot; We will read authors who record, on the one hand, the failures of the American revolution, with its dream of democracy and freedom for all, and on the other hand the potential for narrative to reenact that revolution successfully. In different ways, these authors overturn traditional or unethical authority through their literary innovations. Although certain classic American historical, political, and cultural issues will be at the center of our study--democracy, slavery, gender equity, social reform--we will concern ourselves primarily with literary strategies, with language and its uses. Essays will pursue close readings of the texts and develop students&apos; abilities to think creatively and critically about fictional works.</description>
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