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Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2023/24

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2023/24)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Elective literary courses – List of Courses

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
Elective literary courses – List of Courses
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Elective literary courses – List of ourses

Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Elective literary courses – List of courses
Translation Exercises

*
ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2023-2024
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
Aspects of American Romanticism (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and  Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel. Poetics and Politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2023-2024
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

American Literature and Culture 2: Narrating Race in American Literature and Film (Sawin, guest professor) (A) (19th-20th c.)
American Short Story 
 (Cvek) (A) (19th/20th c.)

The American Bildungsroman of the 19th and the 20th Century (Šesnić) (A) (19th/20th c.)
American Modernism (Cvek, Tutek) (A) (20th c.)

The Anthropocene in British and Australian Fiction and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
The Nineteenth-Century English Novel 
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)

Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature and the Transformation of the World in the Nineteenth Century (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)


_____________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES

° Academic year 2022/23
° Academic year 2021/22
° Academic year 2020/21
° Academic year 2019/20
° Academic year 2018/19
° Academic year 2017/18
° Academic year 2016/17
° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14
° Academic year 2012/13
° Academic year 2011/12

* before 2010: http://www.ffzg.unizg.hr/anglist-stari/w-syllabusi-eng/syllabus-svi%20eng.htm
_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year  2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.  
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2022/23

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2022/23)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Elective literary courses – List of Courses

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
Elective literary courses – List of Courses
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Elective literary courses – List of ourses

Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Elective literary courses – List of courses
Translation Exercises

*
ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2022-2023
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
American Women’s Writing in the Nineteenth Century (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Tutek) (A) (20th c.)

Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and  Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel. Poetics and Politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2022-2023
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

The Anthropocene in British and Australian Fiction and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Short Story
 (Cvek) (A) (19th/20th c.)
American Modernism (Cvek, Tutek) (A) (20th c.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)

The Nineteenth-Century American Novel
(Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
The Nineteenth-Century English Novel
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature and the Transformation of the World in the Nineteenth Century (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)


_____________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES

° Academic year 2021/22

° Academic year 2020/21

° Academic year 2019/20

° Academic year 2018/19

° Academic year 2017/18

° Academic year 2016/17

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

 ° Academic year 2011/12

* before 2010: http://www.ffzg.unizg.hr/anglist-stari/w-syllabusi-eng/syllabus-svi%20eng.htm
_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year  2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.  
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2022/23

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2022/23)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Elective literary courses – List of Courses

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
Elective literary courses – List of Courses
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Elective literary courses – List of Courses

Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Elective literary courses – List of Courses
Translation Exercises

 

ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2021-2022
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
American Women’s Writing in the Nineteenth Century (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and  Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel. Poetics and Politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2021-2022
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

The Anthropocene in British and Australian Fiction and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c)
Twentieth Century American Poetry
 (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
American Short Story 
 (Cvek) (A) (19th/20th c.)
American Modernism (Cvek, Tutek) (A) (20th c.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
The Nineteenth-Century American Novel (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
The Nineteenth-Century English Novel 
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)

Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature and the Transformation of the World in the Nineteenth Century (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

_____________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES

° Academic year 2021/22
° Academic year 2020/21

° Academic year 2019/20

° Academic year 2018/19

° Academic year 2017/18

° Academic year 2016/17

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

 ° Academic year 2011/12

* before 2010: http://www.ffzg.unizg.hr/anglist-stari/w-syllabusi-eng/syllabus-svi%20eng.htm
_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year  2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.  
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2021/22

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2021/22)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Elective literary courses – List of Courses

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
Elective literary courses – List of Courses
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Elective literary courses – List of ourses

Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Elective literary courses – List of courses
Translation Exercises

*
ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2021-2022
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
Aspects of American Romanticism (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)

British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and  Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel. Poetics and Politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2021-2022
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

The Anthropocene in British and Australian Fiction and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c)
Twentieth Century American Poetry
(Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
American Short Story
 (Cvek) (A) (19th/20th c.)
American Modernism (Cvek, Tutek) (A) (20th c.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Cvek, Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)

The Nineteenth-Century English Novel
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
Victorian Literature and the Transformation of the World in the Nineteenth Century (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)
War, Reconstruction and Transformation: American Literature 1860-1914 (Šesnić) (A) (19th/20th c.)


_____________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES

° Academic year 2020/21

° Academic year 2019/20

° Academic year 2018/19

° Academic year 2017/18

° Academic year 2016/17

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

 ° Academic year 2011/12

* before 2010: http://www.ffzg.unizg.hr/anglist-stari/w-syllabusi-eng/syllabus-svi%20eng.htm
_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year  2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.  
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2020/21

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2020/21)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises

*
ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2020-2021
(A=American literature, B=British literature)


Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)

British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and  Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2020-2021
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

The Anthropocene in British and Australian Fiction and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c)
Twentieth Century American Poetry
(Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
American Short Story
 (Cvek) (A) (19th/20th c.)
American Modernism (Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
The Nineteenth-Century English Novel
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)

Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
Victorian Literature and the Transformation of the World in the Nineteenth Century (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

_______________________________________________________________________________________

For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: Students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.

For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.

_______________________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES
° Academic year 2019/20

° Academic year 2018/19

° Academic year 2017/18

° Academic year 2016/17

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

° Academic year 2011/12

_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2019/20

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2019/20)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises

ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2019-2020
(A=American literature, B=British literature)


American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
Aspects of American Romanticism (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel. Poetics and Politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2019-2020
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Twentieth Century American Poetry (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
American Short Story
(Cvek) (A) (19th/20th c.)
American Modernism (Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)

The Nineteenth-Century English Novel
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
War, Reconstruction and Transformation: American Literature 1860-1914 (Šesnić) (A) (19th/20th c.)

_______________________________________________________________________________________

For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: Students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.

For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.

_______________________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES
° Academic year 2018/19

° Academic year 2017/18

° Academic year 2016/17

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

° Academic year 2011/12

_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2018/19

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2018/19)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises

ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2018-2019
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
American Women’s Writing in the Nineteenth Century (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel. Poetics and Politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2018-2019
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

The Anthropocene in British and Australian Fiction and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American literature and Culture II: African American Literature: 1800-Present (Sawin, guest professor) (A) (19th-20th c.)
Twentieth Century American Poetry (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
American Short Story
(Cvek) (A) (19th/20th c.)
The American Bildungsroman of the 19th and the 20th Century
(Šesnić) (A) (19th/20th c.)
American Modernism
(Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
The Nineteenth-Century English Novel
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian Literature and the Transformation of the World in the Nineteenth Century (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

_______________________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES
° Academic year 2017/18

° Academic year 2016/17

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

° Academic year 2011/12

_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2017/18

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2017/18)

1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Introduction to English Literature 1


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
Introduction to English Literature 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises

ELECTIVE LITERARY COURSES, YEAR 2 AND 3
SEMESTER 3 AND 5 (WINTER), 4 AND 6 (SUMMER):

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2017-2018
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
Aspects of American Romanticism (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel – poetics and cultural politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2017-2018
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American literature and Culture II: (Fulbright guest professor) (A) (20th c.)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture
(Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
The Nineteenth-Century American Novel
(Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)

Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Viktorijanski roman: poetika i kulturna politika (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

_________________________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES

° Academic year 2016/17

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

° Academic year 2011/12

_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2016/17

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2016/17)

LITERARY COURSES
1st YEAR
1st semester
Introduction to English Literature 1

2nd semester
Introduction to English Literature 2

2nd and 3rd year
Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2016-2017

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)

Aspects of American Romanticism (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and  Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel – poetics and cultural politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)
_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2016-2017
(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American literature and Culture II: American Literature: Cross-Cultural Contact and Exchange (Eagan, Fulbright guest professor) (A) (20th c.)
African American Literature: 1800-Present 
(Sawin, guest professor) (A) (19th-20th c.)
American Modernism
(Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
War, Reconstruction and Transformation: American Literature 1860-1914 (Šesnić) (A) (19th-20th c.)
Contemporary American Novel

Shakespeare (Brlek) (B) (Early Modern)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues
(Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Viktorijanski roman: poetika i kulturna politika (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

 

______________________________________________________________________________________________

LINGUISTIC COURSES
1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2

_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises
_____________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES

° Academic year 2015/16

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

° Academic year 2011/12

_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2015/16

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION)
(ac. year 2015/16)

LITERARY COURSES
1st YEAR
1st semester
Introduction to English Literature 1

2nd semester
Introduction to English Literature 2

2nd and 3rd year
Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2015-2016

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
Aspects of American Romanticism (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Shakespeare (Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel – poetics and cultural politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2015-2016

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
The American Bildungsroman of the 19th and the 20th Century (Šesnić) (A) (19th-20th c.)
American literature and Culture II
(Fulbright guest professor) (A)
American Modernism
(Tutek) (A) (20th c.)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
Shakespeare
(Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern)
Contemporary American Novel
(Grgas)
The Trans/national in Contemporary Australian Literature and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c.) (no longer available in 2015/16)

Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Viktorijanski roman: poetika i kulturna politika (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

___________________________________________________________________
LINGUISTIC COURSES
1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English

2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester

Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises
_____________________________________________________________________________

COURSES ARCHIVES

° Academic year 2014/15

° Academic year 2013/14

° Academic year 2012/13

° Academic year 2011/12

_____________________________________________________________________________

* Notes:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.
  4. Former title of the course Cultures of the USA and the UK was Societies and Cultures of the English-speaking World
  5. Beginning with 2015/16, the obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature“, held in the first semester of undergraduate study, is replaced with a modified obligatory course “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 1“. There is also a new obligatory course in the second semester, the “Introduction to the Study of English Literature 2“. This change in courses was approved by the Faculty Board on the 17th July 2015. Students who have taken the course Introduction to the Study of English Literature before 2015/16 and have failed it, must now enrol into both introductory courses.
  6. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Regular attendance and active participation in Introduction to English literature 1 is a minimal prerequisite for the enrolment in Introduction to English literature 2.
  7. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2015/16: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Each course fulfils two criteria (century + national literature). Introduction to English Literature 1 and Introduction to English Literature 2 are Year 1 obligatory courses. Students must pass both courses to enrol in any subsequent elective literary course.

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2014/15

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION) 2014/15

LITERARY COURSES
1st YEAR

Introduction to English Literature

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2014-2015

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
American Women’s Writing in the Nineteenth Century (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
British Romanticism: poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Irish Culture (O’Malley, visiting lecturer (B) (20th c.)
Shakespeare (Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel – poetics and cultural politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2014-2015

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
The Nineteenth-Century American Novel (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Tutek) (A) (20. st.)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)

British Romanticism: prose (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English (Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
Shakespeare
(Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Early English Literature (Brljak) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20. st.)
The Trans/national in Contemporary Australian Literature and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c.)

Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Viktorijanski roman: poetika i kulturna politika (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

 _______________________________________________________________________________________


LINGUISTIC COURSES
1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester


Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises
_____________________________________________________________________________

* Note:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.

 

 

Introduction to the linguistic study of English

Course title: Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English
Course coordinator: Assoc. Prof. Mateusz-Milan Stanojević
Instructors: Asst. Prof. Marina Grubišić
ECTS credits: 6
Language: English
Semester: 1st (winter)
Status: Compulsory
Form of Instruction: 4 lectures per week
Prerequisites: none
Examination: Written
Course contents: This elementary course covers the basic topics in general linguistics and selected issues in the linguistic description of the English language. Language is defined on the basis of its unique properties, and the foundations of the structuralist description of language are dealt with, including synchrony and diachrony, prescriptivism and descriptivism, language and speech, the linguistic sign and its properties, double articulation and syntagmatic and paradigmatic relations. The central part of the course deals with core linguistic disciplines: phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics. They are described synchronically, and the description includes theoretical issues with English examples. The description is based on a range of theories, including structuralism, generative linguistics (in syntax) and functionalism (in semantics and pragmatics). The last topic in this part of the course is the history of the language, which explains historical changes on all levels of linguistic analysis, with examples based on the history of English. The last part of the course tackles multidisciplinary approaches to language, describing ways in which contemporary linguistics sees the relationship between language and society (sociolinguistics), language and culture (anthropological linguistics), language and mind (psycholinguistics) and, finally, language acquisition and teaching.
Objectives: The objectives of this course are threefold. Firstly, students will acquire basic theoretical competences. Secondly, students will become familiar with the synchronic and diachronic descriptions of English given by various theories. This will serve as the basis for other linguistic courses in the program, and will enable the students to compare and contrast the approaches. Finally, the compulsory and extra-credit assignments will enable students to acquire some basic linguistic research skills, which will prepare them to do more detailed linguistic research in other specialized linguistic courses.

Week Topic Notes
1 Introduction Orientation, syllabus
  Introduction Scientific study of language. Levels of linguistic study.
2 Articulatory phonetics The sounds of English in comparison with the sounds of Croatian – a review of familiar notions. Articulatory description of sounds. Notation of sounds – transcription. The vocal tract and the ways of making sounds.(Ch. 4. in Yule (2006)
  The sounds of English Using the vocal tract to produce the sounds of English. Articulatory description of consonants, vowels and diphthongs. Some basic contrasts with Croatian. (Ch. 4 in Yule (2006))
3 Suprasegmentals. Acoustic and auditory phonetics. Suprasegmentals: stress, tone, intonation and their importance in meaning. Basic contrasts with Croatian. Measurement of sound waves and sound perception: examples of studies, their results and their significance.
  The sound pattern of a language. Phonology: the organization of sounds. Basic terms: phonemes, allophones, minimal pairs, phonotactics. Phonological alternations in English (and some basic contrasts with Croatian). (Ch 5 in Yule (2006); Ch. 1 in Fasold & Connor Linton (2006)). Additional reading: chapter 3 from Josipović (1999).
4 Constructing words in a language Examples of the way words are constructed in English. Basic contrasts with Croatian. Phonotactic, semantic and functional limitations to making new words vs. acceptable innovations. How words become conventionalized. Why words – psychological reality vs. definitional problems. Morphemes.
  Morphological operations. Derivation and inflection Morphemes, types of morphemes. Allomorphs. Ch. 7 in Yule (2006). Basic morphological operations: affixation, reduplication, ablaut and suppletion. Definitions of derivation and inflection. Examples. Ch. 3. in Fasold & Connor Linton (2006)).
5 Derivation and inflection Types of derivation. Types of inflection. The significance of inflection and derivation in English and Croatian. Examples and exercises.
  Combining units: phrases and sentences The basis of word combinations: meaning and grammar. Word classes and their characteristics. Problems with defining word classes. Larger units: phrases clauses, sentences. Head and dependents. Syntax: definition. Morphology and syntax: grammar. Ch. 8 in Yule (2006).
6 Syntax The basis of word combinations – an overview of verbal and nominal grammatical categories. English vs. Croatian verbal categories: tense, aspect, mood, voice. (Selected terms from a glossary of linguistic terms).
  Syntax English vs. Croatian nominal categories: case, number, gender. Paradigmatic and syntagmatic relations in syntax. Syntactic functions vs. word classes. Exercises. Revision. Basics of generative grammar. Ch. 9 in Yule (2006).
7 Continuous assessment 1  
  Continuous assessment 1 Review.
8 Semantics The centrality of meaning in linguistic analysis. The study of meaning on all linguistic levels: phonology (contrastive; suprasegmentals & intonation) morphology (definitional), syntax (the meaning of word combinations, phrases and sentences). Two levels of meaning: individual units (lexical meaning) & their combinations (phrases, sentences). Conceptual and associative meaning. Lexical relations (synonymy, antonymy, homonymy (homophony), polysemy).
  Semantics (cont.) Lexical relations (hyponymy, prototypes; metonymy). Semantics of word combinations: simple addition or emergent meaning? Collocations, idioms. Semantic features, feature analysis, its problems. Semantic roles. Ch 10 in Yule (2006). Semantic studies – key interests.
9 Pragmatics Meaning in context: pragmatics. Various examples of contextual meaning differences: knowledge of the world and culture, inference. Deixis: person, time, space; what English and Croatian code. Speech acts (introduction, examples).
  Pragmatics. Discourse analysis. Speech acts (classification, felicity conditions). Pragmatic principles: cooperation, politeness. Interpreting discourse: cohesion & coherence, speech events, turn-taking, hedges, schemas and scripts. Chapters 11 & 12 in Yule (2006).
10 Continuous assessment 2  
  Continuous assessment 2 Review
11 Language history and language variation: diachronic linguistics. Synchrony vs. diachrony (revision). Family trees, family relationships, comparative reconstruction. Examples.
  Language history and language variation (cont.) Old English, Middle English, Modern English. The process of change, sound changes, syntactic changes, lexical changes. Ch. 17 in Yule (2006).Language variation: sociolinguisticsLectal varieties: geographical, social, educational distribution. Language continuum. Examples of varieties of English around the world. Examples of sociolinguistic research: methods, participants and results. Sociolinguistic interview. Ch. 18 & 19 in Yule (2006).
  Language and mind; language and culture. Revision of material. Examples of exam questions. Exercises. Discussion of study questions. What is different in language structure (a review of examples). What is common to all languages: typology and universals. Beyond linguistic structure: the body and culture as a source of similarities / differences. Examples (the significance of body parts in various languages). Universality / relativity: the Sapir-Whorf hypothesis. Some more examples (colors, kinship terms).
13 Continuous assessment 3  
  Continuous assessment 3 Review

Required reading:
– Yule, George (2006). The Study of Language. 3rd ed. Cambridge University Press

Additional reading:
– Fasold, Ralph W., and Connor-Linton, Jeff (eds.) (2006). An Introduction to Language and Linguistics. Cambridge University Press
– Josipović, Višnja (1999). Phonetics and Phonology for Students of English. Zagreb: Targa
– Lyons, John (1981). Language and Linguistics. An Introduction. Cambridge University Press

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2013/14

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION) 2013/14

LITERARY COURSES
1st YEAR

Introduction to English Literature

Literary courses – Semester 3 and 5 (Winter) 2013-2014

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
Irish Culture (O’Malley, visiting lecturer (B) (20th c.)
English Romantic Poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Creating Place Out of Space: Early Australian Literature (Klepač) (B) (19th c.)
Shakespeare (Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Victorian novel – poetics and cultural politics (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

Literary Courses: Semester 4 and 6 (Summer) 2013-2014

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c)
Beginnings of the Modern Novel in the 18th-century England (Polić) (B) (starija)
Contemporary Canadian Literature in English
(Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Cool Britannia? British drama in the period 1956 – 2008 (Klepač) (B) (20th c.)
English Romantic Poetry (Domines Veliki) (B) (19th c.)
Shakespeare
(Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
The Trans/national in Contemporary Australian Literature and Film (Polak) (B) (20th c.)

Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Viktorijanski roman: poetika i kulturna politika (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

 __________________________________________________________________________________________


LINGUISTIC COURSES
1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester


Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Cultures of the USA and the UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises
_____________________________________________________________________________

* Note:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.

 

 

Courses Archives – Undergraduate Programme 2012/13

UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAMME – SYLLABI (COURSE DESCRIPTION) 2012/13

LITERARY COURSES
1st YEAR

Introduction to English Literature

2nd and 3rd YEAR

Literary courses – 3rd and 5th (winter) semester 2012/13

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

American Literature and Culture 1 (Ambrose, Fulbright visiting scholar) (A) (19th c.)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c.)
The Nineteenth-Century American Novel (Šesnić) (A) (19th c.)
English Romantic Period (Gjurgjan) (B) (19th c.)
Shakespeare (Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
History of English Drama from Mass to City Play (Petrić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Contemporary American Novel (Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)

_____________________________________________________________________________________

Literary Courses: 4th or 6th (summer) semester 2012/13

(A=American literature, B=British literature)

Alternative Worlds in Contemporary British Fiction (Polak) (B) (20th c)
American Literature and Culture 2 (Ambrose, Fulbright visiting scholar) (A) (19th c.)
The American Bildungsroman of the 19th and the 20th Century (Šesnić) (A) (19th-20th c.)
American Postmodernism and Popular Culture (Cvek) (A) (20th c)
Candian Literature and Culture
(Polić) (B) (20th c.)
Shakespeare
(Ciglar Žanić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
History of English Drama from Mass to City Play
(Petrić) (B) (Early Modern Lit.)
Contemporary American Novel
(Grgas) (A) (20th c.)
The Trans/national in Contemporary Australian Literature and Film
(Polak) (B) (20th c.)

Victorian Literature: Genres and Issues (Knežević) (B) (19th c.)
Viktorijanski roman: poetika i kulturna politika (Jukić) (B) (19th c.)

 __________________________________________________________________________________________


LINGUISTIC COURSES
1st YEAR
1st semester
Contemporary English Language 1 (exercises)
Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English


2nd semester

English Syntax 1: Word Classes
Contemporary English Language 2
_______________________________________________________________

2nd YEAR
3rd semester


Contemporary English Language 3

4th semester
Analysis of English Texts
English Syntax 2: The Sentence
_______________________________________________________________

3rd YEAR
5th semester

Societies and Cultures of the USA and UK
Semantics of the English language

6th semester
Phonetics and Phonology

Translation Exercises
_____________________________________________________________________________

* Note:

  1. Introduction to the Linguistic Study of English is a prerequisite for enrolment in Syntax 1: Parts of Speech.
  2. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2005/06: students select one course from literary courses offered for the 3rd semester. Until the 6th semester, apart from Introduction to English literature and Shakespeare, students must enrol in one literary course in the 3rd, 4th, 5th and 6th semester (the total of five literary courses during undergraduate studies). One of the remaining three elective courses, be it British, American or Anglophone (Australian, Canadian, Irish), must be labelled as a 19th-century course and one as a 20th-century course.
  3. For students who enrolled in Year 1 of Bologna studies in the academic year 2006/07 and later: Students enrolled in the 3rd and 5th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 3rd and 5th semester. Students enrolled in the 4th and 6th semester select elective literary courses from the course list for the 4th and 6th semester. Selection principle: one course in Early Modern literature or one course in Victorian literature; one course in British or American 20th-century literature; one course in British literature; one course in American literature. Introduction to English literature is the 1st semester obligatory course. Students must pass this course to enrol in any subsequent elective literary courses.

 

Arhiva kolegija – preddiplomski studij