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ENGL 22300 - Literature And Technology |
Credit Hours: 3.00. This class uses literature to explore how technological innovation both enables and constrains creativity. It introduces students to the basics of narrative theory, remediation, and historical and contemporary forms of interactive textual media, from the physical to the digital. It also explores how technology has been represented in literature, and examines the relationship between literature and new media (film, television, video games, etc.). Typically offered Fall Spring.
3.000 Credit hours Syllabus Available Levels: Graduate, Professional, Undergraduate Schedule Types: Distance Learning, Lecture Offered By: College of Liberal Arts Department: English Course Attributes: Lower Division, GTC-Science, Tech & Society, UC-Science, Tech & Society May be offered at any of the following campuses: West Lafayette Learning Outcomes: 1. Define technology and its implications. 2. Employ multiple approaches to critical thinking well-suited to cultural complexities. 3. Demonstrate written, visual, and technological literacies while working with diverse media. 4. Demonstrate creativity through remediation (moving information from one medium to another) and iteration. 5. Explain the relationship between information and digital media production. 6. Explain and employ multiple critical approaches to narrative and storytelling. |
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