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Fall 2026 EN Course Descriptions

English majors and minors are encouraged to complete the advising template (PDF) before meeting with their academic advisors. Those who choose to register online might consider filling out the document in Word, saving it to a file, and then e-mailing it to their advisors as part of the "permit to register" request.

English Department Course Offerings - Fall 2026

200-Level Courses

Texts and Contexts: Afrofuturism
EN 202.01 – T/TH 1:40-2:55 PM
EN 202.02 – T/TH 3:05-4:20 PM
Dr. Trevon Pegram

Majors Writers: Classical Myth
EN 211.01 - M/W/F 10:00-10:50 AM
Dr. Aaron Palmore

Comic Books as Literature, TV & Cinema
EN 220.01 - M/W 4:30-5:45 PM
Dr. Brett Butler

Justice & Hope: Writing the U.S.
EN 265.01 - M/W 3:00-4:15 PM
Dr. Hunter Plummer 

U.S. Literature: Imagining the Nation
EN 266.01 - T/TH 9:25-10:40 AM
Dr. Sondra Guttman

Literature and Climate Change
EN 267.01 - M/W/F 2:00-2:50 PM 
Dr. Stephen Park

Growing Up Modern
EN 280.01 - TBD
Dr. Sondra Guttman 

300-Level Courses

Shakespeare: Histories & Tragedies
EN 310.01 - M/W 3:00-4:15 PM
Dr. Thomas Scheye

Book, Edition, Archive
EN 344.01 - T/TH 9:25-10:40 AM
Dr. Gary Slack 

Jane Austen
EN 355.01 - T/TH 4:30-5:45 PM
Dr. Gayla McGlamery

400-Level Courses

Honors Seminar Pre-1800: Reinventing Medieval
EN 430.01 - T/TH 1:40-2:55 PM
Dr. Kathleen Forni
By invitation only

Seminar in Literary Topics before 1800: Japanese Haiku & English Sonnets: Bashō & Shakespeare 
EN 439.01 - T/TH 12:15-1:30 PM
TBD

Seminar in African American Literature: August Wilson
EN 481.01 - T/TH 10:50 AM-12:05 PM
Dr. Trevon Pegram

Seminar in Modern Literature: Bohemianism
EN 483.01 - T/TH 3:05-4:20 PM
Dr. Melissa Girard 

Seminar in Film & Literature: Short Form Animation
EN 486.01 - W 6:00-8:30 PM
Dr. Nicholas Miller 

EN 099 English Internships

Students may take one internship course for degree credit. The course counts as an elective, not as a course fulfilling requirements for an English major or minor. Students taking an internship course are responsible for locating the internship and must work at least ten hours per week. For-credit internships include biweekly meetings with Dr. Forni and other fellow interns, and students undertake a series of reflective and goal-setting activities that can be highly beneficial aspects of the career discernment process. Internships may be done locally in the Baltimore-Washington region or remotely, but written or electronic permission of the instructor is required and all arrangements for a spring semester internship must be made prior to the end of the drop/add period. Interested students should contact Dr. Forni (kforni@loyola.edu) , the departmental internship supervisor, before registration.

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