Lisans Ders Programı
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
CL 103 |
Classical Literature
A survey of major works of ancient Greek and Roman literature in translation, with emphasis on the structural and thematic features of epic, lyrics, and dramatic poetry.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 101 |
Survey of English Literature from Old English Period to Restoration
A chronological survey of English literature from Old English times to the Restoration, with consideration of works, authors, forms, conventions, ideas and movements in a historical setting.
|
3 | 6 |
ENGL 105 |
Introduction to Literary Forms I
An introduction to forms of literature and literary and stylistic analysis of texts. Examination of examples of poetry, short story and drama with reference to a wide range of critical principles and interpretative tools.
|
3 | 6 |
PHIL 111 |
Introduction to Ancient and Medieval Philosophy
The evolution of philosophy from its beginning in ancient Greece till the end of the medieval period.
|
3 | 6 |
PSY 101 |
Introduction to Psychology
Introduction to psychology including basic psychological processes, such as perception, learning, motivation, as well as theories of development, intelligence, personality, social relations and psychopathology. Overview of research methods in psychology to evaluate these theories and processes.
|
3 | 5 |
Total: 15 |
Total: 29 |
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
CL 106 |
Literary Theory and Criticism I
Analysis of the most significant theoretical statements on literature prior to the modern period, focusing on major critical works from the Classical (Greek, Hellenistic, Roman), Medieval, and Early Modern periods, ending with Neoclassical criticism and aesthetic theory.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 102 |
Survey of English Literature from Restoration to Present
A chronological survey of English literature from the seventeenth century to the present, with consideration of works, authors, forms, conventions, ideas and movements in a historical setting.
|
3 | 6 |
ENGL 106 |
Introduction to Literary Forms II
An introduction to the novel as a major literary genre, with reference to a wide range of critical principles and interpretative tools.
|
3 | 6 |
LING 101 |
Introduction to Language and Linguistics I
An introductory course to the study of language focusing on the properties of natural languages and aiming to familiarize the student with linguistic terminology and the concepts underlying these terms.
|
3 | 7 |
PHIL 112 |
Introduction to Modern Philosophy
The evolution of modern philosophy from Descartes up to the present.
|
3 | 6 |
Total: 15 |
Total: 31 |
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
CL 207 |
Literary Theory and Criticism II
Selected critical works of European romanticism; the foundational figures of modern criticism (Marx, Nietzsche, Freud, Heidegger, Saussure). The rise of structuralism, and the emergence of critical methodologies based in identity politics, from feminism to theories of race and ethnicity.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 201 |
Medieval English Literature
Romances, lyrics, allegories, popular tales read against the social and cultural background of the age, with special emphasis on Chaucer.
|
3 | 6 |
HIST |
History Elective Course
History Elective Course
|
3 | 6 |
SCIENCE |
Science Elective Course
Science Elective Course
|
3 | 6 |
TR 221 |
Turkish I
Language theories, the birth of languages and language-culture relationship. The classification of languages, with special emphasis on the Ural-Altaic language family, to which the Turkish language belongs. The study of four major areas of linguistics: phonetics, morphology, syntax and semantics. The phonetic structure of Turkish; word and sentence structure. Analysis of selected poems, essays and works of fiction.
|
2 | 3 |
UNRESTRICTED |
Unrestricted Elective
Unrestricted Elective
|
3 | 4 |
Total: 17 |
Total: 31 |
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
CL 208 |
Literary Theory and Criticism III
A survey of the most significant moments in modern and contemporary literary theory. Deconstruction, cultural studies, and the rise of post-structuralist, post-Marxist, post-psychoanalytic, and postcolonial theory. The most recent trends in critical theory. Queer theory, body theory, affect theory, object theory, material studies, post-humanism and digital humanities.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 202 |
The English Renaissance
A study of the major texts of the English Renaissance from More to Milton with special attention to the development of lyric poetry.
|
3 | 6 |
HIST |
History Elective Course
History Elective Course
|
3 | 6 |
HSS |
HSS Elective
Courses from Humanities and Social Sciences Departments such as Sociology, Psychology, Philosophy, History as well as FA courses.
|
3 | 4 |
SCIENCE |
Science Elective Course
Science Elective Course
|
3 | 6 |
TR 222 |
Turkish II
Practice and training in written Turkish for the purposes of exposition, description, narration and discussion. Fundamental rules, examples of punctuation and dictation. Styles of writing and composition; scientific and scholarly writing, reports and essays. The work of classical and contemporary Turkish writers. Practice in public speaking and argumentation techniques.
|
2 | 3 |
Total: 17 |
Total: 31 |
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
AL 311 |
Survey of American Literature from 17th to 19th Century
A chronological survey of American literature from the 17th to the late 19th century, with consideration of eras, movements, and individual authors in their cultural and historical settings.
|
3 | 6 |
CL 309 |
Contemporary Trends in Literature
A study of contemporary Anglo-American texts written during the last two decades of the 20th century and the 21st century as challenges to the conventional understanding of genres and in interactions with current critical theories.
|
3 | 6 |
DEPT ELECTIVE |
Departmental Elective**
**Departmental Electives should be taken from AL, CL, DRA, EL, and ENGL coded courses.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 303 |
Restoration and Augustan Literature
A study of poetry, prose, drama, fiction and criticism from 1660 to the end of the 18th Century with emphasis on comedy of manners and the satires of Dryden, Pope and Swift.
|
3 | 6 |
HSS |
HSS Elective
Courses from Humanities and Social Sciences Departments such as Sociology, Psychology, Philosophy, History as well as FA courses.
|
3 | 4 |
HTR 311 |
History of the Turkish Republic I
A general survey of Turkish history from about the mid-19th century until World War II with a particular focus on the early Republican era. A comparative and analytical account of Westernization and Ottoman reform attempts, the struggle for constitution, the economic and social transformations, diplomacy and foreign policy, World War I, the rise of Turkish nationalism, the National Struggle, Kemalist social, economic and cultural reforms in the 1920s and 1930s with special emphasis on the Kemalist principles.
|
2 | 3 |
Total: 17 |
Total: 31 |
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
AL 312 |
Survey of American Literature from late 19th Century to Present
A chronological survey of American literature from the late 19th century to the present, with consideration of works, authors, forms, conventions, ideas, and movements in their cultural and historical settings.
|
3 | 6 |
DEPT ELECTIVE |
Departmental Elective
**Departmental Electives should be taken from AL, CL, DRA, EL and ENGL coded courses.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 305 |
Studies in Shakespeare
In-depth analysis of a few of Shakespeare’s great plays, emphasizing both the poetic and dramatic aspects of his art. Consideration of the historical context and of the varieties of critical interpretation.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 306 |
The English Romantics
A study of the major romantic poets and prose writers of the 19th Century, with special emphasis on the aesthetics of Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley and Keats.
|
3 | 6 |
HTR 312 |
History of the Turkish Republic II
A general survey of Turkish history from the beginning of World War II until the present. A comparative and analytical account of party-politics, social movements and mobilizations; different interpretations of Kemalism, the problems of urbanization, industrialization, and immigration; cultural and ideological changes, Turkey’s foreign policy and an overall assessment of Turkey’s standing in light of national and international developments.
|
2 | 3 |
UNRESTRICTED |
Unrestricted Elective
Unrestricted Elective
|
3 | 4 |
Total: 17 |
Total: 31 |
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
DEPT ELECTIVE |
Departmental Elective
**Departmental Electives should be taken from AL, CL, DRA, EL, and ENGL coded courses.
|
3 | 6 |
DEPT ELECTIVE |
Departmental Elective
**Departmental Electives should be taken from AL, CL, DRA, EL, and ENGL coded courses.
|
3 | 6 |
DRA 403 |
Modern Drama
Extensive reading and discussion of modern drama, beginning with Ibsen and including the chief British and European dramatists of our day.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 405 |
Victorian Poetry and Prose
A study of the greater Victorian poets and prose writers, with attention to relationships between the literature and the social and intellectual trends of the age.
|
3 | 6 |
HSS |
HSS Elective
Courses from Humanities and Social Sciences Departments such as Sociology, Psychology, Philosophy, History as well as FA courses.
|
3 | 4 |
Total: 15 |
Total: 28 |
Crdts | ECTS | ||
---|---|---|---|
DEPT ELECTIVE |
Departmental Elective
**Departmental Electives should be taken from AL, CL, DRA, EL and ENGL coded courses.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 402 |
Modern Novel
Analysis of the examples of modern and contemporary novels from English and world literatures, mostly from the 1900s, with a particular focus on the theory of the novel.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 408 |
Modern Poetry
Analysis of modern and contemporary poetry in English, starting with W.B.Yeats, comprising mainly English and American but including European poets as well. Close examination of the poems in terms of their form and content within their intellectual and cultural contexts, employing diverse methods of literary criticism.
|
3 | 6 |
EL 412 |
Senior Thesis
Guided research and writing on a topic which has been approved as a suitable subject for an undergraduate project. Individually supervised by members of the department.
|
3 | 6 |
HSS |
HSS Elective
Courses from Humanities and Social Sciences Departments such as Sociology, Psychology, Philosophy, History as well as FA courses.
|
3 | 4 |
Total: 15 |
Total: 28 |