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Level-3 British and American Literature Course

Special Gift - Free PDF Certificate Included | Video Course | Lifetime Access | Tutor Support


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Summary

Price
£315 inc VAT
Or £52.50/mo. for 6 months...
Study method
Online
Duration
11 hours · Self-paced
Access to content
Lifetime access
Qualification
No formal qualification
CPD
11 CPD hours / points
Additional info
  • Tutor is available to students

Overview

Worried about your future and looking for a way to develop your career? Course Cloud can be the best solution for you to succeed. Course Cloud makes home training easy, and Level-3 British and American Literature Course will teach you how to become a specialist without having to leave the comfort of your home. It was designed in partnership with industry professionals and will add essential competencies to your resume. And if you enrol now, you’ll get a special discounted price.

This bestselling Level-3 British and American Literature Course has been developed by industry professionals and has already been completed by hundreds of satisfied students. This in-depth Level-3 British and American Literature Course is suitable for anyone who wants to build their professional skill set and improve their expert knowledge.

The Level-3 British and American Literature Course is made up of several information-packed modules which break down each topic into bite-sized chunks to ensure you understand and retain everything you learn.

We know that you are busy and that time is precious, so we have designed the Level-3 British and American Literature Course to be completed at your own pace, whether that’s part-time or full-time. Get full course access upon registration and access the course materials from anywhere in the world, at any time, from any internet-enabled device.

CPD

11 CPD hours / points
Accredited by CPD QS

Course media

Description

Course Curriculum

Elizabethan Drama and Shakespeare's Hamlet

  • The History of Drama
  • Elizabethan Drama
  • William Shakespeare
  • Hamlet: A Synopsis of the Play
  • Hamlet: An Anlaysis of the Play
  • Hamlet’s Soliloquies

Jacobean Literature and the Metaphysical Poets

  • Jacobean Literature Poetry and Prose
  • Puritanism & The English Civil War
  • Metaphysical Poetry
  • Metaphysical Poetry
  • George Herbert
  • Andrew Marvell
  • John Milton

The Rise of the Novel and Satire

  • The Restoration & Glorious Revolution
  • The Novel
  • Early Novelists: Defoe, Richardson, and Fielding
  • English Satire: John Dryden & Alexander Pope
  • Jonathan Swift & Gulliver’s Travels
  • Swift’s A Modest Proposal

The Emergence of American Literature

  • Colonialism & John Smith
  • Pilgrim Writers
  • The Revolutionary Period Writers
  • The Knickerbocker Era: Washington Irving
  • Frontier Fiction: James Fenimore Cooper

The New England Renaissance

  • The Westward Expansion
  • Transcendentalism: Ralph Waldo Emerson
  • Transcendentalism: Henry David Thoreau
  • Anti-Transcendentalism: Nathaniel Hawthorne
  • Nathaniel Hawthorne and The Scarlet Letter
  • Herman Melville
  • Edgar Allan Poe
  • Poe’s “The Cask of Amontillado”
  • Poe’s “The Raven”

The American Civil War Era and the Gilded Age

  • The American Civil War Era & Harriet Beecher Stowe
  • Walt Whitman
  • Whitman’s “Drum Taps”
  • Emily Dickinson
  • The Gilded Age
  • Local Color Writing: Mark Twain
  • Tom Sawyer & Huck Finn
  • A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court

Women Writers of the 19th Century

  • Female Writers & The French Revolution
  • Mary Wollstonecraft
  • Helen Maria Williams
  • Unitarianism
  • Harriet Martineau
  • Anna Laetitia Barbauld
  • Lucy Aikin

British Romantic Poets and the Poetic Imagination

  • The Napoleonic Wars
  • The Romantic Period
  • William Blake
  • William Wordsworth
  • Samuel Taylor Coleridge
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley
  • John Keats
  • Lord George Gordon Byron

Victorian Novels

  • Gothic Novels
  • Jane Austin’s Pride and Prejudice
  • Victorian Novels
  • Emily Brontë and Wuthering Heights
  • Charles Dickens and Great Expectations

The Imagist Movements after World War I

  • Anti-Victorianism & Edwardian England
  • Imagism & Gertruid Stein
  • Post War Literature & Ezra Pound
  • S. Eliot
  • William Carlos Williams
  • Archibald MacLeish

Modernist Fiction

  • Modernist Fiction
  • Henry James
  • James Joyce
  • Joyce’s “Araby”
  • Joyce’s Ulysses
  • Virginia Woolf
  • To the Lighthouse

The Lost Generation

  • Ernest Hemingway and the Lost Generation
  • Hemingway’s The Sun Also Rises
  • Scott Fitzgerald
  • Fitzgerald’s The Great Gatsby
  • ee cummings
  • Robert Lowell
  • The Beat Generation & Allen Ginsberg

Certification

Once you have successfully completed the Level-3 British and American Literature course, you will be awarded a certificate of completion as evidence of your achievement. You'll get a PDF certificate for FREE, and the hard copy certificate is available for £12 (The shipping cost inside the UK is free, and outside the UK is £9.99).

Who is this course for?

  • This course is for students / professionals who would love to hone skills and knowledge in their chosen area of study.
  • This course is aimed at newbies looking to get started to learn in their chosen field as quickly and effectively as possible.

Requirements

  • Eagerness to learn.
  • No formal knowledge is required

Questions and answers

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FAQs

Study method describes the format in which the course will be delivered. At Reed Courses, courses are delivered in a number of ways, including online courses, where the course content can be accessed online remotely, and classroom courses, where courses are delivered in person at a classroom venue.

CPD stands for Continuing Professional Development. If you work in certain professions or for certain companies, your employer may require you to complete a number of CPD hours or points, per year. You can find a range of CPD courses on Reed Courses, many of which can be completed online.

A regulated qualification is delivered by a learning institution which is regulated by a government body. In England, the government body which regulates courses is Ofqual. Ofqual regulated qualifications sit on the Regulated Qualifications Framework (RQF), which can help students understand how different qualifications in different fields compare to each other. The framework also helps students to understand what qualifications they need to progress towards a higher learning goal, such as a university degree or equivalent higher education award.

An endorsed course is a skills based course which has been checked over and approved by an independent awarding body. Endorsed courses are not regulated so do not result in a qualification - however, the student can usually purchase a certificate showing the awarding body's logo if they wish. Certain awarding bodies - such as Quality Licence Scheme and TQUK - have developed endorsement schemes as a way to help students select the best skills based courses for them.