Syllabus | Summer 2025
Horror reveals something about who we are as humans, reminding us we have both outsides and insides, skin and guts, eyes and gray matter, ideas and appetites.
Horror reveals something about who we are as humans, reminding us we have both outsides and insides, skin and guts, eyes and gray matter, ideas and appetites.
Here’s what we’ll spend our time doing this Summer quarter. The schedule will evolve as we proceed. Watch regularly for more details, added activities, and stuff might change or move around as our conversation does.
Syllabus Course Description Digital media and online spaces have both introduced and challenged how we write and interact. This course covers contemporary theories and genres of rhetorical practice including network literacies, remix and
WRIT 1133 | Writing: Indie RPGs | jesse.stommel@du.edu Syllabus Course Description World-building and Collaborative Storytelling. The first commercially available tabletop role-playing game, Dungeons & Dragons (D&D), was published in 1974.
WRIT 1122 | Writing: Horror | jesse.stommel@du.edu Syllabus Course Description The horror genre is distinctly rhetorical, working carefully to produce visceral effects in its audience. It’s a popular genre, but also