2014-2015 Academic Catalog 
    
    Apr 27, 2024  
2014-2015 Academic Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

English, A.B.


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Major Requirements


English majors must complete a minimum of nine courses in the department. We strongly advise that ENG 275 - Theory & Methods of English Studies  be completed early in the major sequence. The three approaches courses (Genealogies, Texts/Contexts, and Transformations) should also be taken as early in the major program as possible. Students may not count any of the ENG 100 level courses toward their requirements in the major or minor.

Requirements:


9 courses, including one course in each of the three designated Approaches - Genealogies, Transformations, Texts/Contexts - at either the 200 or 300 level.

  • 1 course unit
  • A minimum of four courses at the 300 level. Prerequisite for 300 level courses: ENG 275  or another 200 level literature course
  • CUE: Senior Seminar taken in the senior year
  • Three additional courses for a total of nine courses in English

Note:


Students may count up to two creative writing courses toward the 9 courses required for the major. Students may also take one 300 level or higher literature course offered by the Department of Languages, Literatures and Cultures.

Courses in Study Abroad, Summer School, and the Wescoe School


Typically, students may count no more than two Summer School and/or Study Abroad courses toward the major. These courses must be approved in advance by the Department Chair. Day students may count courses taken through the Wescoe School toward the major only with permission of the Department Chair.

Majors must maintain a 2.00 GPA in English courses to remain in the department. A 3.300 GPA in the major is expected of those who desire unconditional recommendations for graduate schools or for teaching positions. Students who are planning to attend graduate school in English would do well to enroll several courses in excess of the minimum course requirement for majors and should seek the advice of their faculty advisor as early in their undergraduate career as possible.

Reading X


A set of offerings at the 200 level, the “Reading X” series, is designed for fledgling English majors and minors. These courses are also appropriate for students seeking their HU requirement who may desire greater focus than a typical survey course provides. The “Reading X” courses immerse students in a specific author, text, or literary topic, focusing on areas of controversy and debate in contemporary literary and cultural studies. With the senior seminar, the “Reading X” courses will bookend the major with experiences of depth. They will be taught as writing intensive and will be concerned less with literary theory and criticism than with the experience of reading widely in an author or topic and learning a set of basic close-reading skills. In addition to teaching modes of analysis, these offerings will often make classic works of literature relevant to our time by studying them in relation to their modern adaptations.

Approaches


As students develop their majors, they should incorporate at least one course in each of the three approaches: Genealogies, Transformations, and Texts/Contexts. These courses model different approaches to literary history and are intended to heighten student awareness of literary traditions of the past, of the continuities between and among literary epochs, and of the variety of methodological and theoretical modes used to understand both literary and nonliterary texts. Approaches courses should be taken as early as possible in the major sequence.

It is important to bear in mind that although many twentieth and twenty-first century courses are not listed under a specific approach, they still count as essential experiences in the major/minor. Students are encouraged to take courses from various genres (poetry, fiction, drama, etc.) and various time periods.

Genealogies: Foundational texts and periods.


These courses consider foundational periods in English literary history that are crucial to the development and study of British and American literatures. These courses trace lines of descent of thinking within literature over a continuous period.

Transformations: Readings and rewritings.


These courses focus on instances of change or contestation in the development of literatures in English, including movements that seek to replace established conventions with new or remodeled forms of expression. They consider modern and contemporary adaptations, appropriations, and revisions of the literature of the past. These courses explicitly address how readers and writers continue to engage traditions and conventions, remaking them not only within but also outside the academy.

Texts/Contexts: Interdisciplinary approaches.


These courses attempt to put literary works of a particular moment in history in the context of other systems of meaning current at the time, including science, psychology, sociology, and religion. Consequently, these courses often include substantial engagement with ostensibly non-literary texts as well as with other cultural products from the visual and performing arts and from the marketplace.

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