Dec 26, 2024  
Catalogue 2021-2022 
    
Catalogue 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

English Major


Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: English Department

Required Units


Total number of units required for major, excluding any required Intensive(s): 10

Required Intensive units, if any: 1

Total units required: 11

Distributional Content Area Units Required


  • Two units of literature written before 1800 at the 200- or 300-level
  • One unit of literature written before 1900 at the 200- or 300-level
  • One unit that focuses on race, gender, ethnicity, disability or sexuality at the 200- or 300-level 

Note: Consult the departmental web page for a guide to which courses satisfy historical requirements. Intensives are ungraded and may not be used to satisfy historical and breadth requirements.

Electives


  • Three graded units at the 300 level with at least one seminar taken during senior year
  • A total of 10 graded units, inclusive of required classes

Intensives


One unit of intensives

Pathways


Pathways are designed to articulate coherent plans of study that build on a foundation in introductory and intermediate courses to greater depth and complexity in advanced courses. Students are advised to take the courses in sequence, beginning with either ENGL 101  or ENGL 170  (or both), moving on to 200-level courses, and concluding with 300-level seminars. Intensives may be taken at any point. Each pathway offers a number of courses from which the students must elect at least six, including 101 and/or 170. Intensives may be substituted for courses where appropriate.

Race, Ethnicity, and Indigeneity


Though grounded in lived experience, race, ethnicity, and indigeneity sustain themselves by powerful acts of imagination–beliefs regarding the self and its relation to others–and thus constitute a significant province of literary studies. This pathway explores literatures that interrogate identity, explore its social function and value, and contemplate its undoing and re-making. Courses examine common tropes like noble savages, tragic mulattoes, transracial adoptees, and terrorist threats and particularly track debates about ethnic traditions in English writing.

* Courses that may be counted when the topic is appropriate

Gender, Sexuality, and the Body


Gender, Sexuality, and the Body offers students a powerful lens through which to study literature. Embedded in all social, cultural, and political relationships, gender and sexuality are key categories of analysis across historical periods, national boundaries, and literary traditions. Students choosing the Gender, Sexuality, and the Body pathway can take courses that range historically from the medieval period through postmodernism, and that feature a variety of genres and critical approaches (e.g., historical, biographical, psychoanalytical). The Gender, Sexuality, and the Body pathway challenges gender and sexual norms often upheld as “natural,” introducing students to the crucial insights of feminist, queer, and transgender studies, and asking students to reflect upon the way that gender, sexuality, and the body intersect with categories of power such as race, class, nation, religion, and ability. 

* Courses that may be counted when the topic is appropriate

Literary Geographies


Every literary work presupposes a geography: not only a physical space within which it was conceived (a landscape, a horizon, a city, a nation state, a site of arrival, occupation, bondage, or exile), but also a space it imagines (a heaven or hell, a fictional elsewhere, a regionalized immersion, a world in miniature, a wasteland or homeland). Framing literary analysis in terms of spatial systems and metaphors allows us to cluster and compare texts in a synchronic fashion without losing sight of the historical forces that shaped human geographies in the first place. This track invites various scales and vectors of geographic organization: environmental, global, transnational, settler-colonial, post-colonial, territorial, archipelagic, regional, and urban, including spaces of myth and allegory, quest and pilgrimage, voyage and travel, diaspora and migration, utopia and dystopia.

* Courses that may be counted when the topic is appropriate

British and American Literary History


British and American Literary History offers a historicist rather than great books approach to two national literatures. Organized chronologically and presented comparatively, this concentration facilitates an understanding of the process of canonization, the gradual assimilation of extraterritorial traditions, and how culture contributes to the formation of national identity.

* Courses that may be counted when the topic is appropriate

Creative Writing and Literary Forms


This track supplements required creative writing classes with a selection of non-creative writing courses that foreground considerations of craft and form. Students may pick from the following list.

* Courses that may be counted when the topic is appropriate

At least three literary courses: 2 before 1800, 1 before 1900, and a REGS unit.


Correlates in English


English offers five correlates modeled on the pathways. Students electing correlates are obliged to take six classes from the proffered lists, including one-300 level seminar, but they do not have to fill any historical or breadth requirements. In addition, students undertaking a correlate in Creative Writing and Literary Forms are required to take two literature-based classes at either the 200 or 300 level.

Return to {$returnto_text} Return to: English Department