English

Undergraduate

English courses at Mount Holyoke offer students an opportunity to study texts and writers from the many cultural traditions that have shaped, and been shaped by, the English language.

Program Overview

Our offerings range from the seventh through twenty-first centuries and encompass multiple national, racial, and cultural identities. The department’s courses cultivate skills in close reading, critical thinking, and persuasive writing.

As an English major you will be expected to study texts from a variety of historical periods.  We will challenge you to respond to new questions about the theoretical relationships of literary and cultural forms and historical transformation.

If you are interested in creative writing, a number of courses offer instruction in the techniques of fiction, poetry, and other literary genres, as well as journalism.

The English major will help prepare you for a wide range of careers, including teaching at all levels, law, business, and graduate study in literature and culture.

Community Voices

Spotlight on English students and alums

Cameran (Cam) Steiger ’26

she/her

Vivi Corre ’24

she/her

Our courses

We offer introductory literature courses, courses in creative writing and journalism, and intermediate and advanced literature courses in all genres. We offer two introductory courses designed for first-year students and sophomores: First-Year Seminar 110, a writing-intensive seminar, and English 199, and introduction to the study of literature and criticism.

English majors are encouraged to explore the creative process by taking writing courses. We also urge them to link the study of literature in English with the study of history, art, and other literatures. Courses in classical and modern languages and literatures, art history, philosophy, religion, and history complement and supplement courses in English.

Creative writing and poetry

No matter your major, you are welcome to enroll in our creative writing courses. In English 201, Introduction to Creative Writing, you will experiment with multiple genres, develop a vocabulary with which to talk about the writer's craft and experience a writing workshop, often for the first time.

Upper-level creative writing courses are open to all students who have completed English 201 or its equivalent. Some advanced courses open to all students who have completed the prerequisites and an application.

Each year, the English Department hosts the Kathryn Irene Glascock Poetry Contest, an intercollegiate poetry competition judged by a panel of distinguished poets.

Learn more about Creative writing at Mount Holyoke.

Selecting courses in your first year

Courses open to first-year students include all sections of First-Year Seminar 110 and ENGL 199, An Introduction to the Study of Literature.

First-Year Seminars 110 taught by English Department Faculty: 

  • Books Within Books, Nigel Alderman 
  • Cyberpunks in the Digital Age, Kate Singer 
  • Emily Dickinson At MHC, Christopher Benfey 
  • Slang: Community/Power/Language, Mark Shea 
  • U.S. Multiethnic Literatures, Iyko Day
  • Self-Portraiture, Suparna Roychoudhury 
  • The Nonhuman, Elizabeth Young

Courses and requirements

We encourage you to take advantage of the variety of departmental offerings by thoughtfully devising your own path of study while gaining familiarity with different genres, periods, and media. Our courses range from the seventh through the twenty-first centuries and encompass multiple national, racial, and cultural identities. We aim to cultivate skills in close reading, critical thinking, and creative writing.

Learning Goals

By participating in coursework and experiences constituting a major in English, students are expected to acquire the following knowledge and skills:

  • Become skilled in the close reading of literature and culture.
  • Become familiar with literary works from diverse traditions, periods, and genres.
  • Understand literature and culture in relation to multiple forms of difference.
  • Apply a variety of critical and theoretical interpretive lenses to literature and culture.
  • Learn to write about literary and cultural texts with clarity, argument, and evidence.
  • Learn to produce creative works with craft, imagination, and experiment.

Requirements for the Major

A minimum of 36 credits:

ENGL-199Introduction to the Study of Literature4
Three approved disciplinary perspectives courses in English at the 200 level: 112
One Literary History and Period course
One Race, Power, and Difference course
One Theory and Methods course
Three English courses at the 300 level 212
Two additional English courses at the 200 or 300 level8
Total Credits36
1

See Courses section for lists of approved courses in these specific areas. A student may not double count a single course to fulfill more than one area.

2

At least two 300-level courses must be taken at Mount Holyoke.

Additional Specifications

  • First-Year Seminars do not count toward the completion of the English major.
  • ENGL-295 and ENGL-395 do not count toward the completion of the English major.
  • An English major offers the opportunity to study various texts written in English, both those in traditions of British and American literature as well as those from other parts of the world. A student of English should be acquainted with works from different historical periods and different national traditions and different genres—fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and drama.
  • This discipline consists of a variety of intellectual-interpretive approaches. Each major should take advantage of the department’s diverse offerings by thoughtfully devising their own path of study while becoming familiar with all genres. Core requirements provide an acquaintance with writings and critical methodologies essential to a mastery of the field.
  • We also urge majors to explore the creative process by taking writing courses and to link the study of literature in English with the study of history, the arts, and other literatures. Courses in classical and modern languages and literatures, art history, music, dance, theater, film, politics, anthropology, psychology, philosophy, religion, history, and the sciences complement and supplement courses in English.

Requirements for the Minor

A minimum of 16 credits:

Two courses in English at the 200 level8
Two courses in English at the 300 level8
Total Credits16

Additional Specifications

  • At least one course at each level should be taken at Mount Holyoke.
  • The choice of courses is at the discretion of the student, with no departmental approval required. Members of the department are, of course, available for consultation about possible minor programs. The approval of the chair is necessary for any exception to the requirements.
  • ENGL-295 and ENGL-395 do not count toward the completion of the English minor.
  • First Year Seminars do not count toward the completion of the English minor.

Course Advice

Courses in the First Year

The department offers two kinds of courses for first-year students: first-year seminars offered by English faculty under the FYSEM designation and sections of ENGL-199. The first-year seminars taught by English department faculty are writing-intensive seminars on various topics which strengthen a student’s proficiency and confidence as a writer. ENGL-199, also writing-intensive, is an introduction to literary studies and a required gateway to the major. Students who, in the fall, take a first-year seminar and who are considering a major in English ordinarily take ENGL-199 in the spring. First-year students interested in ENGL-201 and upper-level courses require the permission of the instructor.

Sophomores, juniors, and seniors may elect ENGL-201 or courses such as Poetry Writing I (ENGL-204).
 

Course Offerings

ENGL-199 Introduction to the Study of Literature

Fall and Spring. Credits: 4

This course examines various strategies of literary representation through a variety of genres, including such traditional literary forms as the novel, lyric poetry, drama, and autobiography, as well as other cultural forms, such as film. Particular attention is given to student writing; students are expected to write a variety of short essays on selected topics. Though the themes of specific sections may vary, all sections seek to introduce students to the terminology of literary and cultural discourse.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Notes: ENGL-199, required for the English major, introduces students to critical issues in the study of English literature. Students considering an English major will ordinarily take ENGL-199 after taking a first-year seminar.

ENGL-209 Writing, Reading, and Constructed Languages

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Languages are created by communities, shaped by each generation and passed on to the next. Constructed Languages (conlangs), in contrast, are created intentionally to serve philosophical or artistic goals. Conlangs are often seen in science fiction and fantasy genres, contributing texture to the fictional world. Constructing a language is an act of creativity, but conlangs can never be as complex as natural languages. Which aspects of language do conlangs illuminate, and which do they flatten? How do they critique or reinforce ideologies of oppression? We will approach these questions from linguistic, literary, cognitive, and sociological perspectives.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive

ENGL-249 Style, Voice, and Self in Academic Discourse

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Academic discourse (writing and speaking) is often described as impersonal and objective. Expertise, evidence, and argument are valued. Clarity and concision are expected. Individuality and creativity are rarely mentioned, but can they have a place in academic discourse? This course will explore that question while discussing the relationship between academic and public discourse, social media in academic conversations, academic ethics, and Standard English as a default language for academic communication.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Advisory: The course is designed for students who do not identify as native speakers of English, but it is open to all students.

Writing Courses: Prose and Poetry

ENGL-201 Introduction to Creative Writing

Fall and Spring. Credits: 4

This course offers an introduction to the composition of multiple genres and modes of creative writing, which may include poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, hybrid forms, graphic novels, and digital texts. Students will learn strategies for generating ideas, drafting, giving and receiving feedback, revising creative work, and building literary community.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-204 Poetry Writing

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

In this introductory course, students will read widely in contemporary poetry. Through prompts and project-based inquiry, both within the workshop and in take-home assignments, students will have the opportunity to produce and share writing based on the conceptual frameworks explored in the class.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-205 Playwriting

Fall. Credits: 4

This course offers practice in the fundamentals of dramatic structure and technique. Weekly reading assignments will examine the unique nature of writing for the theatre, nuts and bolts of format, tools of the craft, and the playwright's process from formulating a dramatic idea to rewriting. Weekly writing assignments will include scene work, adaptation, and journaling. The course will culminate in a significant writing project. Each class meeting will incorporate reading student work aloud with feedback from the instructor and the class. Students will listen, critique, and develop the vocabulary to discuss plays, structure, story, and content.

Crosslisted as: FMT-240PW
Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: One course in Film Media Theater or Theatre Arts or a creative writing English course.
Notes: Cannot be taken at the 300 level.

ENGL-219 Topics in Creative Writing

ENGL-219AT Topics in Creative Writing: 'Writing Animal Tales'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

What do writings about animals reveal about their lives? How do human beings engage with mammals, fish, reptiles, and birds as food, competitors, and companions? We will explore these questions as we read works focusing on the real and imagined lives of animals from ancient fables through twenty-first-century novels, essays, and hybrid-genre works. Reading discussions will be followed by writing experiments designed to spark original thinking and develop facility with writing. You will gain insight into the fine and ferocious literature concerning the great and small beasts, writing creative and analytical pieces toward a final portfolio. Some classes will involve field trips to observe animals.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-219BC Topics in Creative Writing: 'Building Literary Community'

Fall. Credits: 4

Writing is a necessary but not sufficient condition for the creation of literature. Together, we will study and participate in various literary communities. We will investigate literary ecosystems, looking at how writing is published, circulated, and rewarded; as well as at labor conditions, ongoing inequities, and possibilities for disruption. Our class will serve as an incubator for new and existing student literary production. Students will work individually and collaboratively on projects such as writing reviews, producing broadsides or chapbooks, hosting readings, advocacy, and more. Visitors may include agents, book or journal editors, reviewers, designers, booksellers, and organizers.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Prereq: ENGL-201.
Advisory: Open to all; experience with campus literary productions welcome but not required.

ENGL-219BH Topics in Creative Writing: 'Beyond the Hero's Journey: On Indigenous Forms and Reimaginings'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

In this class, we will read, discuss, and write into narrative shapes outside Freytag's Pyramid or the Western "hero's journey" with a particular emphasis on the works of Indigenous, historically marginalized, and queer writers. We will look to the traditions, modalities, political movements and artifacts of the natural world that continue to influence contemporary, decolonial, and cross-genre storytelling. Sample authors include: Elissa Washuta, No'u Revilla, Layli Long Soldier, Xavier Navarro Aquino, Kristiana Kahaukawila, Tommy Orange, and others. Throughout the semester, writers will be encouraged to interrogate the objects, animals, climates, and structural systems that inform their own lives. All genres welcome!

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distrib. Rqmt; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201 or equivalent.

ENGL-219CH Topics in Creative Writing: 'Climate Changes Everything: Telling Stories at the End of the World As We Know It'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

In this moment of climate emergency, how and why do we make meaning? What possibilities might various textual practices offer for engaging with, and positioning ourselves in relationship to, the unfathomable? If we are telling stories in the face of a radically uncertain future, who is our audience? Together, we will find ways of telling stories that help us relate to this moment, and, crucially, to each other. This is a creative writing course. Expect to encounter and create texts in many possible forms, including climate fiction, agitprop, documentary poetry, lyric essay, interactive narrative, and more.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-219FM Topics in Creative Writing: 'Four Memoirs: Writing Through Radical Self-Inquiry'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

In this class, we will read four full-length memoirs, each representing radically different structures and styles. Students will write four short memoirs mirroring the forms of these books. These "memoirs" will run between 2,000-2,500 words, and they will represent the pillars of the final grade. Memoir projects will receive instructor feedback, and will also be shared in smaller "care groups" to offer and receive feedback. Mary Oliver once wrote that "attention is the beginning of devotion." Together, we will nurture our attention to the world, and, therefore, devote ourselves to bettering it. We will nurture our sensitivities, our wonder, our awe, and identify not only who we are through rigorous self-inquiry, but what conversations we are participating in when we write, what literary traditions we perpetuate, and, perhaps most importantly, what traditions we break. Sample texts (full-length and excerpted) include Carmen Maria Machado, Alexander Chee, Barry Jenkins, Jaquira Díaz, Michelle Zauner, Saeed Jones, Natasha Trethewey, Alex Marzano-Lesnevich, Cyrus Simonoff, Yuko Tsushima, and others.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-219MA Topics in Creative Writing: 'Everything is Political: Making Art in an Ongoing Catastrophe'

Fall. Credits: 4

In our current polycrisis-climate catastrophe, genocide, the rise of fascism, white supremacy-how and why do artists make meaning? What possibilities might various textual practices offer for engaging with, and positioning ourselves in relationship to, the unfathomable? When we tell stories in the face of a radically uncertain future, who is our audience? With collaboration as our orientation, we will find ways of telling stories that help us relate to this moment, and, crucially, to each other. This is a creative writing course. Expect to encounter and create texts in many possible forms, including agitprop, climate fiction, documentary poetry, interactive narrative, lyric essay, and more.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-219MT Topics in Creative Writing: 'Retelling Myth and Fairy Tale'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course explores contemporary fiction that retells old myths and fairy tales to create new writing. We will read short stories and novels from a diversity of cultures that adapt received texts to generate new works, which often implicitly question the original tales' messages, providing feminist, racial, and/or queer correctives. Students will read these retellings as creative writers, gleaning techniques and approaches to write their own contemporary retellings. Everyone will give and receive critique in small groups and workshops throughout the course and revise writing for the final project.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-219QT Topics in Creative Writing: 'Queer and Trans Writing'

Spring. Credits: 4

What do we mean when we say "queer writing" or "trans writing"? Are we talking about creative writing by queer and/or trans authors? Writing about queer or trans practices, identities, experience? Writing that subverts conventional forms? All of the above? In this course, we will engage these questions not theoretically but through praxis. We will read fiction, poetry, comics, creative nonfiction, and hybrid forms. Expect to encounter work that challenges you in terms of form and content. Some writers we may read include Ryka Aoki, James Baldwin, Tom Cho, Samuel R. Delany, kari edwards, Elisha Lim, Audre Lorde, Cherríe Moraga, Eileen Myles, and David Wojnarowicz.

Crosslisted as: GNDST-204QT
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-219WK Topics in Creative Writing: 'Who Killed the World?: Fiction on Society and the Environment'

Fall. Credits: 4

In this creative writing course, we investigate contemporary fictional depictions of society and the environment, from George Miller's Furiosa (2024), ad campaigns like Chobani's "Dear Alice," and written work from Ted Chiang, Jeff Vandermeer, Charlie Jane Anders, and more. Together and through readings, we define what "climate fiction" is, and what it can do to make meaning in a rapidly changing world.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-265 Children's and Young Adult Literature

ENGL-304 Advanced Poetry Writing

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

In this workshop students will have the opportunity to generate new poems, with an eye to revision, critical thinking, and longer manuscript projects. We will read and discuss work by contemporary poets and will occasionally incorporate other media--visual art, music, performance, film, work that defies genre--to learn about what we might want to do with language and poetry. Together, we will work to build a community through our reading and our work.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201 and 4 additional credits in English.
Notes: Repeatable.

ENGL-306 Advanced Projects in Creative Writing

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This semester-long course is designed for students already at work on a longer project (a novel or novella, a short story collection, a collection of poems, longform creative nonfiction, a graphic novel, or a hybrid form). Students will build on the skills and insights gained in previous creative writing courses to draft, workshop, and revise a full-length creative manuscript. Workshop and revision will comprise much of our time, along with readings on craft by authors such as Lynda Barry, Italo Calvino, and Samuel R. Delany. Students will also have an opportunity to meet literary publishing professionals.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Instructor permission required.
Prereq: ENGL-201 or equivalent.
Advisory: Interested students must complete an application using: this link

ENGL-361 Advanced Creative Writing Topics

ENGL-361AR Advanced Creative Writing Topics: 'Creative Writing from the Archives'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

In this creative writing course, we will draw on ߣߣÉä's archives of the Glascock Poetry Contest, which celebrated its 100th year in 2023. Reading the writings of past contestants and judges including Muriel Rukeyser, Marianne Moore, Sylvia Plath, James Merrill, Adrienne Rich, Audre Lorde, Marilyn Nelson, Marilyn Chin, and Maggie Nelson, we will gain insights into the evolution of American poetry over the last century and investigate how the evaluation of poems has also changed. We will view and listen to archival materials such as photographs, judges' correspondence, and audiotapes to expand our inquiry and spur new creative writing in any genre inspired by these texts and unique holdings.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-361CP Advanced Creative Writing Topics: 'On the Art of Character, and the Character Profile'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Anything becomes interesting if you look at it long enough," Flaubert once wrote, and to this we might add anyone-as every individual holds a universe of complexity and context. In this class, we will read and discuss texts across genres closely following a single character or individual; writers will take on a semester-long challenge interviewing and profiling people they know, as well as individuals they don't know, investigating and building a portfolio of work about and around them. We will focus on technique and craft: How does one conduct an interview? How does one create a compelling, nuanced profile? How do we identify the extraordinary in the familiar? And we will focus on ethics: Is this story mine to tell? What are my biases as a writer? Whose gaze is present on the page and in media? The art of the profile has political currency, the possibility to shift collective imagination and attention. Mary Oliver wrote, "Attention is the beginning of devotion," and our attention as listeners, as witnesses, is more urgent than ever. All genres welcome.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distribution Requirement
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201 or equivalent.

ENGL-361CV Advanced Creative Writing Topics: 'Canny Valley: Writing from Art and Archives'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This multi-genre creative writing course focuses on generating writing inspired by the area's art and archives. The class will visit collections including Sylvia Plath's archives at Smith, the Emily Dickinson Museum, the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, and ߣߣÉä's own art museum and archives. Students will learn how to work with archival materials including original manuscripts, correspondence, recordings, and photos and will create writing in any genre spurred by the art and archives they interact with. Readings will include writings on ekphrasis or writing that responds to visual art. The class will also meet with curators and archivists to discuss aspects of working in these fields.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.
Advisory: At least two previous courses in creative writing is recommended.

ENGL-361KA Advanced Creative Writing Topics: 'Korean American Feminist Poetry'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Poetry by Korean American feminist writers has burgeoned in the 21st century with new generations of poets contributing to life of American letters. Reading works by Theresa Cha, Myung Mi Kim, Don Mee Choi, Mary-Kim Arnold, and others, we will discuss how each writer evokes racial and ethnic identity and intersections with gender and other political concerns, as well as the choices each poet makes regarding form and style. Students will gain insight into a great diversity of approaches to writing poetry and will create a portfolio of their own poems based on our discussions. Most classes will involve group critique of writing; several will involve visits with our authors. All are welcome.

Crosslisted as: GNDST-333KA
Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distrib. Rqmt; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-361LP Advanced Creative Writing Topics: 'Writing as Performance: Latinx and Latin American Poetry and Narrative'

Fall. Credits: 4

This creative writing course turns to poetry and narrative that comes alive off the page. Reading work by Raquel Gutiérrez, Clarice Lispector, Jenni(f)fer Tamayo, Ricardo Bracho, and tatiana nascimento, among others, students will write and perform across genres while in dialogue with voices from across the Americas. To place ourselves in our bodies as well as our words, we will explore not just the innovative aesthetics taken up by writers of Latin American descent but also the politics activated in forms as varied as the butch memoir, the sissy play, the travel diary, and the sound poem. Central to our experiments will be the relationship between writing and other artistic mediums as we navigate topics such as race, colonialism, gender, sexuality, class, disability, ecology, and spirituality.

Crosslisted as: FMT-330LP
Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distrib. Rqmt; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-201.

ENGL-361SW Advanced Creative Writing Topics: 'Screenwriting'

Fall. Credits: 4

The screenplay is a unique and ephemeral form that exists as a blueprint for something else: a finished film. How do you convey on the page a story that will take shape within an audio-visual medium? The screenwriter must have an understanding of both the language of narrative film as well as the general shape and mechanics of film stories. This advanced course will cover dialogue, characterization, plot, story arc, genre, and cinematic structure. We will analyze scenes from fictional narrative films -- both short and feature length -- and read the scripts that accompany these films. By the end of this course, each student will have written two original short films. In workshop style, the class will serve as practice audience for table readings of drafts and writing exercises.

Crosslisted as: FMT-340SW
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is limited to FMT or ENGL majors/minors only.
Prereq: 8 credits in Film Media Theater.

ENGL-361TR Advanced Creative Writing Topics: 'Introduction to Literary Translation'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This creative writing course explores literary translation as a transformative and political practice. Throughout short writing experiments, collaborations, workshops, and a final project, we will work with a range of genres and forms in order to grasp the stakes and possibilities of translation across cultures, mediums, historical epochs, and literary styles. Reading texts by Katrina Dodson, John Keene, Don Mee Choi, and Alejandro Zambra, among others, we will build an expansive vocabulary for discussing our translation projects while keeping in mind questions of context and power. Basic skills in any second language are required.

Applies to requirement(s): Meets No Distrib. Rqmt; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is limited to juniors only.
Prereq: Some knowledge of a foreign language required.

Intermediate Literature Courses

ENGL-211 Shakespeare

Fall and Spring. Credits: 4

A study of some of Shakespeare's plays emphasizing the poetic and dramatic aspects of his art, with attention to the historical context and close, careful reading of the language. Eight or nine plays.

Crosslisted as: FMT-230SK
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy pre-1700 requirement.

ENGL-213 The Literature of the Later Middle Ages

Fall. Credits: 4

This course will examine a variety of English works and genres written in the thirteenth through fifteenth centuries. Our concentration will be principally on the Gawain-poet, Chaucer, Langland, Margery Kempe, and Lydgate. Most of our readings are in Middle English.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: ENGL-199.
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy pre-1700 requirement.

ENGL-214 Topics in Medieval Studies

ENGL-214BE Topics in Medieval Studies: 'Beowulf, Gawain, Ishiguro: Medieval Mythmaking and the Idea of Britain'

Fall. Credits: 4

This course explores early-medieval English literature that focuses on migration, cultural and religious inter-mixing, and histories of invasion and conquest. We'll read early-English literature to study its frameworks of historiography and its imperial interests, the mythologies behind early-English identities, the culture of English learning, and the afterlives of invasion. Course readings will include modern English translations of Beowulf, the works of Gildas and Bede, and selections from post-Conquest history and Arthuriana. With the semester's worth of knowledge about early-English history and literary production, we'll spend the final weeks of the course reading Kazuo Ishiguro's novel The Buried Giant.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-199 and 4 additional credits in the English department.
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy pre-1700 requirement.

ENGL-214CT Topics in Medieval Studies: 'The Canterbury Tales'

Spring. Credits: 4

Amidst the social and political upheavals of the late fourteenth century, Geoffrey Chaucer wrote his well-known work, The Canterbury Tales. This advanced 200-level course will explore Chaucer's social satire, the innovative characterization of his motley pilgrims, and the array of contemporary interpretive approaches this work invites. Guided by literary analysis, our discussions will deepen our understanding of medieval society; its religious and political institutions; its attitudes toward class, gender, and race; its questions about ethical responsibility and individual will; and the functions and impacts of language. Readings will be in the original Middle English.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: ENGL-199 and 4 additional credits in the English department.
Advisory: ENGL-213 recommended.

ENGL-214DM Topics in Medieval Studies: 'Dante's Inferno Between Myth and History'

Spring. Credits: 4

Dante Alighieri's Divine Comedy is one of world literature's foundational works. In his 700-hundred years old masterpiece, Dante poses and confronts universal questions that are still at the core of our daily existence: God, love, ethics, gender relationships, politics, social harmony, literature, the afterlife, and the relations between human and nonhuman forms of life. In this course, we will read, analyze, discuss, and enjoy Dante's great poem by focusing on the first of its three parts, the Inferno. In particular, we will be covering Dante's take on mythology and history.

Crosslisted as: ITAL-221DM, CLAS-250DM
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities

ENGL-214LR Topics in Medieval Studies: 'Love and Reason in Medieval Romance'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Arthurian legend conjures enduring stereotypes of chivalry and romantic love, but how do we go about situating medieval romance in literary history? Where does it come from, why was it written, who read it, and how did it change over time? In this course, students will learn about romance's historical and social contexts, its form, tropes, and imagery. We will think about romance's contemplation of justice, loyalty, subjectivity, love, and shame, especially as this body of literature grapples with the conflicts that arise between the mortal and divine. Course readings will include works by Marie de France, Chrétien de Troyes, Chaucer, Lydgate, and Spenser. We will read in Middle English where possible.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Advisory: ENGL-210 or ENGL-213 recommended.
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy pre-1700 requirement.

ENGL-217 Topics in English

ENGL-217GA Topics in English: 'Global Anglophone Literature: Who Writes the World?'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course introduces the literature of the former British colonies (South Asia, Anglophone Africa, Caribbean, and Canada). Some topics under consideration are colonialism and society, postcolonial disillusionment, neoliberalism, human rights storytelling, and ecocriticism. Readings include Wide Sargasso Sea by Jean Rhys, Joys of Motherhood by Buchi Emecheta, Maps by Nuruddin Farah, Nervous Conditions by Tsitsi Dangarembga, Krik? Krak! by Edwidge Danticat, The God of Small Things by Arundhati Roy, Anil's Ghost by Michael Ondaatje, The Cry of Winnie Mandela by Njabulo Ndebele, and Animal's People by Indra Sinha.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-217GE Topics in English: 'Global English: Its Written and Spoken Forms'

Spring. Credits: 4

What is the relationship between language and social and political power? This course is an interdisciplinary study of the global role of the English language. Migration, education, and identity are major themes of the course, and we look at how linguists, policy-makers, and individuals grapple with these complex topics. This course also focuses on students' development of their written and spoken communication skills and is open to students in all disciplines. Our approach to writing and speaking may be particularly effective for students who do not identify as native speakers of English.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive

ENGL-217HA Topics in English: 'Hitchcock and After'

Spring. Credits: 4

This course will examine the films of Alfred Hitchcock and the afterlife of Hitchcock in contemporary U.S. culture. We will analyze Hitchcock films in a variety of interpretive frames, including feminist and queer theories, and in shifting historical contexts including the Cold War. We will also devote substantial attention to the legacy of Hitchcock in remakes, imitations, and parodies. Hitchcock films may include The Birds, The Man Who Knew Too Much, Marnie, North by Northwest, Psycho, Rear Window, Rebecca, Shadow of a Doubt, Spellbound, Strangers on a Train, and Vertigo.

Crosslisted as: FMT-230HA
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: 4 credits in Film Media Theater.
Notes: Weekly evening screening required.

ENGL-217LX Topics in English: 'Latinx Literature in the U.S. and Beyond'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course offers an introduction to 20th- and 21st-century Latinx literature and cultural production ranging from poetry, plays, fiction, and nonfiction to film, murals, installations, and performance art. While centering US Latinx writers and their historical contexts, we will also consider visual media and the work of authors from Brazil, Mexico, and the Dominican Republic who illuminate and challenge the idea of latinidad. Topics to be explored include U.S. imperialism, migration, revolutionary social movements, gender and queer sexualities, religion and spirituality, racial and class formations, and aesthetic traditions such as rasquachismo and ritual performance. Authors and artists may include Gloria Anzaldúa, Pedro Pietri, Adão Ventura, the Young Lords, Ana Mendieta, Third World Gay Revolution, and Virginia Grise.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-217SA Topics in English: 'South African Literature: Postapartheid and Beyond'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course is a survey of postapartheid South African literature. In the aftermath of apartheid post-1994, South African literature has wrestled with ideas about what kind of future is livable and possible. Labeling itself as the "Rainbow Nation," South African politicians, activists, and artists (literary, visual, musical) have sought to create a democratic vision of South Africa that celebrates differences of race, culture, gender, and sexual orientation. Using 1994 as our moment of departure, this course will examine the "future" of South Africa as told through postapartheid South African fiction. Acknowledging that there are many ways to imagine the future, this course examines how portrayals of race, of gender and sexuality, and of the nation serve to construct and disrupt ideas about the future.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-217TJ Topics in English: 'Translation Theory and Practice in Jewish Literature'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course examines translation as a mode of cultural transmission, creativity, and theoretical inquiry for Jewish literature and thought. Topics include: translation as a means of mediating access to the sacred; women's roles as readers and creators of translations; enduring debates about what may be "lost" in translation; and whether translation into "Global English" helps or hurts the survival of literatures in Yiddish, Ladino, and other minoritized languages. Students put theory into practice by reading translations of Jewish literature critically and comparatively and by producing their own translations.

Crosslisted as: JWST-219, GRMST-231TR
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities

ENGL-217TR Topics in English: 'Transgender Literature'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Transgender literature has had a significant impact on how we talk about transness (and gender) and the kinds of trans stories we are able to tell. Although trans identities may find expression in texts as early as Metamorphoses (Ovid), this course will look at literature from the 20th and 21st centuries. Considering a wide range of genres -- novels, poetry, short stories, memoir, and young adult literature -- we will think about how writers talk about their bodies, their transitions, and their histories. Drawing upon fields such as history, medicine, and social science, this course will look at trans literature as both a product of these histories and as a powerful tool for critical liberation.

Crosslisted as: GNDST-204TA
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-217WP Topics in English: 'Contemporary Women Playwrights'

Spring. Credits: 4

While women have written plays since the seventeenth century, the twentieth and twenty-first century has witnessed a boom in women playwrights. This course will familiarize students with some of the major female playwrights of our era, such as Wendy Wasserstein, Caryl Churchill, Suzan Lori-Parks, and Nzotke Shange, as well as newer playwrights (Amy Hertzog, Katori Hall, and Young Jean-Lee). Assignments include both practice-oriented (such as developing a screen treatment or production proposal for one of the plays) and research-oriented (such as conducting in-depth research for a grant proposal), three short analytical papers, a script analysis, and in-class presentations.

Crosslisted as: FMT-230WP
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: One course from: FMT-102, FMT-104, FMT-106, or ENGL-199.

ENGL-226 Black Before the Law

Fall. Credits: 4

This course will interrogate the law through its confrontations with racial blackness. Considering a range of literary, historical, and cultural material -- the Dred Scott v. Sandford decision; the series How to Get Away with Murder; the overturn of Roe v. Wade -- we will ask: from what sources does the law derive its authority, and what enables its authority to persist? Attuning to the strategic positioning of black people as often outside of the law's protection, while also central to its operation, we will track the law's inbuilt contradictions. Some texts will include Cheryl Harris's "Whiteness as Property," "The Moynihan Report," and W.E.B. DuBois's Black Reconstruction in America.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-232 Rovers, Cuckqueens, and Country Wives of All Kinds: The Queer Eighteenth Century

Fall. Credits: 4

With the rise of the two-sex model, the eighteenth century might be seen to be a bastion of heteronormativity leading directly to Victorian cis-gender binary roles of angel in the house and the bourgeois patriarch. Yet, beginning with the Restoration's reinvention of ribald theater, this period was host to a radical array of experimentation in gender and sexuality, alongside intense play with genre (e.g., the invention of the novel). We will explore queerness in all its forms alongside consideration of how to write queer literary histories.

Crosslisted as: GNDST-204ET
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Notes: This course is part of a two-semester sequence with ENGL-233 Nonbinary Romanticism, but students are encouraged to take either course separately. Meets the department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement.

ENGL-233 Nonbinary Romanticism: Genders, Sexes, and Beings in the Age of Revolution

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

With the onslaught of American, French, Haitian, and South American revolts and revolutions, the Atlantic world, much of Europe, and its colonial/industrial empire were thrown into a period of refiguring the concept of the raced, national, and gendered subject. This course considers what new forms of gender, sex, sexuality, and being were created, practiced, or thought, however momentarily, in this tumultuous age. Specific attention is given to conceptions of nonbinary being (of all varieties). Authors may include E. Darwin, Equiano, Wollstonecraft, Lister, M. Shelley, Byron, Jacobs.

Crosslisted as: GNDST-204NB
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Notes: This course is a second part of a two-course sequence with ENGL-232, but each may be taken separately. Meets the department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement

ENGL-240 Early American Narratives and Counternarratives

Spring. Credits: 4

This course frames early American literary and cultural history as a series of hegemonic narratives and counternarratives. Starting with the violence of settler colonialism and Indigenous resistance, this course considers how US literary and national traditions have always been contested by oppressed and dispossessed peoples, who have offered alternatives to predominant American mythologies such as individualism and freedom. We will also track how African American antislavery writers established rhetorical and literary forms in opposition to slavery that influenced the protest and reform ethos of the first half of the nineteenth century. By focusing on the development of various literary forms such as the essay, oratory, the slave narrative, and poetry, this course will consider how Black writers, Indigenous figures, women, and social reform movements reconsidered questions surrounding race, gender, and class from sixteenth-century contact and colonization up until the end of the Civil War.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Notes: Meets the department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement

ENGL-243 American Gothic

Fall. Credits: 4

An examination of the gothic -- a world of fear, haunting, claustrophobia, paranoia, and monstrosity -- in U.S. literature and visual culture. Topics include race, slavery, and the gothic; gender, sexuality, and the gothic; regional gothic; the uncanny; cinematic and pictorial gothic; pandemic gothic. Authors, artists, and filmmakers may include Dunbar, Elmer, Faulkner, Gilman, Hitchcock, Jackson, Kubrick, LaValle, Lovecraft, McCullers, Morrison, O'Connor, Parks, Peele, Poe, Polanski, Romero, and Wood.

Crosslisted as: FMT-230AG
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Advisory: ENGL-240 or ENGL-241 recommended.

ENGL-244 Self, World, Other: Reading the Global Anglophone

Fall. Credits: 4

This course will introduce you to the study of literature in English across connected pasts and global circulations. We will focus on works from the former British Empire-mainly Asia, Africa, and the Caribbean-though our inquiry extends to the shared and ongoing conditions of colonialism in the 20th and 21st centuries. Through novels, poetry, and cinema, we will explore questions of citizenship and exile, racialization and identity, language and politics, and collective life under globalized capitalism. We will ask: what constitutes the world of literature? Who inhabits its centers and margins? We will explore works by Walcott, Roy, Ngugi, Ghosh, Dangaremba, and Coetzee, amongst others.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-246 The Graphic Novel

Fall. Credits: 4

Graphic narratives have come to occupy a significant (if contentious) place in literary discourse. From its origins in underground comics culture to the recognition of global awards, the graphic form continues to transform and surprise. In this course, we will study several graphic narratives together with film, media theory, and criticism. With special attention to its most popular incarnation-the autobiographical novel-we will ask: What does graphic representation make possible for literature? How do images work with (or against) text? What kinds of political and aesthetic expression does the graphic novel afford? Works by Sacco, Bechdel, Satrapi, Nakazawa, Sajad, amongst others.

Crosslisted as: FMT-230GN
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-254 Topics in African American Literature

ENGL-254EN Topics in African American Literature: 'The Theory of the Early African American Novel'

Fall. Credits: 4

This course examines the beginning of the African American novelistic tradition in the nineteenth century alongside a range of literary and cultural theory drawn from Marxism, cultural studies, and novel theory to consider how early African American writers produced strange, unique, and new experimental forms of literature that both responded to the political economy of racial capitalism while also redefining literary history. We will explore how the novel-a fictional form-imagines abolitionist futures, while also tracking the role it played within nineteenth-century abolitionist politics. Writers may include Hannah Crafts, William Wells Brown, Harriet Wilson, Stuart Hall, and Georg Lukacs.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: ENGL-199 or 4 credits in English.
Notes: This course meets the English department's 1700-1900 requirement.

ENGL-254TR Topics in African American Literature: 'Tragicomedy in Black: Humor and Horror in Black Critical Expression'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

The course examines horror and comedy as genre conventions that become strained and distorted when bent to the demands of black critical expression This course will center on themes of life and death as they are framed in black film and literature through idioms of the absurd and the ghastly. We will encounter film and writing by Ralph Ellison, Zora Neale Hurston, Chester Himes, Toni Morrison, Danielle Fuentes Morgan, Bill Gunn, and Donald Glover. Students will learn how to close-read our media-saturated environment, thinking through the ways in which representation functions to condition our perception of enjoyment and terror.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive

ENGL-255 Writing the Black Self

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course explores the idea of "the self" and "the subject" by reading autobiographical and memoir writing by Black authors. Through an engagement with some criticism on the role of slavery in staffing the sense of self-possession accorded to the individual subject, we will think together about how autobiographical forms of writing function in the tradition of black thought and letters. From slave narratives, to the essays of the Harlem Renaissance, to the preponderance of Black Power-era memoirs, we will consider whether these texts accomplish a Black self in writing, and if indeed that is their ambition.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive

ENGL-257 Survey of African American Literature

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course surveys Black literary production with special attention to the idea of genre as a choice of form made by Black writers from the antebellum era through the present to communicate critique, effect political change, and render new worlds. Structured around debates about the genre status of Black writing, this course introduces students to slave era texts by Harriet E. Wilson, David Walker, and Phillis Wheatley; twentieth-century works by Nella Larsen, Zora Neale Hurston, Amos Tutuola, Chester Himes, Bill Gunn, James Baldwin, and Toni Cade Bambara; and contemporary work by Saidiya Hartman, Octavia Butler, Jeremy O. Harris, and Rita Dove. Reading, writing, and critical viewership will be central to the course. Crosslisted as:

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives

ENGL-274 Introduction to Asian American Literature

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course introduces students to Asian American literature, considering its historical origins and evolution. Throughout the course we explore questions of identity, immigration and citizenship, generational conflict, war and migration, and mixed and cross-racial politics. Readings of primary texts will be supplemented by historical and critical source materials. Authors may include Nina Revoyr, Ruth Ozeki, Nam Le, Chang-rae Lee, Aimee Phan, Susan Choi, and Jhumpa Lahiri.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-279 Sherlock Holmes and Interpretation

Spring. Credits: 4

This course will explore the Sherlock Holmes stories and their various afterlives as a case study to explore the problematics of interpretation, especially literary interpretation. Some of the questions raised will concern evidence, inductive and deductive thought, applying theoretical paradigms, historical and material contexts, character and narrative, form and genre, popular culture, ideology, and the aesthetic.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: ENGL-199 or 8 credits in English.

ENGL-280 Literary and Cultural Theory

Spring. Credits: 4

How and why do we read literature and cultural expression? What kinds of knowledge can different cultural media offer us about ourselves and the world? This introduction to literary and cultural theory will survey later twentieth- and twenty-first-century thought, including theorists asking questions about labor, power, ideology, subjectivity, identity, race, gender, sexuality, indigeneity, empire, colonialism, language's figurality, affect, technology, and the nonhuman. We will think about these theories as their own forms of cultural expression and as methodologies that can help us discuss and make meaning of textual, visual, and digital culture.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-281 Topics in Literary and Cultural Theory

Topics in Literary and Cultural Theory courses aim to take several fields of literary and cultural theory and focus reading and discussion on their singular and intertwined projects.

ENGL-281AD Topics in Literary and Cultural Theory: 'Queer and Disability Mindbodies, Affects, and Times'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course will read queer and disability theory both as separate histories and as interlaced projects that resist normative life chronologies, genders, sexualities, productivities, and bodily shapes. Particular attention will be given to questions of embodiment, race, political activism, and relationality. This last category-how we relate to ourselves and to others-will be explored through queer and disability theory's understanding of neurodivergent mindbodies and their nonconforming sorts of feelings and times. How might we think about, for example, "feeling backwards" or "flexible time" as both scholarly ideas and experiences that might help us change our lives and the structures we live within? We will also discuss how theory might be written, and might ask us to read, in queer and neurodivergent ways.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

ENGL-282 Writing London: The Modern City Novel

Spring. Credits: 4

This course will chart London's progress from the center of an empire to a node in the global world's economy, and the novel's movement from realism to postmodernism and beyond. Beginning by contrasting the London of Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes with that of Virginia Woolf's Mrs. Dalloway, we will then trace the development of a multiethnic city in which according to a recent report there are more than 300 languages spoken in London schools. By so doing we will also examine the history and tradition of the twentieth- and twenty-first-century novel and investigate its various theories, genres, and styles.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors

Advanced Literature Courses

Prerequisites for Advanced Courses

The stated prerequisites for 300-level courses are junior and senior standing and 8 credits of work in English beyond a first-year seminar, often including a specified course such as ENGL-199 or ENGL-240. A sophomore who has completed the specified 8 credits may enroll with prior permission of the instructor. Any student without the prerequisites should consult the instructor.

Seminars and Courses on Special Topics

These courses offer advanced study of literature in English. Reading texts from different periods and genres, seminars aim for depth and specific focus and require of every student both original work and partial responsibility for leading class discussions.

Each year the department offers various upper-level seminars and special topics courses. Enrollment in these seminars and courses is restricted (15 to 20 in seminars; 30 or fewer in courses). Interested students should pay particular attention to the prerequisites; preference for admission is usually given to seniors.

ENGL-311 Chaucer: Stories & Storytellers

ENGL-311CT Chaucer: 'The Canterbury Tales'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Known as a storyteller par excellence, Chaucer was also a famous reader of classical epic, romance, and philosophy. This research seminar will give students the opportunity to read the Canterbury Tales in light of the work's cultural, historical, and literary contexts. Throughout the semester, students will engage with Chaucer's tales and his favorite sources to examine and discuss his representations of gender and class, his perspectives on religious authority, his use of the English vernacular, and his commitment to poetry.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Prereq: ENGL-199 and 8 credits in the department.
Advisory: ENGL-213 or ENGL-214 strongly recommended.
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy pre-1700 requirement.

ENGL-312SF Shakespeare: 'Shakespeare and Film'

Spring. Credits: 4

We will read plays by Shakespeare, watch films based on those plays, and study the plays, the films, and the plays-as-films. 'Shakespeare' comes first, of course, both historically and as the source/inspiration for the films. Yet each film has its own existence, to be understood not just as an 'adaptation,' but also as the product of linked artistic, technical, and economic choices. Considering Shakespeare's plays as pre-texts (rather than pre-scriptions), we will look at early and recent films, both those that follow closely conventionalized conceptualizations of 'Shakespeare,' and those that tend to erase or emend their Shakespearean sources.

Crosslisted as: FMT-330SF
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits from English beyond the 100 level, including ENGL-211.
Notes: Does not meet the English department's pre-1700 requirement.

ENGL-321 Studies in Nineteenth-Century British Literature

ENGL-321WD Studies in Nineteenth-Century British Literature: 'William Wordsworth and George Eliot'

Fall. Credits: 4

William Wordsworth and George Eliot grew up in a revolutionary age: the American Revolution, the French Revolution, the Haitian Revolution, wars of independence and of imperial conquest, and, behind it all, the social transformations arising from the industrial revolution. Both Wordsworth and Eliot wrestled with how to adapt their art to these new realities: he introduced dramatically new content into poetry and experimented with a startling variety of poetic forms; she transformed the various prose genres to construct a novelistic form able to represent the totality of British society. By so doing, they forged a revolution in literary forms with the emergence of the modern lyric and the realist novel.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Prereq: 8 credits in English.
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement.

ENGL-323 Gender and Class in the Victorian Novel

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course will investigate how gender and class serve as structuring principles in the development of the Victorian novel in Britain, paying attention to the ways in which the form also develops in relation to emerging ideas about sexuality, race, nation, and religion. Novelists include Brontë, Dickens, Eliot, and Gaskell and we will read examples of domestic fiction, detective fiction, social realist novels, and the Victorian gothic.

Crosslisted as: GNDST-333SS
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English.
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement.

ENGL-325 Victorian Literature and Visual Culture

Fall. Credits: 4

This course will examine literary texts that represent new forms of visuality in nineteenth-century Britain as well as examples of visual culture that provide a framework for reading Victorian culture in innovative ways. We will study nineteenth-century photography--portraiture, prison photography, imperial photographs, and private and popular erotic images--as well as novels and autobiographical writing that engage with new photographic technology and its transformation of the ways in which Victorians understood identity, politics, aesthetics, and representation. The course will take a similar approach to painting, literary illustration, political cartoons and caricature, and advertising.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Prereq: 8 credits in English.
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement.

ENGL-334 Asian American Film and Visual Culture

ENGL-334BG Asian American Film and Visual Culture: 'Beyond Geishas and Kung Fu Masters'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course examines contemporary Asian American film and visual culture through the lens of cultural recovery, self-invention, and experimentation. Focusing primarily on film and photography, we will explore issues of race and visuality, Hollywood orientalism, memory and postmemory, and racial impersonation and parody. Students will engage with a variety of theoretical and critical approaches. Artists may include Nikki S. Lee, Margaret Cho, Tseng Kwong Chi, Jin-me Yoon, Justin Lin, Binh Dahn, Richard Fung, Mira Nair, Deepa Mehta, and Alice Wu.

Crosslisted as: FMT-330BG
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English or Film Media Theater.

ENGL-338 Aesthetics of Racial Capitalism

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Race is the modality in which class is lived," wrote the late cultural theorist Stuart Hall. This course takes Hall's axiom as a starting point for considering the racial, gendered, and sexualized character of capitalist domination. Throughout the course students will explore both the political economy and the cultural imagery of racial capitalism. One question we will grapple with is the following: if capital itself is as imperceptible and objectively real as gravity, what are the common tropes we use to apprehend its circulation? Is it the stock market ticker tape, the shipping container, or the industrial wasteland? Drawing on writers and artists of color from around the world, we will consider ways they offer cognitive maps of the gendered and sexualized contours of racial capitalism. Authors may include Octavia Butler, Chang-rae Lee, Leslie Marmon Silko, Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, and Ruth Ozeki. Visual artists may include Xu Bing, Otobong Nkanga, Allan deSouza, Rodney McMillian, Mark Bradford, Takahiro Iwasaki, Anicka Yi, and Candace Lin.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive
Prereq: 8 credits in English or CST-200/CRPE-205.

ENGL-349 Cosmopolitanism

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Nothing that is human can be alien to me." This is the motto of cosmopolitanism, a way of thinking that stretches back to the Greeks, and which emphasizes our common status as citizens of the world, urging us to value the universal as highly as the local. How are we to balance our duty to humankind broadly in relation to those nearby? How are the stories that we tell about immigration, asylum, global capital, tourism, and environmentalism involved in this conversation? This course explores the premises of cosmopolitanism in conjunction with contemporary transnational literature; authors may include Rushdie, Naipaul, Coetzee, Adichie, Hemon, and Bulawayo.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English.

ENGL-350 Studies in African American Literature

ENGL-350AB Topics in African American Literature: 'Abolition and Climate Change'

Spring. Credits: 4

What makes change so difficult? Why do people always seem to be so apathetic to the most pressing political and social issues? In the face of climate change and racial injustice, why do so many people remain absolutely unmoved? Questions like these were central problems for the abolitionist movement in the nineteenth century, and they remain crucial issues for people today who similarly believe that another world is possible. This class will consider how the abolitionist movement was intertwined with the birth of environmentalism to understand the nature of struggle today. We will read a range of antislavery writing, nineteenth-century Black radical figures, and various critical theorists of capitalism and climate change.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English.
Notes: Meets the department's legacy 1700-1900 requirement

ENGL-350AT Topics in African American Literature: 'Race and the Aesthetics of Taste'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This 300-level seminar will examine race and taste in the literatures of slavery and colonialism. We will analyze taste as a mode of racial perception and a practice of racial discrimination. To do this, taste will be interpreted as a metaphor for aesthetic discernment ('you have great taste!') and at the register of gustatory perception ('what does it taste like?') to reveal that taste does not name a neutral operation of judgment; rather it names a field of interaction with the world that produces and extends social values, cultural commonsense, and racial categories. Together we will trace how subjectively experienced affects associated with the consumption of food and drink recapitulate arrangements of racial and epistemic power.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors

ENGL-357 Blackness and the Literatures of Law

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course submits the language of law and legality to consideration as a literary genre. We will endeavor to treat the production of legal literature as a choice of form and part of a broad cultural apparatus that legitimizes hierarchical forms of social organization. In particular, we will track the manner in which the law assembles its legitimacy alongside the strategic positioning of blackness and Black people as oftentimes beyond its boundaries, while at other times central to its ethical operation. The conventional moral and sacred regard for the law as an arbiter of truth will be scrutinized for how it enables structural contradictions to be sutured. Texts will include Patricia Williams, The Alchemy of Race and Rights; Cheryl Harris, "Whiteness as Property"; the decision in Dred Scott v. Sandford; Colin Dayan, The Law Is a White Dog; and Wahneema Lubiano, "Black Ladies, Welfare Queens, and State Minstrels: Ideological War by Narrative Means.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: ENGL-199.

ENGL-362 Virginia Woolf and the Bloomsbury Group

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This seminar will examine the Bloomsbury Group, the most important British cultural formation in the first half of the twentieth-century. The group included artists, art critics, biographers, economists, literary critics, novelists, philosophers and translators such as Vanessa Bell, E. M. Forster, John Maynard Keynes, George Moore, Bertrand Russell, Lytton Strachey, and Virginia Woolf. We will emphasize the ways in which they sought to dismantle the artistic, political, and sexual repressions of the Victorian period and to replace them with new forms of art, community, and society.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Prereq: 8 credits in the English department.

ENGL-367 Topics in Film Studies

ENGL-367AD Topics in Film Studies: 'Adaptation: A Study in Form'

Fall. Credits: 4

The Oxford English Dictionary defines "adaptation" as "the bringing of two things together so as to effect a change in the nature of the objects." Rather than studying adaptation as a project that attempts to reproduce an original work in another medium, our course considers the complex relationship between narratives and their retellings and revisions. In particular, we will focus on how such retellings permanently alter their so-called "source" material and how each incarnation of a given narrative offers us insight into and commentary upon a particular historical moment and its unique political and ideological challenges. We will also consider the ways in which literary and visual representations differ in their communicative and affective mechanisms, and challenge where we draw the line between "art," "history," and "entertainment.

Crosslisted as: FMT-330AD
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English or in Film Media Theater.

ENGL-367RE Topics in Film Studies: 'Revenge on Stage and Screen'

Spring. Credits: 4

Revenge plots display an enduring popularity. We will examine plays and films that show the range of possibilities, exploring: narratives focused on gender, race, and class; the place of family in revenge plots; the "underdog" tale; the importance of religion to ideas of justice; and the way in which genre influences notions of vengeance. Films and plays include the following: Euripides' Medea, Shakespeare's Hamlet, Ji Junxiang's The Orphan of Zhao, Suzan-Lori Parks's Fucking A, Fritz Lang's The Big Heat, Damián Szifron's Wild Tales, Quentin Tarantino's Kill Bill, and Emerald Fennell's Promising Young Woman. Students will design their own final research projects.

Crosslisted as: FMT-330RE
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Other Attribute(s): Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in Film Media Theater or English.

ENGL-368 Shapeshifting Through the Nineteenth Century and Beyond

Spring. Credits: 4

How can we change our ideas and enactments of white, Western subjectivity and being? This course contends that one transhistorical figure for such revolution is shapeshifting, and we will read examples in novels, poetry, memoir, and other nineteenth-century and contemporary media. Special attention will be paid to texts, then and now, that speak to queer/trans, disability, and critical race discourses as significant sites of resistance to Western being through bodily transformation. A substantial amount of time will be spent on individual research and methodologies.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English.
Notes: Meets English department legacy 1700-1900 requirement

ENGL-382 Advanced Topics in English

ENGL-382AN Advanced Topics in English: 'American Animality'

Spring. Credits: 4

This course investigates the representation of nonhuman animals in US literature and culture over the last 200 years. Topics include: literary animals and racism; reimaginations of animals by writers of color; animals, gender, and sexuality; taxidermy and extinction; and experiments in representing animal perspectives. Readings in Animal Studies, Black Studies, feminist and queer theory, environmental humanities, and other fields. Authors, artists, and filmmakers may include Octavia Butler, Karen Joy Fowler, Zora Neale Hurston, Jack London, Eadweard Muybridge, Aimee Nezhukumatathil, Jordan Peele, Edgar Allan Poe, Kelly Reichardt, Mark Twain, and Jesmyn Ward.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English.

ENGL-382EQ Advanced Topics in English: 'Equiano's Worlds: Global Abolition, Alt Humanisms, and Experimental Prose'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

Olaudah Equiano is now famous for having penned the first slave narrative the same year as the French Revolution, a narrative that documented life in Africa, the horrors of Atlantic enslavement, as well as his voyages to South America, the Caribbean, and the Arctic. We will read and reread this narrative as a work of experimental prose and as a call to study of the following literary-cultural topics: the discourse of global abolition, alternatives to the Enlightenment Human in the context of enslavement, oceanic movement and global migrations, and the surfeit of experimental prose writing that sought to understand the concomitant changes in economic systems and the politics of living.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive, Writing-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors

ENGL-382MX Advanced Topics in English: 'I Would Prefer Not To: Marxism and Early American Literature'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course considers how early American and African American writers have critiqued labor under capital: from the plantation, to the factory, and to the office. At its core, this course considers how slavery functions as the political unconscious of early American literary critiques of labor. Throughout the semester, we will put a range of early American literary texts in conversation with the Marxist tradition and anti-capitalist theory in order to uncover a latent leftist politics of possibility in the early American period while also exploring how early American authors were anti-capitalist theorists in their own right. Literary authors may include: Harriet Wilson, William Wells Brown, Herman Melville, and more. Marxist theoretical thinkers may include Karl Marx, Cedric Robinson, Angela Davis, and Gyorgy Lukács.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive
Restrictions: Course limited to sophomores, juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits in English.

ENGL-382QM Advanced Topics in English: 'The Queer Early Modern'

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

This course combines Renaissance literary texts with various related secondary readings that will enable students to better understand the way that sexuality -- both normative and nonnormative -- was portrayed and interpreted in early modern literature. As we progress through the course, we will discuss what defines queer history and histories of sexuality, how the history of sexuality in the past informs the present, and, ultimately, the ways in which we can use early modern literature to better understand ourselves today. Course texts will include Christopher Marlowe's Edward II, John Lyly's Galatea, Shakespeare's sonnets, and the poetry of Aemilia Lanyer, Aphra Behn, and Katherine Philips.

Crosslisted as: GNDST-333QM
Applies to requirement(s): Humanities
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Notes: Meets the English department's legacy pre-1700 requirement.

ENGL-389 Revolution and Change in the Age of Necropolitics

Not Scheduled for This Year. Credits: 4

The "age of revolution" saw revolts in the Black Atlantic world: Americans rebelled against the British; Native Americans opposed white colonists; bourgeoisie vied for power against the aristocracy; women decried patriarchal imprisonment; Latin American creoles resisted Spanish imperialists; and slaves threw off their masters. This course considers these diverse narratives of revolution as a series of social, political, and philosophical movements to change "biopolitics" (control of life) and "necropolitics" (control via death). We will read revolutionary tracts, slave narratives, and abolitionary literature alongside critical theory to consider how these authors offer ways of living and surviving Western, racial imperialisms.

Applies to requirement(s): Humanities; Multicultural Perspectives
Other Attribute(s): Speaking-Intensive
Restrictions: This course is open to juniors and seniors
Prereq: 8 credits combined in English, Critical Social Thought, History, or Africana Studies.
Notes: Meets the English department's 1700-1900 requirement.

Independent Study

Students with special interests, adequate preparation, and a capacity to work well on their own may apply for independent study, either ENGL-295 or ENGL-395. An application for independent study must be submitted the semester prior to which the work will be completed. Note: ENGL-295 and ENGL-395 do not count toward the completion of the English major or minor.

Sophomores, juniors, and seniors may take ENGL-295 for 1 to 4 credits, if suitable directors for the proposed projects are available.

Juniors and seniors who have devised projects in literary criticism and scholarship, or in writing prose and poetry, and demonstrate strong preparation, are encouraged to take ENGL-395 for 4 credits. They should discuss their ideas for projects with their academic advisor and others in the department who might serve to direct the project. In most cases, students should seek out department members with whom they have already studied; but if this is not possible, their advisors or the department chair will help find someone to supervise the project. (Students studying off campus may pursue such arrangements by email.) The department will try to find such advisors for students, but cannot guarantee a student will be allowed to undertake independent study. Planning ahead increases the probability of success. Again, preference is given to students who can demonstrate thorough preparation, normally through appropriate course work at the 300 level.

Seniors who have done well in one semester of ENGL-395, and who meet the College requirement of a 3.00 grade point average, may, with the approval of the director of the project, continue the independent work for an additional 4 credits, with the intent of writing a thesis to be submitted for honors.

ENGL-295 Independent Study

Fall and Spring. Credits: 1 - 4

Restrictions: Contact instructor for independent study declaration form and signatures.
Instructor permission required.

ENGL-395 Independent Study

Fall and Spring. Credits: 1 - 8

Restrictions: Contact instructor for independent study declaration form and signatures.
Instructor permission required.

Courses Meeting Disciplinary Perspectives Requirements

Literary History and Period

English
ENGL-211Shakespeare4
ENGL-213The Literature of the Later Middle Ages4
ENGL-214BETopics in Medieval Studies: 'Beowulf, Gawain, Ishiguro: Medieval Mythmaking and the Idea of Britain'4
ENGL-214CTTopics in Medieval Studies: 'The Canterbury Tales'4
ENGL-214DMTopics in Medieval Studies: 'Dante's Inferno Between Myth and History'4
ENGL-214LRTopics in Medieval Studies: 'Love and Reason in Medieval Romance'4
ENGL-232Rovers, Cuckqueens, and Country Wives of All Kinds: The Queer Eighteenth Century4
ENGL-233Nonbinary Romanticism: Genders, Sexes, and Beings in the Age of Revolution4
ENGL-240Early American Narratives and Counternarratives4
ENGL-243American Gothic4
ENGL-244Self, World, Other: Reading the Global Anglophone4
ENGL-254ENTopics in African American Literature: 'The Theory of the Early African American Novel'4

Race, Power, and Difference

English
ENGL-217GATopics in English: 'Global Anglophone Literature: Who Writes the World?'4
ENGL-217LXTopics in English: 'Latinx Literature in the U.S. and Beyond'4
ENGL-217SATopics in English: 'South African Literature: Postapartheid and Beyond'4
ENGL-226Black Before the Law4
ENGL-240Early American Narratives and Counternarratives4
ENGL-244Self, World, Other: Reading the Global Anglophone4
ENGL-246The Graphic Novel4
ENGL-254ENTopics in African American Literature: 'The Theory of the Early African American Novel'4
ENGL-254TRTopics in African American Literature: 'Tragicomedy in Black: Humor and Horror in Black Critical Expression'4
ENGL-255Writing the Black Self4
ENGL-257Survey of African American Literature4
ENGL-274Introduction to Asian American Literature4
ENGL-281ADTopics in Literary and Cultural Theory: 'Queer and Disability Mindbodies, Affects, and Times'4
Film Media Theater
FMT-230GNIntermediate Courses in History and Theory: 'The Graphic Novel'4

Theory and Methods

English
ENGL-209Writing, Reading, and Constructed Languages4
ENGL-217HATopics in English: 'Hitchcock and After'4
ENGL-217TRTopics in English: 'Transgender Literature'4
ENGL-219BCTopics in Creative Writing: 'Building Literary Community'4
ENGL-219BHTopics in Creative Writing: 'Beyond the Hero's Journey: On Indigenous Forms and Reimaginings'4
ENGL-219CHTopics in Creative Writing: 'Climate Changes Everything: Telling Stories at the End of the World As We Know It'4
ENGL-219MATopics in Creative Writing: 'Everything is Political: Making Art in an Ongoing Catastrophe'4
ENGL-219QTTopics in Creative Writing: 'Queer and Trans Writing'4
ENGL-219WKTopics in Creative Writing: 'Who Killed the World?: Fiction on Society and the Environment'4
ENGL-226Black Before the Law4
ENGL-232Rovers, Cuckqueens, and Country Wives of All Kinds: The Queer Eighteenth Century4
ENGL-233Nonbinary Romanticism: Genders, Sexes, and Beings in the Age of Revolution4
ENGL-246The Graphic Novel4
ENGL-254ENTopics in African American Literature: 'The Theory of the Early African American Novel'4
ENGL-255Writing the Black Self4
ENGL-257Survey of African American Literature4
ENGL-279Sherlock Holmes and Interpretation4
ENGL-280Literary and Cultural Theory4
ENGL-281ADTopics in Literary and Cultural Theory: 'Queer and Disability Mindbodies, Affects, and Times'4
Film Media Theater
FMT-230GNIntermediate Courses in History and Theory: 'The Graphic Novel'4

Contact us

The English Department reflects in its offerings a balanced variety of historical and theoretical approaches to the study of language, literature, and culture.

Joshua Boydstun, 2024
  • Academic Department Coordinator

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