Academic Catalog 2023-2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
English
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Chair: Associate Professor J. Lewin
Faculty: William D. Williams Endowed Professor J. Murphy, Edward Everett Hale Jr. Endowed Professor J. Smith; Professor C. Bracken (on leave Fall 2023), A. Burkett, K. Doyle (on leave from English as Interim Dean of Academic Departments and Programs), H. Jenkins (on leave Spring 2024); Associate Professors B. Kuhn, K. Lynes (on leave Fall 2023), J. Mitchell, J. Troxell, B. Tuon, P. Wareh; Assistant Professors S. McAuliffe; Visiting Assistant Professors E. Mena, K Staudt; Affiliated Faculty Associate Professor D. Venning (also in Theater & Dance, on leave AY 202-24); Senior Lecturer A. Pease (also in Modern Languages-Russian.)
Staff: Debora Catharine (Administrative Assistant)
Course Selection Guidelines
Placement in Union’s English Curriculum:
Students should enroll in any English 100-level course (usually 100-189) unless they scored a 5 on either the AP English Literature or AP English Language test (see AP credit explanation below).
Non-Majors:
- All students are welcome to enroll in English 100-level courses. All 100- level courses are equal in difficulty. Courses between 190-199, categorized under our new “Confronting the Canon” curricular initiative (described below), are specifically designed for and required of English majors, minors and ID majors, who have priority.
- Having completed one 100-level English course, any student may enroll in any 200-level EGL course (see also AP 5 information).
- All 200-level courses are equal in difficulty and appropriate for both majors and and all other interested students who have taken either one 100-level prerequisite or who have an AP 5 credit (see below)
- Students should NOT enroll in multiple introductory (100-189) English courses without permission.
Students with AP English credit:
At Union College, a grade of 4 or 5 on an AP English Literature or an AP English Language test earns one unspecified course credit toward the 36 required for graduation. Nonetheless, all students must still fulfill the requirements of their class year’s Common Curriculum or Complex Questions: Global Challenges & Social Justice general education system.
AP credit does not substitute for requirements in either system.
Students scoring a “5” on AP English Exams:
The English Department recognizes an AP English Literature or Language score of 5 as sufficient preparation for 200-level coursework; students with these scores may enroll in 200-level English courses without the prerequisite by securing a waiver from the the registrar. AP 5 credit does not reduce the number of courses to be taken to complete an English major or minor, which remains 12 courses (7 for minors/ 8 for IDs). With AP credit offsetting one course between 100-189, de facto, majors, minors and IDs with an AP 5 get an extra elective. (More information for prospective majors or minors below).
Prerequisites in Union’s English curriculum:
- One 100-level course is a prerequisite for any 200-level course. (Exceptions - See AP5 information above)
- To enroll in a 300-level EGL course, a student must have taken two 200-level EGL courses and have either taken one 100-level course or have an AP5 for a total of at least three English courses. Others may be admitted at the instructor’s discretion.
- To enroll in a 400-level EGL course, a student must have taken four 200-level EGL courses and have either taken two 100-level courses or have an AP5 and taken one 100-level course for a total of at least six English courses. Others may be admitted at the instructor’s discretion.
Junior and Senior EGL seminars are designed mainly for majors, IDs and minors, who have priority. Some seats may be available to interested non-majors at the discretion of the instructor.
“Confronting the Canon” curriculum initiative:
Union’s English department affirmed the following pledge in June 2020 and revised its curriculum accordingly:
“We will restructure our curriculum, so as to include and make visible the experiences of underrepresented students. We pledge to do more to center the lives and experiences of those who are Black, Indigenous, and People of Color in our scholarship, teaching, and service both within and beyond the Union College community.” In order to put this pledge into practice, we will embed the lives and experiences that are explored in texts by BIPOC authors into the undergraduate study of literature.
We developed a new, two-course sequence which requires a course in our , “Confronting the Canon,” series (EGL 190-199) and a course focusing on literature written by BIPOC authors. These courses, taken in any order, ensure that students engage with critical race theory and BIPOC-authored literary texts at multiple points during their training as English majors or minors.
“Confronting the Canon” courses are designed to introduce English majors and minors to foundational questions raised when interrogating and reconfiguring what has long been considered the traditional, Western literary canon. The courses emphasize the fact that English literary study, has an established history of focusing on texts by white, male authors, often at the expense of works written by, among others, women, writers of color, and queer writers. By confronting curricular choices and their implications, “Confronting the Canon” courses explore reimagining the canon intentionally. The courses ask questions such as: Who determined the canon? What does the canon perpetuate? Who is included and who excluded? What is at stake in upholding or dismantling it? What do we value as English students and faculty? What do we envision as our role in the field of English literary and cultural studies?
The following summarizes the English requirements still in place for the graduating class of 2024 and the requirements for the Class of 2025 and beyond. More details and course lists are available at the links below “Programs”.
Class of 2024
Requirements for the English Major
Twelve courses, including: two introductory-level courses (100-199)(unless one has an AP5, in which case see above); seven intermediate courses (200-level), among which are required: one course on Shakespeare (200 or 201), one pre-1700 course (202-215), and one 1700-1900 course (216-236, 264, 272, 282), and four electives (any course 200 - 299); and three seminars in total, among which are required one junior seminar (300-level), one senior seminar (400-level) and a third seminar at either level.
- Thesis is not required of English majors, who are still eligible for college distinctions based on GPA (summa cum laude, magna cum laude and cum laude).
- All English majors, including those who write a thesis, must take one senior seminar (WS requirement).
- Students seeking English Honors have a 14-course requirement: the additional two courses being the two-term Honors thesis seminar, EGL 402-3 which is a workshop taken during Fall-Winter of students’ senior year, and is by application.
Requirements for Interdepartmental Majors
I.D. Majors have an 8-course English requirement: one 100-level course and seven others, including one Shakespeare course (200 or 201), one pre-1700 course (202-215), four 200-level courses of choice, and one seminar of choice. Interdepartmental majors must pay particular attention to the requirements of both departments and complete a senior seminar/project (WS)
Students seeking an Honors I.D. degree with English have a 10-course requirement, the additional two courses being the two-term Honors thesis seminar. ID Honors students should be sure to take EGL 302 Literary Theory in Winter of their Junior year.
Requirements for the Minor
English Minors have a 7-course requirement, one 100-level course and six others, including one Shakespeare course (200 or 201), one pre-1700 course (202-215), three 200-level electives, and one 300-level course of choice.
Classes of 2025 and following:
Requirements for the Major:
Majors take one 100-level (100-189) and one “Confronting the Canon” (190-199) course, and take a 200-level, BIPOC- literature course among their 200-level electives.
ID Majors take one 100-level (100-189) and one “Confronting the Canon” (190-199) course, then choose either a pre-1700 (202-215), or a Shakespeare course (200-201). Like full majors, ID majors must take a 200-level, BIPOC literature course as one of their 200-level electives.
Minors take one 100-level course (100-189) and then choose two of the following three coverage requirements: a “Confronting the Canon” course (190-199), a pre-1700 course (202-215), or a Shakespeare course (200-201). Minors may satisfy the BIPOC literature course requirement at the 200, 300, or 400-level.
* An AP English score of 5 may substitute for the 100-level course (100-189) but not the “Confronting the Canon” or the BIPOC lit requirement.
For detailed information about English department courses, activities, posters and bulletins, see the English Department’s website, Facebook page (“Union College English Department”), Twitter account (@UnionCollegeEGL), or Instagram account (@unionegl).
ProgramsBachelor of ArtsMinorCourses- EGL 100 - The Study of Literature: Poetry
- EGL 101 - The Study of Literature: Fiction
- EGL 102 - The Study of Literature: Dramatic Literature and Social Justice
- EGL 110 - The Poetic Process
- EGL 111 - Introduction to Creative Writing
- EGL 113 - Disability Poetry
- EGL 114 - Puerto Rican Poetry
- EGL 115 - Black Lives Matter Poetry
- EGL 116 - Poetry of People and Places
- EGL 117 - Queer Poetry
- EGL 118 - Trans/gressive Poetry
- EGL 119 - Decolonial Poetries
- EGL 120 - Fictional Forms
- EGL 140 - Introduction to Digital Studies
- EGL 150 - Film Form and Analysis
- EGL 188 - Cyborgs!
- EGL 190 - Confronting the Canon: Beowulf
- EGL 191 - Confronting the Canon: The Modernist Edition
- EGL 192 - Confronting the Canon: What is an Empire?
- EGL 193 - Confronting the Canon: Confronting the Hero’s Journey
- EGL 200 - Shakespeare to 1600
- EGL 201 - Shakespeare after 1600
- EGL 202 - Amazons, Saints and Scholars: Women’s Writing in the Middle Ages and Renaissance
- EGL 203 - The Age of Heroes
- EGL 204 - Plague, Revolt, Religion, and Nation: The Fourteenth Century
- EGL 205 - The Road to Canterbury
- EGL 206 - Gender in Renaissance Literature
- EGL 208 - Renaissance Drama
- EGL 210 - British Literature: Seventeenth-Century Literature
- EGL 211 - Milton
- EGL 212 - The Restoration
- EGL 213 - Circum-Atlantic Revolutions
- EGL 216 - Eighteenth-Century British Literature
- EGL 217 - Enlightenment and Romanticism
- EGL 220 - The Romantic Revolution
- EGL 223 - Jane Austen
- EGL 224 - 19th-Century Novel
- EGL 226 - Victorian Detective Fiction
- EGL 230 - Seduction in Early American Republic
- EGL 231 - Nineteenth-Century American Literature
- EGL 233 - 18-19th Century Early Literature of African Diaspora
- EGL 236 - Trans-Atlantic Realism and Naturalism
- EGL 237 - Reclamation & Renaissance: Black Literary Arts 1900 to 1968, “Dark Like Me - That is my Dream!”
- EGL 241 - Graphic Literature
- EGL 242 - Experimental Writing Workshop
- EGL 243 - Poetic Object: Experimental Book Forms
- EGL 244 - The Contemporary British Imagination
- EGL 245 - Experimental Texts
- EGL 246 - Modern Poetry
- EGL 247 - Studies in Modern Poets: Bob Dylan and Gary Snyder
- EGL 248 - Introduction to Black Poetry
- EGL 249 - Contemporary Poetry
- EGL 250 - The Beats and Contemporary Culture
- EGL 251 - World Literatures in English
- EGL 252 - The Islamic World and Global Literary Culture
- EGL 253 - Narratives of Haunting in US Ethnic Literature
- EGL 254 - Discourses on the Viet Nam War
- EGL 255 - Asian American Literature and Film
- EGL 256 - Southeast Asian-American Experience
- EGL 257 - Irish American Literature: Race, Gender, Sexuality
- EGL 258 - Changing Ireland
- EGL 259 - Irish Literature and Film
- EGL 260 - James Joyce
- EGL 261 - Modernism and Modernity
- EGL 262 - Global Modernisms
- EGL 263 - Literature and Sexuality
- EGL 264 - Women Writers, 18th to 20th Century
- EGL 265 - Jewish Women Writers
- EGL 266 - Black Women Writers
- EGL 267 - The Virginia Woolf
- EGL 268 - Staging Black Feminisms
- EGL 269 - New Women around the World
- EGL 270 - Imagining the Nation(s): Ireland/India
- EGL 271 - Dark Deeds: Crime in the Adirondacks
- EGL 272 - Indigenous Sovereignty
- EGL 274 - Uncanny Texts: Literature and Psychoanalysis
- EGL 275 - Autobiography
- EGL 276 - Literature of the Manor House
- EGL 277 - Philosophical Fiction
- EGL 278 - Science Fiction
- EGL 279 - Literature and Science
- EGL 280 - Nature and Environmental Writing
- EGL 281 - Environmental Psychology and the American Literary Landscape
- EGL 282 - The Theory of Things: Objects, Emotions, Ideas
- EGL 283 - Pilgrims, Flâneurs, & Pranksters: The Walk in Literature
- EGL 284 - Interactive Fiction Workshop
- EGL 285 - Nabokov
- EGL 286 - Transnational Literature, Film, and Theory
- EGL 287 - Gender and Sexuality in Film
- EGL 288 - Film as Fictive Art: American Independent Cinema
- EGL 288T - Film as Fictive Art: British Cinema
- EGL 289 - The Essay Film
- EGL 290 - Studies in Film Genre/Style: Documentary
- EGL 291 - From the Drama Desk: Performance, Culture & Creativity
- EGL 292 - Contemporary American Theater and Drama
- EGL 293 - Workshop in Poetry
- EGL 294 - Workshop in Fiction
- EGL 295 - Workshop in Creative Non-Fiction
- EGL 295H - English Honors Independent Project 1
- EGL 296 - Screenwriting Workshop
- EGL 296H - English Honors Independent Project 2
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