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Nov 25, 2024
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Academic Catalog 2021-2022 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
English (ID), B.A.
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Requirements for the Interdepartmental (ID) Major:
Students wishing to declare an ID major should confer with both Department Chairs to explain how their intellectual interests or plan of study might integrate the two disciplines.
SUMMARY:
Classes of ‘22, ‘23, and ‘24
English I.D. Majors have an 8-course requirement, which includes one 100-level course and seven others, with at least one pre-1700 course (202-215), one Shakespeare course (200 or 201), four 200-level courses of choice, and one seminar of choice.
Class of 2025
ID majors will take one 100-level (100-189) and a “Confronting the Canon” (190-199), then choose between either a pre-1700 (202-215), or Shakespeare (200-201). Like full and double majors, ID majors must take a 200-level BIPOC lit course as one of their 200-level electives.
Class of 2025
English ID majors take eight courses, including the required courses below:
One Confronting the Canon course (between 190-199)
One Shakespeare OR pre-1700 course (between 200-216))
One course focused predominantly on literature by authors who are Black, Indigenous, or People of Color (BIPOC) from the following:
Three more intermediate courses of choice (all 200-levels are the same difficulty):
- 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 210 - British Literature: Seventeenth-Century Literature
- EGL 211 - Milton
- EGL 212 - The Restoration
- EGL 213 - American Literature in Historical Context: Beginnings to 1800
- EGL 217 - Enlightenment and Romanticism
- EGL 219 - Rise of the Novel
- EGL 220 - The Romantic Revolution
- EGL 223 - Jane Austen
- EGL 224 - 19th-Century Novel
- EGL 225 - The Bronte Sisters
- EGL 226 - Victorian Detective Fiction
- EGL 230 - Seduction in Early American Republic
- EGL 231 - Nineteenth-Century American Literature
- EGL 232 - The American Renaissance
- EGL 233 - African-American Literature: Beginnings to 1900
- EGL 236 - American Realism and Naturalism
- EGL 237 - Reclamation & Renaissance: Black Literary Arts 1900 to 1968, “Dark Like Me - That is my Dream!”
- EGL 244 - The Contemporary British Imagination
- EGL 245 - Experimental Texts
- EGL 246 - Modern Poetry
- EGL 247 - Studies in Modern Poets: Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen
- EGL 249 - Contemporary Poetry
- EGL 250 - The Beats and Contemporary Culture
- EGL 251 - World Literatures in English
- 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 271 - Dark Deeds: Crime in the Adirondacks
- 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, Flaneurs, & Pranksters: The Walk in Literature
- EGL 286 - Transnational Literature, Film, and Theory
- EGL 287 - Gender and Sexuality in Film
- EGL 288 - Film as Fictive Art: American Independent Cinema
- EGL 289 - Studies in a Major Film Director
- EGL 290 - Studies in Film Genre/Style: Documentary
- EGL 291 - From the Drama Desk: Performance, Culture & Creativity
- EGL 292 - Special Topics in Theater: Contemporary American Theater
- EGL 293 - Workshop in Poetry
- EGL 294 - Workshop in Fiction
- EGL 295 - Workshop in Creative Non-Fiction
- EGL 296H - English Honors Independent Project 2
- EGL 299 - Literary Research Practicum 3
One 300-level Junior Seminar (topics vary each year):
Classes of ‘22, ‘23, and ‘24
English ID majors take eight courses, including the required courses below:
One pre-1700 course:
*The pre-1700 and the Shakespeare requirements must be fulfilled with two separate courses. A second course in Shakespeare may count as an elective, but the department wishes to clarify that this practice should not substitute for taking a pre-1700 course.
Four intermediate courses of choice (all 200-levels are the same difficulty):
- 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 210 - British Literature: Seventeenth-Century Literature
- EGL 211 - Milton
- EGL 212 - The Restoration
- EGL 213 - American Literature in Historical Context: Beginnings to 1800
- EGL 217 - Enlightenment and Romanticism
- EGL 219 - Rise of the Novel
- EGL 220 - The Romantic Revolution
- EGL 223 - Jane Austen
- EGL 224 - 19th-Century Novel
- EGL 225 - The Bronte Sisters
- EGL 226 - Victorian Detective Fiction
- EGL 230 - Seduction in Early American Republic
- EGL 231 - Nineteenth-Century American Literature
- EGL 232 - The American Renaissance
- EGL 233 - African-American Literature: Beginnings to 1900
- EGL 236 - American Realism and Naturalism
- EGL 237 - Reclamation & Renaissance: Black Literary Arts 1900 to 1968, “Dark Like Me - That is my Dream!”
- EGL 244 - The Contemporary British Imagination
- EGL 245 - Experimental Texts
- EGL 246 - Modern Poetry
- EGL 247 - Studies in Modern Poets: Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen
- EGL 248 - Introduction to Black Poetry
- EGL 249 - Contemporary Poetry
- EGL 250 - The Beats and Contemporary Culture
- EGL 251 - World Literatures in English
- 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 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 275 - Autobiography
- EGL 276 - Literature of the Manor House
- EGL 277 - Philosophical Fiction
- EGL 278 - Science Fiction
- EGL 279 - Literature and Science
- EGL 281 - Environmental Psychology and the American Literary Landscape
- EGL 280 - Nature and Environmental Writing
- EGL 282 - The Theory of Things: Objects, Emotions, Ideas
- EGL 283 - Pilgrims, Flaneurs, & Pranksters: The Walk in Literature
- EGL 286 - Transnational Literature, Film, and Theory
- EGL 287 - Gender and Sexuality in Film
- EGL 288 - Film as Fictive Art: American Independent Cinema
- EGL 289 - Studies in a Major Film Director
- EGL 290 - Studies in Film Genre/Style: Documentary
- EGL 291 - From the Drama Desk: Performance, Culture & Creativity
- EGL 292 - Special Topics in Theater: Contemporary American Theater
- 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 296H - English Honors Independent Project 2
- EGL 299 - Literary Research Practicum 3
One 300-level Junior Seminar (topics vary each year):
Requirements for Honors in English (ID):
Students seeking interdepartmental honors in English have a 10-course requirement, the usual eight and the two-term thesis seminar. Be advised that Honors ID majors, like full Honors majors, must take the Literary Theory course EGL 302 in their Junior year and meet the other qualifications for honors.
In the two-term honors thesis seminar* students are expected to learn research methods, discuss their subjects and approaches to them, and share ideas and writing, as they work toward completing their individual theses under the direction of the seminar instructor. Prospective Honors thesis and Honors ID thesis writers take EGL 302 prior to applying to write a thesis, whether proposing a creative or an analytical thesis. Students proposing creative theses should have already participated in a creative writing workshop in the proposed genre. Interested students should discuss possible thesis subjects with their advisor and other departmental members in order to develop an appropriate thesis topic. Prospective Honors thesis students apply by submitting a two-to three-page thesis proposal with a writing sample in the appropriate genre for review by the department’s Honors thesis selection committee. Acceptance is competitive and not guaranteed.
Note: ID Honors thesis students enroll in IDM 498-499 (by application) yet participate in the Honors thesis workshop class, EGL 402-403.
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