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Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013
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Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

Mar 29, 2015

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Page 1: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

Revising the English Major

January 30 & 31, 2013

Page 2: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

A Little History….O The “old” major (last year, 2006–07)

O A traditional, historically grounded majorO Requirements:

O 11 coursesO ENGL 67, “Literary Interpretation” [1 course]

O Historical distribution [5 courses]

O Two pre-1700 coursesO Two courses, 1700–1900O One course, 1900–present

O Three “free” electives (at least two, 100–199) [3 courses]

O Senior seminar (ENGL 170) [1 course]

O Senior exercise: second senior seminar or senior thesis [1 course]

Page 3: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

A Lot Less History….O The “new” major (last year, 2010–11)

O An open, student-directed majorO Requirements:

O 11 coursesO ENGL 67, “Literary Interpretation” [1 course]

O An eight-course “path,” selected and proposed by the student

O Ex.: “Poetry and Poetics”; “High & Low Genres”; “Remaking Myths”; “Writing the World”

O Senior seminar (ENGL 170) [1 course]

O Senior exercise: second senior seminar or senior thesis [1 course]

Page 4: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

Technical DifficultiesO The new major was a creative idea; in practice, it was

… sort of a nightmareO A late-declaring major might have 6, 7, 8 English

courses already on her transcript. Did they really fall on a thought-out “path”?

O A good (early) plan required very good information about upcoming course offerings … but life happens (study abroad; faculty leaves; etc.)

O Different faculty members had differing notions of just how broad or narrow a path could/should be.O I used to tell my advisees: “A path is not a plot [of

ground].”O Are we comfortable graduating an “English major” who has

never studied literature before the twentieth century, or after the Glorious Revolution, or has never studied poetry?

Page 5: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

The “New” Major, v. 2.0 (2011–13)

O Think, the “new” major—with no “path,” no map.

O Requirements:O 11 courses

O ENGL 67, “Literary Interpretation” [1 course]

O Eight “free” electives (“free” means free) [8 courses]

O Senior exercise: Senior seminar + senior thesis, or two senior seminars [2 courses]

Page 6: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

Philosophical Difficulties

O In the words of one English department faculty member: “We’ve abdicated our responsibility to our students.”

O If we have one obligation to our majors, it’s not uniformity of experience, but diversity.O And diversity has more than one dimension:

it’s not just historicalO There are, ultimately, a handful of

experiences that we want our graduating seniors to have, questions we want them to have wrestled with.

Page 7: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

The New, “New” Major (anticipated, Fall 2013)

O Twelve courses (up from eleven)O Seven categories of experience

O I. Methods of Literary StudyO II. Historical Breadth RequirementO III. Genre RequirementO IV. Single-Author StudyO V. Interpretive “Lenses”O VI. Senior SeminarO VII. Senior ExerciseO VIII. Electives

Page 8: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

I. Methods of Literary Study

O Two courses:O ENGL 67, “Literary Interpretation”

O Prerequisite for ENGL 170 & ENGL 191O One course designated “theory-

intensive” (Th)O Pre- or co-requisite for ENGL 191

Page 9: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

A Word about Designations

O Starting in Fall 2013, each course in the English listing in the catalog will carry a designation(s) indicating which requirement(s) it can satisfy.

O Most courses will carry multiple designations; one course can be used to satisfy, at most, two requirements.

O Example: ENGL 161, “James Joyce” (Sa, H5, Pr)O Sa=Single-author; H5=Historical period 5;

Pr=Prose

Page 10: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

II. Historical Breadth Requirement

O Courses in four of the following five periods:O Medieval (H1)O Renaissance/Early Modern (H2)O 18th Century (H3)O 19th Century (H4)O 20th-21st Century (H5)

Page 11: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

III. Genre RequirementO One course focused on the study of

poetry (Po)O One course focused on the study of

prose (Pr)

Page 12: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

IV. Single-Author StudyO One course focusing on the study of

an individual author (Sa)

Page 13: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

V. Interpretive “Lenses”

O Courses in two of the following three areas:O Race & Class (RC)O Gender & Sexuality (GS)O Diaspora & Geopolitics (DG)

Page 14: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

VI. Senior SeminarO ENGL 170O Unchanged from the current

requirement

Page 15: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

VII. Senior ExerciseO Seminar Option:

O A second ENGL 170O ENGL 190, “Senior Exercise/Seminar Option”O Unchanged from current major

O Thesis Option:O ENGL [195], “Literary Interpretation:

Advanced Methods” New courseO ENGL 191, “Senior Thesis” (2 semesters, 1

credit)

Page 16: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

VIII. ElectivesO Seminar Option: 0–5

O Thesis Option: 0–4

Page 17: Revising the English Major January 30 & 31, 2013.

Sample Program of Study

O ENGL 67, 1 creditO ENGL 126, “California Poetry” (Po; H5), 1 creditO ENGL 140, “Literature of Incarceration” (RC), 1 creditO ENGL 134, “Women Medieval Authors” (GS, H1), 1 creditO ENGL 145, “Gothic Tradition” (H3, Pr), 1 creditO ENGL 141, “Shakespearean Drama” (H2, Sa), 1 creditO ENGL 170L, “Genre Theory” (Th), 1 credit

O Seminar Option Thesis OptionO ENGL 170I, “Tragedy & Phil.,” 1 credit ENGL [195], “Lit. Interp.: Adv.,”

1 cr.O ENGL 190, “Senior Ex./Seminar,” n.c. ENGL 191, “Senior

Ex./Thesis,” 1 cr.O Free electives, 4 credits Free electives, 3 credits