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English
Faculty
MA Program
Interdepartmental Programs
Courses
Disclaimer
Co-directors Christine Bold and Harry Lane (426 MacKinnon, Ext. 3881)
(E-mail: cbold@uoguelph.ca or hlane@uoguelph.ca)
Graduate co-ordinator Danny O'Quinn (414 MacKinnon,
Ext. 3250) (E-mail: doquinn@uoguelph.ca)
Graduate secretary Sharon Ballantyne (427 MacKinnon, Ext.
6315) sballant@uoguelph.ca
Graduate Faculty
Christine Bold MA Edinburgh, PhD University
College London - Professor and Co- Director of the School
Peter A. Brigg BA Bishop's, MA, PhD
Toronto - Associate Professor
Susan I. Brown BA King's College and Dalhousie, MA Dalhousie, PhD Alberta - Associate Professor
Elaine Chang BA British Columbia; AM, PhD Stanford --Assistant Professor
Romita Choudhury BA, MA Jadavpur (India); MA, PhD Alberta --Assistant Professor
Daniel Fischlin BFA, MA Concordia, PhD York - Associate Professor
Kenneth W. Graham BA Royal Military College, M Phil, PhD London - Professor
Ajay Heble BA Innis College (U. of Toronto), MA Dalhousie, PhD Toronto - Associate Professor
Patrick J. Holland BA Victoria (Wellington), MA Auckland,
MA, PhD McMaster - Associate Professor
Helen Hoy BA, MA, PhD Toronto - Associate Professor
Michael H. Keefer BA Royal Military College, MA Toronto, DPhil Sussex - Associate Professor
Thomas King BA, MA Chico State, PhD Utah - Associate Professor
Janice Kulyk Keefer BA, MA Toronto, DPhil Sussex - Professor
Gerald F. Manning BA, MA Alberta, PhD Queen's - Associate Professor
Daniel O'Quinn BSc, MA Western, PhD York - Assistant Professor
Donna Palmateer Pennee BA, MA Guelph, PhD McGill - Associate Professor
Mary H. Rubio BA DePauw, MA Illinois, PhD McMaster - Professor
J.R. (Tim) Struthers BA, MA, PhD Western Ontario - Associate Professor
From the Drama Program:
Alan D. Filewod BA York, MA Alberta, PhD
Toronto - Professor
Richard P. Knowles BA, MA, PhD Toronto - Professor
Harry Lane BA Durham, MA, PhD Toronto - Associate Professor and Co-Director of the School
Paul A. Mulholland BA, MA Toronto, PhD Birmingham - Associate Professor
Judith Thompson BA Queen's, Cert. National Theatre School - Associate Professor
Ann Wilson BA, MA, PhD York - Associate Professor
From the School of Languages and Literatures:
Daniel Chouinard BA, MA, PhD Montréal - Associate Professor
Stephen Henighan BA Swarthmore, MA
Concordia, D.Phil. Oxford - Assistant Professor
Dana Paramskas BSL, MSL Georgetown, PhD Laval -
Professor
François Paré BA Montréal, Collége Edouard Montpetit, PhD SUNY, Buffalo - Professor
Associated Graduate Faculty:
Eugene Benson BA National University of Ireland, MA Western
Ontario, PhD Toronto - University Professor Emeritus
Diana Brydon BA, MA Toronto, PhD Australian National
University - University of Western Ontario
Neil Carson BA Western Ontario, MA Nottingham, PhD London -
Professor Emeritus
James Harrison BA, M. Litt Durham, University Professor Emeritus
Linda E. Marshall BA, MA Western Ontario, PhD. Toronto - Professor Emerita
M. Elizabeth Waterston BA Toronto, MA Bryn Mawr,
PhD Toronto - Professor Emerita
MA Program
The English MA program in the School of Literatures and
Performance Studies in English is designed to provide students with an intensive introduction to graduate-level
work in English studies, within a flexible program. Students can draw on the program's strengths in the
postcolonial and Canadian fields as well as pursue a wide range of research topics in consultation with faculty
members actively engaged with the literatures of different historical periods and geographical locations, and
with current debates in such areas as critical theory, cultural studies, gender studies, and queer theory.
Admission Requirements
The normal requirement for admission to the English MA program is the equivalent of
an Honours degree in English studies from a recognized institution with at least a high second-class standing
(78% or higher) in the last year of study. Students with degrees with excellent academic records in other
disciplines will also be considered, or may be allowed to do qualifying undergraduate courses at the University
of Guelph prior to beginning graduate study. Students wishing to enter the program normally do so in
September. (Only under exceptional circumstances may students be considered for admission in either January
or May.) Applications from international students are warmly encouraged, although the application procedures
are somewhat more complex. If the applicant's first degree was completed in a country where English is not the
first language, English-language proficiency must be documented at the time of application. Sample minimum
scores are 580 for TOEFL or 6.5 for the British Council test.
Degree Requirements
All entering MA students
will register for the joint, required two-semester course, ENGL*6010 Approaches to Research and Theory.
This course must be taken upon entrance, requiring that entering students be registered for both the Fall and
Winter semester. Students may choose between two options for completion of remaining degree requirements:
- Course-Work Option: The required ENGL*6010 plus five other courses; plus ENGL*6803 Research Project
- Thesis Option: The required ENGL*6010 plus three other courses; plus a thesis of 20,000 to 25,000 words (80-100 pages)
Creative Writing Option: both the research paper or project and the thesis may, with approval,
and contingent upon faculty availability, be completed as exercises in creative writing.
Interdepartmental Programs
Collaborative International Development Studies Program
The School
of Literatures and Performance Studies in English participates in the Collaborative International Development
Studies (CIDS) program. Please consult the International Development Studies listing for a detailed description
of the collaborative program including the special additional requirements for each of the participating
departments.
Scottish Studies Interdepartmental Group
The School participates in the activities of the Scottish
Studies Interdepartmental Group. Those faculty members whose research and teaching expertise includes
aspects of Scottish studies may serve as advisers and examiners of MA students specializing in Scottish studies
areas and registered in the English MA program. Please consult the Scottish Studies listing for a detailed
description of the Scottish Studies Interdepartmental Group.
Courses
NOTE: With the exception of
ENGL*6010, the content of the courses listed below will vary according to the research interests of the faculty
involved in offering the course. Specific course descriptions for a particular offering of the course will be
available from the Graduate Co-ordinator one year in advance of the course being offered. Please consult the
Graduate Co-ordinator for information on the particular focus of a specific offering of any of the courses listed
below.
Course/(Credit Value) |
Term |
Course Description |
ENGL*6010 Approaches to Research and Theory (0.5) | | Introduces methodologies of graduate-level
scholarship through a series of modules. Module 1 (which is required) focuses on a common text of imaginative
literature, to introduce a range of theoretical and interpretative strategies and research tools. Subsequent
modules (of which two are required) focus on particular issues in the study of literature and performance. NOTE: ENGL*6010 is offered over the Fall and Winter semesters and students must therefore register for the
course in both Fall and Winter. They will receive an INP ("in progress") grade at the end of the Fall, and a final
grade at the end of the Winter |
ENGL*6201 Topics in Canadian Literature (0.5) | | A course to be offered at least
once every academic year. This course in Canadian Literature may focus on cross-genre study or on single
genres such as poetry, biography, the short story, literary memoir and/or autobiography, and poetic prose. The
focus may be on such topics as the literary and general cultural production of a time-period, an age group (such
as children's literature), or a specific region (such as Atlantic Canada, the Prairies, or the West Coast), or may
bring together texts from two or more categories to allow for a comparative study. Other possible topics
include: post-modernism and the creation of an ex-centric Canadian canon; multiculturalism and the
transcultural aesthetics of Canadian writing; the construction and reinvention of a national identity and literature;
and literary history, influence, reception and critique. |
ENGL*6209 Topics in Commonwealth/Postcolonial Literature (0.5) | | A course to be offered at least once every academic year. A comparative study of postcolonial
literatures in English. Topics may include a focus on a single area, such as India, the Caribbean, Africa,
Australia, or New Zealand or may focus on the comparative study of some of these literatures, considering the
construction of Third World, diasporic, or settler-invader colonies, or writing and reading practices in colonial,
neo-colonial, and postcolonial environments. |
ENGL*6002 Topics in the History of Criticism (0.5) | | This course
deals with various aspects of the field of literary criticism, focusing on a specific problem or question each
time it is offered. Topics may include the investigation of a specific critical debate - the debate between the
Ancients and the Moderns, for instance - or the various ways in which a particular concept - such as didacticism
or intentionality - has been treated or is being treated in literary studies. |
ENGL*6003 Problems of Literary
Analysis (0.5) | | Variable in content and practical in orientation this course seeks to familiarize the student with
particular critical techniques and approaches by applying specific examples of those approaches and methods to
particular topics (e.g., cultural studies and renaissance literature, discourse analysis and the Victorian novel,
computer-mediated analysis and the theatre of the absurd). |
ENGL*6412 Topics in Medieval/Renaissance
Literature (0.5) | | A examination of the literature of Britain between the 17th century and the latter part of the
18th century. Topics may focus on a single author, a specific genre, or relationships between the literary and the cultural. |
ENGL*6421 Topics in Eighteenth Century and Romantic Literature (0.5) | | An examination of the
literature of Britain between the restoration of the Stuart monarchy and the accession of Queen Victoria. Topics
may include focus on a single author, the consideration of a specific genre, or the probing of the interface
between the literary and other cultural aspects of the period. |
ENGL*6431 Topics in Nineteenth Century
Literature (0.5) | | A study of the literature of Britain from the late 18th century until the start of the First World
War. Topics may focus on a single author, a specific genre, or a central critical question. |
ENGL*6441 Topics in
Modern British Literature (0.5) | | A study of the literature of Britain in the twentieth century. This course
includes a consideration of the interaction between literature and culture in the period - sometimes through the
examination of a specific author, sometimes through the study of a particular genre or issue. |
ENGL*6451
Topics in American Literature (0.5) | | Topics may include a focus on a single region, such as the American West,
on a single time period, such as the Civil War, on a specific genre, such as the novels of frontier women, or
other issues in American literary studies. |
ENGL*6611 Topics in Women's Writing (0.5) | | In the past the course
has dealt with Victorian women poets, with the place of women in the literature of the American West, and with
other issues of interest to students of women's writing and the broader issues of feminist theory. |
ENGL*6621
Topics in Children's Literature (0.5) | | Past offerings have involved a focus on a specific author - such as Lucy
Maud Montgomery - or on a specific kind of writing for or by children. |
ENGL*6641 Topics in Scottish
Literature (0.5) | | Courses under this rubric are concerned with the various literatures produced by Scots both
within and beyond the boundaries of Scotland. The course could involve the study of a specific genre, the
investigation of a specific theme, or the examination of a particular author over the course of her/his career. |
ENGL*6691 Interdisciplinary Studies (0.5) | | Designed to provide the opportunity to explore alternative fields
and modes of critical inquiry, this variable-content course will study the relationship between literary study and
other forms of intellectual inquiry such as the relationship between literature and sociology, between critical
theory and psychology, between literary history and historical fact. |
ENGL*6801 Reading Course I (0.5) | | An
independent study course, the nature and content of which is agreed upon between the individual student and the
person offering the course. Subject to the approval of the student's advisory committee and the graduate
committee. |
ENGL*6802 Reading Course II (0.5) | | An independent study course, the nature and content of which
is agreed upon between the individual student and the person offering the course. Subject to the approval of the
student's advisory committee and the graduate committee. |
ENGL*6803 Research Project (1.0) | | An independent
study course, the content of which is agreed upon between the individual student and the person offering the
course. Subject to the approval of the student's advisory committee and the Graduate Committee. This course is
designed to provide the student with the opportunity to conduct an extended research project that, while not as
complex or as extensive as a thesis, still provides the student with training in research methodology. |
ENGL*6811 Special Topics in English (0.5) | | Depending on the research interests of the instructor, courses
under this rubric explore topics in the study of literature that do not fall neatly under the rubrics above. In the
past the course has dealt with literature and aging, and with issues in the field of popular culture. |
The Office of Graduate Studies has attempted to ensure the accuracy of this
on-line Graduate Calendar. However, the publication of information in this document does not
bind the university to the provision of courses, programs, schedules of studies, fees, or facilities as
listed herein. Other limitations apply.
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