English Language and Literature
Dunton Tower 1812
Telephone: 613-520-2310
Fax: 613-520-3544
Web site: carleton.ca/english/
The Department
Acting Chair of the Department: L.T.R. McDonald
Departmental Supervisor of Graduate Studies: B.
Greenspan
Associate Graduate Studies Supervisor: G. Williams
The Department of English Language and Literature offers
programs of study leading to the M.A. and Ph.D. in English
language and literature. Additional information may be obtained
by consulting the departmental supervisor of graduate
studies.
Master of Arts
Admission Requirements
The minimum admission requirement for the master's program
is a B.A. (Honours) (or the equivalent) in English language and
literature, with at least a high honours standing (normally B+
or better).
Possession of the minimum entrance standing is not in
itself, however, an assurance of admission into the
program.
Qualifying-Year Program
Applicants who hold a general (3-year) B.A. degree with at
least a high honours standing (normally B+), with a major in
English language and literature, may be admitted to the
qualifying-year program. Normally, these students will be
required to complete 4.0 or 5.0 credits in English, as
determined by the department, and to maintain a high honours
standing (normally B+) before being considered for admission
into the master's program. For more information regarding the
qualifying year, see the General Regulations section of this
Calendar.
Program Requirements
Each candidate will select one of the following program
patterns:
- 2.0 credits in English, selected from those at the
5000-level (excluding ENGL 5908), plus ENG 5005, and a
master's thesis; an oral examination on the thesis will be
required. A prospectus for the thesis must be submitted to
the graduate committee by December 1 after registration in
September, or at the end of three months for any other
registration, or
- 3.0 credits in English selected from those at the
5000-level (excluding ENGL 5909), plus ENGL 5005, and a
research essay; an oral examination on the research essay
may be required, or
- 4.0 credits in English selected from those at the
5000-level (excluding ENGL 5908 and ENGL 5909), plus ENGL
5005.
Each program is designed to be completed within the
three-term academic year. Each program is of equal status.
Guidelines for Completion of Master's Degree
Full-time master's candidates are expected to complete all
requirements in twelve months or three terms of registered
full-time study. Part-time master's candidates are expected to
complete their degree requirements within an elapsed period of
six calendar years after the date of initial registration.
All candidates are required to demonstrate a reading
knowledge of one language other than English, approved by the
Department.
Academic Standing
A standing of B- or better must be obtained in each credit
counted towards the master's degree.
Doctor of Philosophy
The Department of English Language and Literature offers a
program of studies leading to the degree of Doctor of
Philosophy in English. There is one field of study in the
program: The Production of Literature.
Admission Requirements
Applicants will normally hold a master's degree in English
(or equivalent) with at least an A- average (10 G.P.A.)
Applicants judged to be deficient in preparation may be asked
to complete course work in addition to the Ph.D. program
requirements.
Program Requirements
Students admitted to the Ph.D. program are required to
complete a total of 10.0 credits.
- ENGL 6000 Doctoral Seminar (1.0 credit)
- ENGL 6001 Proseminar (0.5 credit)
- 2.0 credits of approved courses
- 1.0 comprehensive credit (ENGL 6900)
- 1.0 research project credit (ENGL 6901)
- 4.5 dissertation credits (ENGL 6909)
ENGL 6000 and ENGL 6001 are required courses. Optional
English coures will be selected from a list approved annually
by the department. Students may take up to 1.0 credit of
approved courses offered in other departments. Students may
also choose directed reading courses with the core faculty of
the program.
Comprehensive Examination and Research Project
Students are required to complete one comprehensive
examination and one doctoral research essay. Each has a 1.0
credit value. The comprehensive examination (ENGL 6900) will
focus on relevant theoretical and methodological issues and
will take the form of a written examination set and marked by
members of core faculty. This will normally take place at the
beginning of the second year of full-time doctoral study. The
doctoral research project (ENGL 6901) will focus on the general
historical period or conceptual issues of the candidate's
research and will comprise a written research project of
publishable length followed by an oral examination. This will
normally be completed before the end of the second year of
full-time studies.
Language Requirements
Candidates must demonstrate reading ability in a language
other than English, normally by successfully completing a
translation examination during the second year of full-time
enrolment in the program.
Thesis
All students are required to submit a thesis proposal before
proceeding to the writing of the thesis. The proposal must be
approved by the graduate supervisor and the thesis committee.
This will normally take place early in the third year of
doctoral study. All students are required to complete a thesis
(4.5 credits) in partial fulfilment of the requirements of the
degree offered by the program. The thesis must be defended at
an oral examination.
This program is designed to be completed in four years of
full-time study. Students admitted to part-time study will
normally complete all requirements within eight years of
registration.
Academic Standing
Doctoral students must normally obtain a grade of B- or
better in each course counted toward the fulfilment of the
degree requirements.
Graduate Courses
Not all of the following courses are offered in a given
year. For an up-to-date statement of course offerings and to
determine the term of offering, consult central.carleton.ca
- ENGL 5000 [0.5 credit]
- Literary Criticism
- A study of specific topics or particular areas of
literary criticism.
- ENGL 5002 [0.5 credit]
- Contemporary Literary Theory
- Contemporary approaches to theory and literary studies.
Topics vary from year to year and may include Marxism,
feminism, hermeneutics, narrative theory, psychoanalysis,
or postcolonialism.
- ENGL 5003 [0.5 credit]
- Feminism/s: The Literary Dimension
- This course examines a range of topics in feminist and
gender theory. Topics vary from year to year and may
include women and mass media, gender panics, female
spectacles and specularization.
- ENGL 5004 [0.5 credit]
- Literature, Contact, and Empire in
- Colonial and Post-Colonial Societies
- Topics in colonial, postcolonial, native and diasporic
literature and theory. Topics vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5005 [0.5 credit]
- M.A. Seminar
- Examines topics such as research resources and
methodologies, current issues in literary theory and
professional concerns. Graded
Satisfactory/Unsatisfactory.
- ENGL 5207 [0.5 credit]
- Early Medieval Studies
- Topics in early medieval period. Topics vary from year
to year and may include Old English, Old Norse, Latin texts
in translation, or pre-Chaucerian texts.
- ENGL 5208 [0.5 credit]
- Middle-English Studies
- Topics in the literature and culture of the Middle
English period. Topics vary from year to year and may
include Chaucer, Piers Plowman, Arthurian literature,
medieval drama, medieval romance, 15th Century Literature,
religious and mystical texts. Also may be offered at the
undergraduate level, with different requirements, as ENGL
4208, for which additional credit is precluded.
- ENGL 5301 [0.5 credit]
- Renaissance Poetry
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5302 [0.5 credit]
- Seventeenth-Century Poetry
- A study of selected seventeenth-century poets.
- ENGL 5304 [0.5 credit]
- Renaissance Drama
- Topics vary from year to year and may include a focus
on specific dramatists, themes, or genres.
- ENGL 5307 [0.5 credit]
- Renaissance Authors
- A study of selected Renaissance authors.
- ENGL 5308 [0.5 credit]
- Renaissance Studies
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5402 [0.5 credit]
- Eighteenth-Century Studies
- Eighteenth-century cultural concerns such as:
literature and the marketplace; gender, authorship and
genre; the literary periodical; literature and the public
sphere; literature and nationalism; literature and
science.
- ENGL 5408 [0.5 credit]
- Studies in Romanticism
- Selected texts of Romantic literature and culture.
Topics vary from year to year and may be organised by
theme, author or genre.
- ENGL 5501 [0.5 credit]
- Nineteenth-Century Studies
- A study of works written between 1830 and 1870 in terms
of gender representation in relation to generic modalities,
exploring the thesis that poets of the period - Tennyson,
the Brownings, the Rossettis, Arnold, Clough - confronted a
crisis in gender ideology that problematized the
lyric.
- ENGL 5503 [0.5 credit]
- Nineteenth-Century Fiction
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5508 [0.5 credit]
- Nineteenth-Century Literature
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5601 [0.5 credit]
- Twentieth-Century Poetry
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5603 [0.5 credit]
- Twentieth-Century Fiction
- A study of selected twentieth-century writers.
- ENGL 5604 [0.5 credit]
- Twentieth-Century Drama
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5606 [0.5 credit]
- Twentieth-Century Literature
- Topics vary from year to year and may include issues of
genre, selected themes, particular literary movements or
developments in critical theory.
- ENGL 5607 [0.5 credit]
- Twentieth-Century Authors
- A study of twentieth-century authors of fiction.
- ENGL 5608 [0.5 credit]
- Twentieth-Century Studies
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5701 [0.5 credit]
- American Poetry
- A study of the formative poetry and poetics of several
major modern American writers, including: Whitman, T.S.
Eliot, Ezra Pound, William Carlos Williams, H.D., George
Oppen, Charles Olson, and Robert Creeley.
- ENGL 5703 [0.5 credit]
- American Fiction
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5706 [0.5 credit]
- American Literature
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5708 [0.5 credit]
- Studies in American Fiction
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5801 [0.5 credit]
- Canadian Poetry
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5802 [0.5 credit]
- Ethnicity, Multiculturalism, and Canadian
Literature
- Canadian literature in relation to theoretical and
critical issues posed by ethnicity and other aspects of
Canadian cultural diversity.
- ENGL 5803 [0.5 credit]
- Canadian Fiction
- Canadian writing of the last twenty to thirty years,
with reference to the concept of ideology, within the
contexts of Marxist, feminist, and postmodernist literary
theories.
- ENGL 5805 [0.5 credit]
- Canadian English
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5807 [0.5 credit]
- Selected Topics in Canadian Literature
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5809 [0.5 credit]
- Colonial Discourse and Native Literatures in
Canada
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5900 [0.5 credit]
- Selected Topic
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5901 [0.5 credit]
- Selected Topic
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5903 [0.5 credit]
- English and Cultural Studies
- The borders of literature and cultural studies. Topics
vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5904 [0.5 credit]
- Special Studies in Dramatic Literature
- Topic may vary from year to year.
- ENGL 5908 [1.0 credit]
- Research Essay
- ENGL 5909 [2.0 credits]
- M.A. Thesis
- ENGL 6000 [1.0 credit]
- Doctoral Seminar
- Issues related to the production of literature as a
material object, as an institutional site or practice, and
as an enabling concept.
- ENGL 6001 [0.5 credit]
- Proseminar
- Exploration of recent critical theory and discussion of
issues related to the profession.
- ENGL 6101 [0.5 credit]
- Directed Reading
- This tutorial is designed to permit students to pursue
individual research. Topics will be chosen in consultation
with at least one faculty member and the graduate
supervisor.
- ENGL 6102 [0.5 credit]
- Studies in the Production of Literature
- Explores selected studies/themes related to the
production of literature.
- ENGL 6103 [0.5 credit]
- Selected Topics in the Production of
Literature
- Selected topics/themes related to the production of
literature.
- ENGL 6900 [1.0 credit]
- Comprehensive Examination
- This examination will include a range of topics related
to the production of literature as a material object, as an
institutional site or practice, and as an enabling
concept.
- ENGL 6901 [1.0 credit]
- Doctoral Research Project
- This project will comprise both an essay of publishable
length and an oral defense in the general area of the
project.
- ENGL 6909 [4.5 credits]
- Thesis
Undergraduate Courses
Master's students may take the equivalent of 1.0 credit at
the senior undergraduate level.
Other Disciplines
With prior approval of the English department's supervisor
of graduate studies or departmental Chair, graduate students
may take the equivalent of 1.0 credit in a related
discipline.
Other Universities
Graduate students may take the equivalent of 2.0 credits at
another university or other universities. Students are
especially reminded that the University of Ottawa offers a wide
range of graduate courses which may be completed (under the
general 2.0 credit ruling) for credit at Carleton
University.
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