English
M. F.A. Requirements
(At least 60 credit hours--48 in residence)
• 16 hours of workshops (poetry or fiction)
• Four courses (12-16 hours) in AAADS literature, culture, and history, at least two of which must be at the 600 level or above
• W554 Teaching Creative Writing
• W664 Topics in Current Literature or W680 Theory and Craft of Writing
• 10 elective graduate hours
• Maximum of 12 hours for thesis credit
• Thesis
M.A. in African American and African Diaspora Studies
Requirements (26 credit hours minimum)
• Required courses in AAADS (10-12)
• Electives (12 credits minimum): Students should take courses organized around a topical concentration, whether specifically regional or comparative. These courses are to be selected from the range of AAADS and those cross-listed AAADS in the College and several professional schools with the approval of the student’s major advisors in CW and AAADS.
• A698 Field Study Seminar (4-8): research and preparation of thesis essay. Students can take two semesters of A698 at four hours per semester. (one semester in thesis research and one semester for thesis writing).
• Language requirement (two semesters – 6 hours) Foreign Language Requirements (two semesters)
• MfA/MA students may satisfy the foreign language requirement by showing satisfactory completion of course work or passing a language proficiency exam. Language requirements should be met as soon as possible, beginning immediately after graduate studies have begun. A student is expected to be working on fulfilling the requirement every semester until it is completed.
Please see director of creative writing for course approval or AAADS director of graduate studies for courses outside the College of Arts and Sciences.
Dual Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing and Doctor of Philosophy with Concentration in Literature or Concentration in Rhetoric
Requirements
A total of 124 hours required; of these up to 12 hours may be MFA thesis credit, 44 hours must be doctoral research credit.
• MFA core (18): 4 primary genre workshops (W611- W612 or W613-W614; 16 credits) + the Creative Writing Pedagogy course (W554; 2 credits).
• Doctoral core (20): 5 courses (20 credits) in doctoral field beyond the requirements for the MFA. At least four of these must be at the 700-level. At the discretion of the Director of Graduate Studies, one seminar substitution may be allowed. Such substitutions may include but are not limited to the use of one transferred seminar, one seminar-level equivalent course from a relevant Indiana University Department, OR a 600-level English department course with verified seminar-level work.
• Up to 16 hours of graduate coursework in the Literature program or the Rhetoric program may count toward both the MFA lit-culture-and language requirement AND the 30 hours graduate literature MA/PhD requirements (see respective degree descriptions).
• Up to 12 hours of graduate W- credit may count towards both the PhD CW minor requirement and toward the total MFA credit hour requirement; four of these credits must be in a craft coursw (W664 Topics in Current Literature or W680 Theory and Craft of Writing).
• In conjunction, the two preceding guidelines allow for a MAXIMUM of 28 graduate credit hours in English that may be counted toward BOTH the MFA and PhD degrees
• For the MFA: Thesis
• For the PhD: Dissertation Doctor of Philosophy Degrees Admission
Requirements: Students are eligible for admission to the Ph.D. programs upon successful completion of the M.A.
requirements.
Doctor of Philosophy Degree with Concentration in Literature
Course Requirements
A total of 90 credit hours; students will be required to take 16 credit hours in English beyond the 30 credit hours required for the M.A. At least four 700-level seminars in English are required for the Ph.D. At the discretion of the Director of Graduate Studies, one seminar substitution may be allowed. Such substitutions may include but are not limited to the use of one transferred seminar, one seminar-level equivalent course from a relevant Indiana University Department, OR a 600-level English department course with verified seminar-level work.
Students must also satisfy course requirements for a graduate minor (see below). Students transferring into the department with M.A. degrees from other universities may be required to take several more courses than the minimum.
Foreign Language: Two languages, reading proficiency, or one language at the level of in-depth proficiency.
Language competency will be verified by the relevant foreign language department or program.
Doctor of Philosophy Degree with Concentration in Rhetoric
Course Requirements
A total of 90 credit hours, including at least 16 credit hours beyond the 30 credit hours required for the M.A. degree, to include at least four 700-level departmental seminars.
The total must include R546 (Rhetoric and Public Culture);
R607 (History of Rhetorical Theory I); and R608 (History o fRhetorical Theory II). Information about relevant courses, including those offered by other departments, is available from the chair of the Composition Committee and the student’s advisory committee.
Periodic Review
Each year the graduate faculty will examine the grades and instructors’ reports on all students and will discourage from further work those whose achievements and potential are below standard. Students who fail to maintain a 3.7 GPA or who accumulate three or more grades of Incomplete will be placed on departmental probation.
Minors
Ph.D. students in English may take minors in the following departments and programs: American studies, African American and African Diaspora studies, art history, comparative literature, cultural studies, English and German philology, film studies, folklore, French, gender studies, German, Greek, history, Italian, journalism, Latin, linguistics, medieval studies, performance studies, philosophy, religion, Renaissance studies, Slavics, Spanish, theatre, drama and contemporary dance, Victorian studies, and European studies. Minors in additional departments may also be accepted at the discretion of the Director of Graduate Studies. Internal minors in a field outside the student’s major field concentration may also be considered. Requirements for outside minors are set by the minor department.
Among the specific minors the English Department offers are the following: American Literature, British Literature, Creative Writing, English and Germanic Philology, Feminist Critical Studies, History of the Book, Literary Theory, and Pedagogy. Minors within the department must be approved by the Director of Graduate Studies.
For candidates earning double degrees (e.g. MFA & PhD;
MA & MLIS), coursework toward the second degree (the degree that is not the English PhD) replaces the minor.
Qualifying Examination
Upon completion of doctoral course work, students will prepare and take a doctoral qualifying examination. The examination consists of two parts: an oral examination based upon a reading list and the defense of a written dissertation prospectus. Assuming the student enters the program without an M.A., the exams are taken in his or her fourth year in the program. The oral examination tests a student’s qualifications as a specialist in his or her chosen field; the prospectus and defense test a student’s qualifications and readiness for undertaking the dissertation. Part one of the exam is taken in September;
the prospectus should be completed the following spring and defended by the second week of May. Students pursuing a dual-degree PhD are allowed some flexibility in the timing of the qualifying exam. Further details of the procedure are available from the director of graduate studies (director of graduate studies).
Dissertation Prospectus/Research Proposal
Following the successful completion of the first part of the qualifying examination, the student names his dissertation committee and registers for W795, the dissertation prospectus writing workshop taught each spring by the director of graduate studies. The prospectus and bibliography are written in consultation with supervisory faculty and with the instructor of W795. When the prospectus is ready to be approved, the student submits it to his committee and arranges a time for the defense of the prospectus (which constitutes the final part of the Qualifying Exam). In this two-hour oral exam, members of the dissertation committee examine the claims of the prospectus as well as the dissertation research proposed, and assess the student’s preparedness to undertake a long-term independent research project. The committee may ask for further revisions of the prospectus. The student must revise the prospectus as needed and submit it to the director of graduate studies no later than the end of May. The prospectus may be re-submitted and
the defense repeated once within 6 months of the first attempt.
Research Proposal
After the dissertation proposal has been approved, the student will nominate a research committee consisting of no fewer than three members of the English department faculty and a representative of the minor.
Final Examination: Oral dissertation defense, at the completion of the dissertation project.
Ph. D. Minor in English
Minimum of twelve hours (at least three courses) in English Department coursework in a chosen field within English Literature (examples may include, but are not limited to, English Language, 20t Century Fiction, Transatlantic literature, Digital English, the Novel, Literature and the Environment, etc.). Consultation with the Director of Graduate Studies is required to declare the minor and determine field of study.
Ph.D. Minor in American Literature
Minimum of twelve hours (at least three courses) in English Department coursework concentrated in American Literature and related topics. Consultation with the Director of Graduate Studies is required to declare the minor.
Ph.D. Minor in British Literature
Minimum of twelve hours (at least three courses) in English Department coursework concentrated in British Literature and related topics. Consultation with the Director of Graduate Studies is required to declare the minor.
Ph.D. Minor in Creative Writing
Three courses, to be chosen from W511 (Writing Fiction), W513 (Writing Poetry), W550 (Teaching Creative Writing in the Community), W615 (Writing Creative Nonfiction), W664 (Topics in Current Literature), and W680 (Theory and Craft of Writing). Students who want to pursue this minor must submit to the Creative Writing Director a brief personal statement outlining your wish to pursue this minor and a writing sample (10 poems for poets and 25 pages for fiction writers).
Ph.D. Minor in English Language
Three courses in English Language, to be chosen from G601 [Medieval Languages] (may be taken more than once for credit), G602 [Readings in Language, History, and Culture], G655 [History of the English Language], L701 [Descriptive Bibliography and Textual Problems}, and L742 [Research in Structure, History and Use of English and Related Languages]. Relevant offerings of L680 [Special Topics in Literary Study and Theory], L695 [Individual Readings in English], and L790 [Independent Study] may also count.
Ph.D. Minor in English and Germanic Philology Four courses, to include G601 Old English and at least one of the other older Germanic languages; i.e., German G632 Gothic, G635 Old Icelandic, G638 Old High German, G639 Old Saxon, and G640 Middle High German. The remaining courses may be chosen from English G602 Middle English, G655 History of the English Language, L710 Beowulf, L711 Old English Literature;
German G532 History of the German Language, and
G625 Colloquium in Germanic Linguistics (when the topic is appropriate), G640 Reading Middle High German, G636 Old Icelandic Literature, G835 Seminar in Germanic Linguistics (when the topic is appropriate), and any of the remaining older Germanic languages listed above.
Ph.D. Minor in Feminist Critical Studies
The Minor in Feminist Critical Studies emphasizes feminist criticism and theory. It requires four courses (at least 15 hours of credit), including English L663 Introduction to Feminist Critical Studies and at least one course outside the Department of English; each course must be passed with a grade of B+ (3.3) or higher. Relevant courses include English L605, L700, L707, and L773;
Fine Arts A474 and A674; Cultural Studies C601 and C602; Communication and Culture C551 and C604; and Telecommunications T651. Students should consult with the minor advisor in the English department about specific courses of study.
Ph.D. Minor in Literacy Studies
Jointly administered by the Department of English and the School of Education, the minor requires a minimum of four courses, including English L502, Education L630, and two courses selected from an approved list, at least one of which must be outside the English department. For School of Education students, three of the four courses must be outside the student’s major area. Students should confer with one of the advisors of the Literacy Studies minor;
their names can be obtained from the director of graduate studies.
Ph.D. Minor in Literary Theory
Jointly administered by the Departments of English and Comparative Literature, the minor requires a minimum of three courses, including at least one selected from Comparative Literature C503, C504, C601, or C602; and one from English G660, L605, L607, L608, or L707. Other courses approved for the minor are French and Italian F584 and G560; Germanic Studies G800; Slavics and East European Languages and Cultures R521; Spanish and Portuguese S473 and S512; and Theatre and Drama T555 and T556. Courses other than those listed previously may also be acceptable toward completion of the requirement; written consent to count such courses must be obtained in advance from the graduate advisor in the Department of English or Comparative Literature.
Ph.D. Minor in Literature and Science
The literature and science minor consists of four courses.
Two of the four will be Department of English courses from the area of literature and science. One of those English courses will be L769 Research in Literature and Science, the “core” course for the minor. The non- English department courses will come from a relevant science, from the Department of History and Philosophy of Science, or from some other relevant (nonliterary) discipline. The minor will be administered by the director of graduate studies in English, in consultation with the literature and science faculty as necessary.
Ph.D. Minor in Critical Race and Postcolonial Studies (CRPS)
Jointly administered by the departments of English and American Studies, this minor requires four courses, (12-16 credits): the Introduction to Critical Race and Postcolonial Studies (ENGL L 648 Readings in Critical Race &
Postcolonial Studies) and three additional courses drawn
from at least two departments, chosen in consultation with the CRPS supervisor. To complete the minor, the student must present her/his research in a forum organized by the CRPS Advisory Committee.
Performance Studies
Four courses to include Introduction to Performance Studies (Folklore F750 or its cognate in another department) and three others from such departments and programs as English, Anthropology, Film Studies, Fine Arts, Comparative Literature, Ethnomusicology, and Folklore.
Pedagogy
Twelve hours (three courses) in pedagogy, which may include W500 [Teaching Composition: Issues &
Approaches], W602 [Contemporary Theories of Rhetoric and Composition], L503 Teaching of Literature in College, L508 [Practicum on Teaching Literature in College] and/
or a seminar in Composition, Rhetoric, or Literacy [L707, L762, L790], though substitutions are possible depending on the background and interests of the student.
History of the Book / Critical Bibliography
Three courses on subjects such as (but not limited to) the history of print, manuscript studies, digital textuality, and critical bibliography, to be taken from any of the following departments: English, History, Informatics and Library Science, Comparative Literature, the foreign languages.
Consultation with the Director of Graduate Studies is required.
Eighteenth-Century Studies
(From the Center for Eighteenth-Century Studies website) Eighteenth-Century Studies offers a Ph.D. minor open to graduate students from any field. To enter the minor, students must first have been accepted for admission to a departmental graduate program. The minor requires:
successful completion of the interdisciplinary gateway course, “Introduction to Eighteenth Century Studies”;
12 additional credit hours in at least two departments, including at least one approved seminar (usually, 700 level).
Graduate Area Certificate in English and Germanic Philology
Also offered is a certificate in English and Germanic philology, requiring four courses in addition to the four required for the minor. These may include any of the courses listed previously, as well as courses in other departments (e.g., linguistics, folklore, classical studies, and anthropology) that are relevant to the history and prehistory of the Germanic languages, and to early Germanic literature and culture. For information about relevant courses, see the graduate advisor in the Department of English.
Faculty Chairperson Patricia Ingham
Associate Chairperson Kathy O. Smith
Graduate Faculty
(An asterisk [*] denotes membership in the University Graduate School faculty with the endorsement to direct doctoral dissertations.)
Distinguished Professors
Philip Appleman* (Emeritus), Susan D. Gubar* (Emerita), James Justus* (Emeritus), Terence Martin* (Emeritus), Scott R. Sanders* (Emeritus)
Chancellor’s Professors
Judith H. Anderson(Emerita)*, Anthony Ardizzone*, Robert Fulk*, James Naremore* (Emeritus)
Rudy Professor/COAS Distinguished Professor Patrick Brantlinger* (Emeritus)
Susan Gubar Chair of American Literature Stephanie Li*
Culbertson Chair of Writing John Schilb*
Ruth N. Halls Professors
Paul John Eakin* (Emeritus), Karma Lochrie*
Professors
Michael P. Adams*, Judith H. Anderson(Emerita)*, Anthony V. Ardizzone* (Emeritus), , Frederick Beaty*
(Emeritus), Ernest Bernhardt-Kabisch* (Emeritus), Catherine Bowman*, Patrick Brantlinger* (Emeritus), , Linda Anne Charnes*, , Edward Paul Comentale*, Don Cook* (Emeritus), , Jonathan E. Elmer*, Christine Rhoda Farris*, , , Robert Dennis Fulk*, Mary Gaither*
(Emerita), Donald Gray* (Emeritus), Kenneth R. R. Gros Louis* (Emeritus, Comparative Literature), Paul Charles Gutjahr*, Raymond W. Hedin*, , T. Scott Herring*, Patricia Clare Ingham*, Kenneth Johnston* (Emeritus), Joshua Kates* Eugene R. Kintgen* (Emeritus), , , Stephanie Li*, Karma D. Lochrie*, , Alyce L. Miller*, , , Roger Mitchell*
(Emeritus), Richard Nash*, David J. Nordloh* (Emeritus), Alvin H. Rosenfeld* (Jewish Studies), John Lincoln Schilb*, Murray Sperber* (Emeritus), Maura Frances Stanton*, Samrat Upadhyay, Shane Vogel*, Stephen Myers Watt*, Malvin Zirker* (Emeritus)
Associate Professors
Dana Larson Anderson*, Penelope Anderson*, Purnima Bose*, Judith Christine Brown*, William Burgan*
(Emeritus), Jennifer Fleissner*, Ross Gay, Shannon Gayk*, D. Rae Greiner*, , , Jeffrey F. Huntsman*
(Emeritus), DeWitt Douglas Kilgore*, Ivan Kreilkamp*, Sheila Lindenbaum (Emerita), Joan Pong Linton*, , Joss Marsh*, Ellen Mackay*, Monique Morgan*, Walton Muyumba*, Michael Rosenblum* (Emeritus), Ranu Samantrai*, Lee W. Sterrenburg (Emeritus), Nicholas Mark Williams*, John Woodcock* (Emeritus)
Assistant Professors
Scot Barnett, Justin Hodgson, Adrian Matejka, Jesse Molesworth*, Nikki Skillman, Jacinda Townsend, Alberto Varon*
Adjunct Professors
Oscar Kenshur* (Emeritus, Comparative Literature), Barbara Klinger* (Communication and Culture), John McCluskey Jr.* (Emeritus, African American and African Diaspora Studies),
Adjunct Associate Professors
Herbert Marks* (Comparative Literature), Melvin Plotinsky*
(Emeritus)
Director of Graduate Studies
Associate Professor Richard Nash*, Ballantine Hall 442D, (812) 855-1543
Courses 500 Level
ENG-G 500 Introduction to the English Language (4 cr.) An introduction to the English language: its nature, structure, and development.
ENG-L 500 Introduction to Graduate Study for International Students (4 cr.) The methods and assumptions of graduate study in English and American literature, with special emphasis on classroom
participation, the preparation and delivery of reports, and the writing of critical essays based on individual research.
Admission must be approved by the departmental advisor for international students.
ENG-L 501 Professional Scholarship in Literature (4 cr.) Materials, tools, and methods of research.
ENG-L 502 Contexts for the Study of Writing (2-4 cr.) Historical and cognitive effects of writing, reading, and language use, and the implication of these effects for the teaching and study of literature and writing.
ENG-L 503 Teaching of Literature in College (2-4 cr.) Classroom teaching of literature in the light of current approaches.
ENG-L 504 Practicum on Research Techniques (2-4 cr.) Introduction to a range of general and specialized methods for advanced research in literary and cultural studies. Topics include methods for research in the History of the Book, codicology, research in popular cultural archives, digital research environments, etc.
ENG-L 505 Teaching Children’s Literature at the Post- Secondary Level (2 cr.) Classroom teaching of children’s literature in the light of current approaches.
ENG-L 506 Introduction to Methods of Criticism and Research (4 cr.) The conditions and assumptions of studying English, with emphasis on criticism and research on a culturally and historically diverse range of texts.
ENG-L 507 English Outside the Academy (4 cr.) Primarily for Special Field M.A. candidates. Explores discourses and domains of thought and language use that link the academy with areas of expertise outside it, including law, publishing, the media, advertising, health, and counseling.
ENG-L 508 Practicum on Teaching Literature in College (2-4 cr.) Topics include syllabus construction, lecture and discussion techniques, use and evaluation of written work.