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Literary Studies/Theatre Studies in English

Faculty
PhD Program
Courses

Disclaimer



Director
Daniel Fischlin
(University of Guelph, 439 Mackinnon Building, Ext. 3267)
(E-mail: dfischli@uoguelph.ca )

Graduate officer - Laurier
Eleanor Ty (Wilfrid Laurier University, 519-884-0710 Ext. 3581 )
(E-mail: ety@wlu.ca)

Graduate officer - Guelph
Danny O'Quinn (University of Guelph, Ext. 3250)
(E-mail: doquinn@uoguelph.ca )

Graduate secretary - Laurier
Joanne Buehler-Buchan
(Wilfrid Laurier University, 519-884-0710 Ext. 3257)
english@wlu.ca

Graduate secretary - Guelph
Sharon Ballantyne (University of Guelph, 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 UBC, AM, PhD Stanford - Assistant Professor

Romita Choudhury
BA, MA Jadavpour University, MA, PhD Alberta - Assistant Professor

Alan D. Filewod
BA York, MA Alberta, PhD Toronto - Professor

Daniel Fischlin
BFA, MA Concordia, PhD York - Professor and Director of the Joint PhD Program

Kenneth W. Graham
BA Royal Military College, MPhil, PhD London - Professor

Ajay Heble
BA Innis College (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

Ric Knowles
BA, MA, PhD Toronto - Professor

Janice Kulyk Keefer
BA, MA Toronto, DPhil Sussex - Professor

Harry Lane
BA Durham, MA, PhD Toronto - Associate Professor and Co-Director of the School

Gerald F. Manning
BA, MA Alberta, PhD Queen's - Associate Professor

Paul A. Mulholland
BA, MA Toronto, PhD Birmingham - Associate Professor

Daniel O'Quinn
BSc, MA Western, PhD York - Associate Professor & Graduate Coordinator

François Paré
BA Montréal, PhD SUNY, Buffalo - 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

Ann Wilson
BA, MA, PhD York - Associate Professor

The following members of Wilfrid Laurier University are members of the program:
Gary Boire
BA Loyola, MA, PhD McMaster - Professor & Chair of the English Department

Jodey Castricano
BA, MA Simon Fraser, PhD UBC - Assistant Professor

Viviana Comensoli
BA, MA Simon Fraser, PhD UBC - Professor

Maria DiCenzo
BA McMaster, MA Queen's, PhD McMaster - Associate Professor

Joel Faflak
BA, MA, PhD Western Ontario - Assistant Professor

Edwin Jewinski
BA, MA Waterloo, PhD Toronto - Professor

Michael Moore
BA, MA Carleton, PhD Queen's - Professor

Leslie O'Dell
BA Queen's, MA, PhD Toronto - Associate Professor

Anne Russell
BA Trent, MA, PhD York - Associate Professor

Lynn Shakinovsky
BA Witwatersrand, MA, PhD Toronto - Associate Professor

Rowland Smith
BA Natal, MA Oxon, PhD Natal - Professor & Vice-President, Academic

Paul Tiessen
BA Laurier, MA, PhD Alberta - Professor

Eleanor Ty
BA Toronto, MA, PhD McMaster - Professor & Graduate Coordinator

Christl Verduyn
BA Trent, MA, PhD Ottawa - Professor

Robin Waugh
BA, MA Manitoba, PhD Queen's - Assistant Professor

James Weldon
BA, MA New Brunswick, PhD Queen's - Associate Professor


Admission Requirements
     Admission to the Joint PhD Program normally requires an MA in English, an MA in Drama/Theatre, or an equivalent degree with at least an A- average in graduate work. Applications are considered by the Joint PhD Program Committee and a recommendation to admit or decline is forwarded to the Dean of Graduate Studies at the proposed home university.

Program Requirements
     Although students might choose either Literary Studies or Theatre Studies, innovative opportunities exist in the program to pursue work across these traditional disciplinary boundaries. The degree requirements consist of three one-semester (0.5 credit) graduate courses normally taken in the first year of the program; one general area seminar (0.5 credit) culminating in a written candidacy exam and a colloquium presentation; one intensive area seminar (1.0 credit) culminating in an oral and written candidacy exam; and a dissertation (2.0 credits). For purposes of the Joint PhD Program, the qualifying examination related to the student's knowledge of the subject area and field shall consist of the oral and written candidacy exam for the intensive area seminar.

Area Seminars
     The area seminars are structured directed-reading courses in two different fields, intended to provide concentrated training in the student's expected areas of research concentration and preparation for the written examination at the conclusion of each area seminar. The seminars involve regular consultations between the student and the seminar director. The general area seminar will normally be taken during the second and third semesters of the program (year one). The intensive area seminar will normally be taken in the fourth and fifth semesters of the program and will culminate in the oral candidacy examination (year two).

General Area Seminar (Year One)
     The general area seminar explores an area in a field other than that in which the student has chosen to specialize and write a dissertation. The seminar emphasizes thorough general knowledge of the area's scope, relevant theoretical frameworks, and research methodologies, with due regard to the student's own teaching, research interests, and critical perspectives. The reading and other activities proceed in close consultation with an advisory committee consisting of an assigned area seminar director (who will normally be a faculty member other than the anticipated dissertation supervisor) and two other faculty members. The area seminar director is selected from the core faculty in the student's resident institution, while the two faculty members may be from one or both institutions. This advisory committee, together with the Director of the Joint PhD Program, comprise the student's candidacy examination committee.

A written take-home candidacy examination is to be completed in a two-week period, normally in June of year one. The student designs course outlines for junior and senior undergraduate courses in the area of specialization, submits a rationale for the selection and organization of materials, an outline of and justification for theoretical approaches, and an account of pedagogical strategies for the proposed courses. A theoretical or critical essay that develops from the student's engagement with the texts included in the proposed course outlines is submitted.

Evaluation of General Area Seminar:
Report by Seminar Director -- 60% based on reading, consultation, and written work
Formal colloquium -- 40% includes written versions

Intensive Area Seminar (Year Two)
     The intensive area seminar involves individualized, directed study of the immediate literary, cultural, and theoretical contexts of the student's approved dissertation subject. Ordinarily, the assigned seminar director is the confirmed dissertation supervisor. Two additional faculty members serve in an advisory capacity, and together with two additional members of the graduate faculty (at least one of whom must be a member of the unit), plus the Director of the Joint PhD Program or the chair of the academic unit, form the candidacy examination committee. The intensive area seminar ensures that the student's dissertation work is supported by a broad and contextualized understanding of the primary materials associated with the area of specialization and dissertation.

Students are required to make two presentations: an informal seminar in December and a formal colloquium in April. Candidacy examination II is normally held in May of year two and consists of a written scholarly theoretical or critical paper on an approved topic that stems from the research undertaken for the intensive area seminar. The examination is followed by an oral examination that contributes to the final grade. Both the written and oral examinations for the intensive area seminar shall constitute the qualifying examination. Upon satisfactory completion of these examinations the student is deemed to have met the Joint PhD Program standards and becomes a candidate for the PhD degree.

Evaluation of Intensive Area Seminar
2 end-of-semester reports (20% per term) -- 40% based on reading, consultation, written work
Informal presentation (December Year 2) -- 25% including written versions
Formal colloquium (April Year 2) -- 35% including written versions

Progress Reports
     At the end of the first year of registration (usually in May) and once a year thereafter, a student is required to complete an annual research progress report detailing the achievements of the previous year and the objectives for the next year. The report must demonstrate satisfactory progress, and must be signed with comments by the supervisor and Director of the Joint PhD Program, and filed with both the program director and the Graduate Studies Office of the home university. Failure to submit a satisfactory report may result in the student being required to withdraw from the program.

It is the responsibility of the advisor to submit evaluation reports every semester to the Joint PhD Program Committee and, when there are concerns or when the progress being made is unsatisfactory, to the appropriate Office of Graduate Studies.

PhD Dissertation
     Following successful completion of the two Area Seminars, the student must complete an original research project on an advanced topic. The advisory committee for the dissertation will consist of three members of the graduate faculty, one of whom will assume the primary supervisory role. The dissertation should normally be between 50,000 and 75,000 words in length. The regulations and procedures at the university in which the student is registered will govern both the dissertation and the examination formats.

Language Requirement
     Students will be required to demonstrate reading knowledge of one language other than English, as approved by the Joint PhD Program Committee. Assessment of the student's reading knowledge will be based on the student's translation (with the help of a dictionary) of a critical passage, and a written analysis (in English) of the passage's critical implications. Evidence that a student has already demonstrated similar language ability at another university prior to admission may be submitted to the Joint PhD Program Committee with a request to have the language requirement waived. Credit will be given to any student who has fulfilled the language requirement through an MA-level examination. Credit will not normally be given for the completion of a university-level language course.

Typically the language requirement will be completed by the end of the second semester of study, and no later than the third semester (year one). A student who fails the language examination twice will normally be required to withdraw from the program.

Residency Regulations
     At least five semesters of full-time study must be devoted to the doctoral program following the completion of a recognized Master's degree.


Courses

Course/(Credit Value) Term Course Description
LTS*7777
Language Requirement (0.0)
   A written demonstration of a student's reading knowledge of one language other than English, as approved by the Joint PhD Program Committee. Graded on a SAT(Satisfactory)/UNS (Unsatisfactory) basis.
LTS*7800
General Area Seminar (0.5)
   A directed-reading course to provide concentrated training in an area of research other than the student's expected area of research concentration. This seminar emphasizes thorough general knowledge of a chosen area's scope, theoretical frameworks, and research methodologies. The course is normally taken during the first year of a student's program.
LTS*7820
Intensive Area Seminar (1.0)
   A reading course intended to provide concentrated training in the student's expected area of research concentration. This seminar involves individualized, directed study of the immediate literary, cultural, and theoretical contexts of the student's approved dissertation subject. The course is normally taken in the second year of a student's PhD program.
LTS*7900
Directed Studies (0.5)
   The study of a special topic under the guidance of a member of the Department/School. Prerequisite: permission of the instructor and the Joint PhD Program Committee.

Courses Offered at the University of Guelph*
DRMA*6020 Canadian Drama in English
DRMA*6040 Quebec and Franco-Canadian Drama
DRMA*6050 Special Studies in Canadian Drama
DRMA*6060 Aspects of Canadian Theatre History
DRMA*6080 Special Studies in Canadian Theatre
DRMA*6090 Aspects of Theatre in Early-Modern England
DRMA*6100 English Drama to 1642
DRMA*6120 Aspects of 20th Century Theatre
DRMA*6130 Aspects of 19th Century Drama
DRMA*6140 Aspects of 20th Century Drama
DRMA*6150 Special Studies in Theatre History
DRMA*6180 Aspects of 19th Century Theatre
DRMA*6190 Special Studies in Drama
DRMA*6220 Aspects of the Theory of Drama, Theatre, and Performance
DRMA*6801 Reading Course I
DRMA*6802 Reading Course II
ENGL*6002 Topics in the History of Criticism
ENGL*6003 Problems in Literary Analysis
ENGL*6201 Topics in Canadian Literature
ENGL*6209 Topics in Commonwealth/Postcolonial Literature
ENGL*6412 Topics in Medieval/Renaissance Literature
ENGL*6421 Topics in Eighteenth-Century and Romantic Literature
ENGL*6431 Topics in Nineteenth-Century Literature
ENGL*6441 Topics in Modern British Literature
ENGL*6451 Topics in American Literature
ENGL*6611 Topics in Women's Writing
ENGL*6621 Topics in Children's Literature
ENGL*6641 Topics in Scottish Literature
ENGL*6691 Interdisciplinary Study
ENGL*6811 Special Topics in English
ENGL*6801 Reading Course I
ENGL*6802 Reading Course II
* N.B. all courses, except for the Intensive Area Seminar and the Dissertation, are weighted 0.5.

Courses Offered at Wilfrid Laurier University*
WLU*E600 Research Methods, Theory, and Professional Issues
WLU*E601 Fiction by Contemporary British Women
WLU*E602 Gender and Genre in Renaissance Drama
WLU*E603 American Women Writers
WLU*E604 The Gender of Modernism
WLU*E605 Representations of Gender in Victorian Literature
WLU*E606 Theatrical Images of Gender
WLU*E607 Ideologies of Genre in Nineteenth-Century Literature
WLU*E608 Women Writers of the 17th Century
WLU*E610 Feminist Theory and Women's Writing
WLU*E621 The Nature Lyric: Genre and Gender
WLU*E622 British Feminist Drama in the 20th Century
WLU*E623 Film Genre and Feminist Theory
WLU*E624 Medieval Dream Vision Narrative
WLU*E625 Medieval Romance
WLU*E626 Postcoloniality: Theory and Practice
WLU*E628 The Dramatic Experience
WLU*E629 Canadian Documents and Canadian Poems
WLU*E630 Modernism to Postmodernism
WLU*E632 Renaissance Domestic Tragedy
WLU*E634 Dramatic Comedy of the 17th Century
WLU*E635 The Gothic
WLU*E640 Reading Theory
WLU*E641 Voices of the Diaspora
WLU*E690 Directed Studies
WLU*E691 Special Topics in Gender
WLU*E692 Special Topics in Genre
* N.B. All courses, except for the Intensive Area Seminar and the Dissertation, are weighted 0.5.



         



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