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Sturgeon, Carolyn – CEA Forum, 2013
Teaching service courses such as the first year composition courses and an introduction to literature is often a primary mission for English departments on campuses in the United States. Sometimes specific departments request specialized additional English classes such as Writing for Business, basic grammar courses, composition courses focused for…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Literature, Writing (Composition), College Freshmen
English Departments' Relationships to Community: An Experiment at the Heart of Disciplinary Identity
Duffey, Suellynn – Journal of Public Scholarship in Higher Education, 2011
English departments is not uniform. Many departments still exist with traditional notions of inquiry and curriculum and ignore community engagement or understand it in narrow ways. For a variety of reasons, writing courses and compositionists more easily than literature scholars and creative writers can embrace current concepts of community…
Descriptors: English Departments, School Community Relationship, Graduate Students, Seminars
Billington, Josie; Sperlinger, Tom – Teaching in Higher Education, 2011
This article explores the question of where literary study happens through reflection on two case studies. The article examines projects within two UK English departments, which were designed to allow students of literature to engage with local communities as part of their studies. The implications of this work are considered for curriculum…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Curriculum Design, English Departments, Foreign Countries
Ianetta, Melissa – College Composition and Communication, 2010
This essay argues that a trend in histories of literary and writing studies is to bifurcate the origins of the fields and so engage in those modernist narrative fallacies described by Jean-Francois Lyotard. Such works limit our understanding of past practices and the longstanding connections between disciplinarity and labor. (Contains 2 notes.)
Descriptors: Writing (Composition), Labor, Educational History, Literature
Gebhardt, Richard C. – CEA Forum, 2007
Discussions of English department identity and mission more often center on the undergraduate major curriculum than on classes for general-studies and other non-major students. In such courses, though, educators have an opportunity to touch the intellectual lives of far more people than they do in courses for majors. The author argues in this…
Descriptors: Nonmajors, English Departments, College English, Literature
D'Angelo, Frank – College English, 2007
A symposium in the November 2006 issue of "College English" addresses the question, "What should college English be?" In this article, the author presents his answer to this question--it should be a functional approach to English studies. By English studies he means everything that is done in English departments. Most English departments teach…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, English Departments, Creative Writing, College English
Waters, Lindsay – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2005
Literary criticism no longer aims to appreciate aesthetics, which is to study how humans respond to art. The problem plaguing the literary academy is that literature is reduced to an idea or a moral and theory has become institutionalized in literature departments and continues to be taught.
Descriptors: Literary Criticism, Aesthetics, Literature, English Departments
Howard, Jennifer – Chronicle of Higher Education, 2005
Syllabi from some 20 colleges and universities were reviewed with prominent English and literature departments and a discussion was held with a number of professors who teach literary theory. It is suggested that devolution and fragmentation of theory might be a survival strategy, an adaptation to the new realties of academic institutions.
Descriptors: English Departments, Course Descriptions, Literary Criticism, Literature
Isaacson, David – Acquisitions Librarian, 2004
This essay explores some of the conflicts faced by the author, a liaison with book-selection responsibilities to a university English Department. These conflicts include: trying to fill gaps missed by profiles set up with our book vendor; trying to achieve a reasonable balance between canonical and non-canonical texts; between primary texts and…
Descriptors: Library Development, Library Materials, Library Policy, Performance Factors
Moore, Patrick – Journal of Technical Writing and Communication, 2006
Carolyn Miller's oft-cited "Humanistic Rationale for Technical Writing," published in 1979, tries to give technical communication faculty more cultural capital in English departments controlled by literature professors. Miller replaces a positivistic emphasis in technical communication pedagogy with rhetoric. She shows how technical knowledge is…
Descriptors: Technical Writing, English Departments, Cultural Capital, Intellectual Disciplines
Finke, Laurie; Johnson, Barbara; Leitch, Vincent B.; McGowan, John; Williams, Jeffrey J. – College English, 2003
Literature anthologies are part of the furniture of English departments. Like the putty or gunmetal-gray file cabinet that one might have gotten new or used, they are not a showpiece of academic decor, but it would be hard to imagine work spaces without them. Indeed, they are omnipresent, amassed on the shelves of campus bookstores, weighing down…
Descriptors: Literature Appreciation, Anthologies, English Departments, Literary Criticism