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Hutcheon, Linda – ADE Bulletin, 1997
States that interdisciplinary studies have a long history in North American universities, but that those who teach in American and English literature departments have been accused of colonizing in the name of cultural studies. Distinguishes between interdisciplinary "tourism" and interdiscursivity. (PA)
Descriptors: English Departments, Higher Education, Interdisciplinary Approach, Literary Criticism
Dalbey, Marcia A. – ADE Bulletin, 1999
Notes that the question of whether English departments had a future was asked 17 years ago when the author first became a department chair as it is asked now upon her retirement. Discusses things about the profession that have changed, for good or ill. Suggests that the profession's penchant for self-examination has not changed. (RS)
Descriptors: Department Heads, English Departments, Higher Education, Intellectual Disciplines
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Reichert, Pegeen – JAC: A Journal of Composition Theory, 1996
Draws on Susan Miller's distinction between "feminist composition studies" and "feminine composition studies" to raise concerns about the perception, place, and role of composition studies in English departments. Examines the feminine metaphors used in composition theory and research. (TB)
Descriptors: English Departments, Feminism, Higher Education, Metaphors
Bialostosky, Don – ADE Bulletin, 2001
Addresses budget issues in terms of "getting" and "spending." Notes that educators should not lay waste their powers in exchange for getting and spending. Notes that careful budget management is a necessary virtue, but it is not a sufficient virtue to win additional support. Suggests what to take to an annual budget hearing. (SG)
Descriptors: Budgeting, Compensation (Remuneration), Credibility, English Departments
Lloyd-Jones, Richard – ADE Bulletin, 2002
Suggests reasons that Robert Scholes is an ideal person to receive the Francis Andrew March Award. Discusses aspects of his career that are not automatically clear from his publications. Concentrates on his professional presence for over more than a third of a century. (SG)
Descriptors: English Departments, Higher Education, Teacher Attitudes, Undergraduate Students
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
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Cornwell, Gareth – Arts and Humanities in Higher Education: An International Journal of Theory, Research and Practice, 2006
The article is an exploration of current trends within, and the desired destiny of, the humanities discipline of English Studies in the context of calls for the "Africanization" of South African universities. The essay advocates the embrace of a non-universalist, emancipationist humanism. (Contains 8 notes.)
Descriptors: English Departments, Foreign Countries, Humanities, Higher Education
Dalbey, Marcia A. – ADE Bulletin, 1988
Describes the author's own perceptions and experiences as a woman chair, claiming that having a feminist chair (male or female) makes a positive difference in a department, for both women and men. (JK)
Descriptors: English Departments, Females, Feminism, Sex
Bialostosky, Don H. – ADE Bulletin, 1988
In a response to the Minnesota Conference on the Future of Doctoral Study in English, argues that literary theory has redirected attention to the medieval liberal arts of grammar, rhetoric, and dialectic. (JK)
Descriptors: English Curriculum, English Departments, Higher Education, Liberal Arts
English, Todd M. – 1999
This paper is conceived as an extended reflection on what has passed for a materialist epistemology--which may be one way to understand cultural work--in English Studies. Rather than providing any final answers to the questions of what the praxis says about the theory, the paper first examines the origin of the humanistic literary text and then…
Descriptors: English Departments, Higher Education, Theory Practice Relationship, Writing Instruction
Skaggs, Calvin – ADE Bulletin, 1981
Suggests that verbal and visual literacy are interdependent and that English departments should take on the task of heightening visual literacy. (AEA)
Descriptors: Curriculum Development, English Departments, Higher Education, Television
Collins, Rowland L. – ADE Bulletin, 1980
Discusses the responsibilities of serving as English department head. Two main duties identified are (1) to preserve and expand knowledge and (2) to ensure the success of the educational mission of the department. The administrator is encouraged to maintain scholarly activities while being a student of departmental and institutional affairs. (DF)
Descriptors: Administrators, Department Heads, English Departments, Higher Education
Christ, Carol – ADE Bulletin, 1996
Describes three criteria used by a college administrator to allocate faculty positions. Discusses ways for English departments to enhance their chances for faculty positions. Suggests that departments that can significantly enhance undergraduate education have the best claim on faculty positions. (RS)
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, English Departments, Higher Education
Langland, Elizabeth – ADE Bulletin, 1996
Presents 10 concrete strategies for retaining faculty lines, strategies that respond to the new economic realities shaping institutions and at the same time preserve the vital heart of the academy. (RS)
Descriptors: College Administration, College Faculty, English Departments, Higher Education
David, Deirdre – ADE Bulletin, 1990
Suggests that the increasing prevalence of the two-career couple on university campuses should be viewed as an exhilarating challenge rather than an unmanageable mess of contending views. (RS)
Descriptors: English Departments, Faculty Mobility, Faculty Recruitment, Higher Education
Jehlen, Myra – ADE Bulletin, 1989
Argues that curricular revision (in the direction implied by widespread adoption of terms such as "canon" and "theory") has been accomplished with little overhauling, in large part by adding non-White, nonmale, nonclassical writers to traditional courses. Argues that reading new works is not the same as arriving at new…
Descriptors: Educational Trends, English Curriculum, English Departments, Higher Education
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