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English

Students who study in the app College English Department gain direct, intimate access to other cultures and time periods, through encounters with works from classical Greece, medieval Europe, and Victorian Britain to U.S. and world literature of the present. At the same time, students develop both analytically and creatively as writers and thinkers, learning to express themselves with clarity and power. In engaging us with a range of forms — poetry, fiction, nonfiction, drama, film, as well as the genres of the Internet age — English courses enlarge our vision of the complexity and richness of human achievements and how we might contribute to them ourselves.

These are strengths prized in a wide variety of professions. As a number of articles in the mainstream  and have recently argued, skills developed in literature and writing courses yield advantages not only in the fields of teaching, publishing, and journalism but also in any profession in which critical thinking, analysis, and the ability to communicate effectively are vital. YC English majors have gone on to such careers as business, medicine, and law as well as television production, filmmaking, and urban planning.

While at YC, English majors join a community. From their initial work together in Interpreting Texts, our gateway course, each cohort of majors embarks on a shared intellectual journey that culminates in the Senior Colloquium, a yearlong discussion in which students join with English Department app members to learn from each other. Whether you pursue an English major or minor or our Writing minor, you will come together with app and other students over text as a source of lifelong intellectual engagement, and of surprise and wonder.

Please click here for the mission of and goals for the Writing Minor and here for information about our new Media Studies Minor.

Mission Statement

The English Department’s mission is to teach the forms, traditions, theories, and practices foundational to contemporary literary studies, as well as the skills and habits of mind necessary for interpreting, analyzing, and creating texts; to develop “a disposition, a habit, a way of being in the world of words” (Derek Attridge).

In mentoring sophisticated readers of text and of culture—from classical Greece to medieval Europe to the U.S. of the Internet era; from Victorian Britain to the postcolonial Caribbean—we seek to enlarge students’ understanding of themselves and of those who are different from them, to broaden their sense of intellectual citizenship. And in training them as writers, the Department seeks to develop students’ creative as well as analytical skills, and their ability to express themselves with clarity and power in a complex modern world.

Student Learning Goals

  • Hone reasoned and compelling critical analysis skills 
  • Learn a wide range of literary traditions and forms, and build awareness of the changing contexts of literary production.
  • Reflect meaningfully upon their own cultural histories and values, as well as the cultures and values of others.
  • Connect with others effectively through written and verbal communication. 

For more information about the English Department at app College, please contact Professor Paula Geyh at geyh@yu.edu or 212.960-5400 ext. 6862. 

Program Information

Click the following links to see descriptions of the exciting courses the English Department has offered over the last several years.

 

The following list includes app who teach at the Beren (B) and/or Wilf (W) campus.

 

Lauren Fitzgerald

Professor of English (W)

Director, The Wilf Writing Center

 

Paula Geyh

Professor of English (W)

Chair, English Dept

 

Gina Grimaldi

Clinical Assistant Professor of English (B)

Director, The Beren Writing Center

 

Joan Haahr

Professor of English, Emerita

 

Joanne Jacobson

Professor of English, Emerita (W)

 

David Lavinsky

Associate Professor of English (W)

 

William Lee

Associate Professor of English, Emeritus (W)

 

Matt Miller

Associate Professor of English (B)

Chair, English Department

 

Erik Mintz

Adjunct Instructor in English (B)

 

Nora Nachumi

Professor of English

 

Richard Nochimson

Professor Emeritus of English

 

Seamus O'Malley

Associate Professor of English (B)

 

Katherine Payne

Instructor in Writing (B/W)

 

Ann Peters

Associate Professor of English (B)

 

David Puretz

Lecturer in English (W)

 

Carrie Shanafelt

Instructor of British/American Literature

 

Linda Shires

David and Ruth Gottesman Professor of English, Emerita (B) 

 

Norma Silbermintz

Adjunct Instructor in English (W)

 

Elizabeth Stewart

Associate Professor of English (W)

 

Fred Sugarman

Adjunct Instructor in English (W)

Associate Dean of app College

 

Brian Trimboli

Lecturer in English (W)

 

Cynthia Wachtell

Research Associate Professor of American Studies (B)

Director, S. Daniel Abraham Honors Program

 

Manfred Wiedhorn

Professor of English, Emeritus

 

 

English Major

Students can choose between two concentrations in the English major, Literary Studies or Creative Writing. 

Literary Studies Concentration: 33 Total Credits 

Required courses:

  • ENG 2010, Interpreting Texts, to be taken within the first two semesters of study for the major
  • Eight electives, two of which may be ENG Core courses numbered 1001–1099, and two of which maybe Creative Writing courses (ENG 1300–1899)
  • ENG 3005, Advanced Research Seminar (only offered in the Fall)
  • ENG 4001, Senior Colloquium (only offered in the Spring) 

Creative Writing Concentration: 33 Total Credits

Required courses:

  • ENG 2010, Interpreting Texts, to be taken within the first two semesters of study for the major
  • Three literary studies courses, two of which may be ENG Core courses numbered 1001–1099
  • Five creative writing courses (ENG 1300–1899)
  • ENG 3005, Advanced Research Seminar (only offered in the Fall)
  • ENG 4001, Senior Colloquium (only offered in the Spring) 

Notes for both Concentrations:

  • FYWR 1020/H may be taken during the same semester as ENG 2010 but is a pre-requisite for all other ENG courses except Core ENG courses numbered 1001–1099. It does not count towards the 33 credits.
  • At least one literary studies course (numbered 2011–3999) must focus on the pre-1700 period (Medieval to Early Modern Literature and Culture)
  • At least one literary studies course (numbered 2011–3999) must focus on the period between 1700-1900. 

Minors

Creative Writing Minor: 15 Total Credits

Required courses:

  • Five Creative Writing courses (ENG 1300–1899)

Note:  FYWR 1020/H is a prerequisite for ENG Creative Writing courses and does not count towards the minor.

English Minor: 18 Total Credits

Required courses:

  • ENG 2010, Interpreting Texts
  • Five ENG courses, of which two of which may be Core ENG courses numbered 1001–1099, and one may be a Creative Writing course (ENG 1300–1899). 

Note:  FYWR 1020/H may be taken during the same semester as ENG 2010 but is a pre-requisite for all other ENG courses. It does not count towards the 18 credits. 

Media Studies Minor: 18 Total Credits

Required courses:

  • ENG 2010, Interpreting Texts
  • Six additional ENG credits (one approved Creative Writing course and one approved 2000- or 3000-level media-related course)
  • One approved three-credit course from another discipline
  • Two additional approved courses (which may be Core courses)

Click here for more information about the Media Studies Minor.

To chart your progress through the English Majors or Minors, please visit the Advising Center’s Fact Sheets.

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