English

University of California, Berkeley

This is an archived copy of the 2014-15 guide. To access the most recent version of the guide, please visit http://guide.berkeley.edu/.

Overview

The Department of English offers courses in literature, in language, and in writing. The courses in literature have many different focuses: major authors, historical periods, genres, critical theories and methods as well as cultural and multicultural studies. Courses in language offer instruction in both the history and the structure of the English language. Writing courses offer training in both expository and creative writing.

Entry-Level Writing Requirement

Students must have fulfilled the Entry Level Writing Requirement before taking any course in the Department of English. For further information, see the College Writing Programs  or the Undergraduate Education section of this bulletin.

Undergraduate Programs

English : BA or Minor

Graduate Program

English : PhD

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Courses

English

ENGLISH N1A First-Year Reading and Composition 3 Units

Training in writing expository prose. N1A. Instruction in expository writing in conjunction with reading literature. Satisfies the first half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

ENGLISH N1B First-Year Reading and Composition 3 Units

Training in writing expository prose. N1B. Further instruction in expository writing in conjunction with reading literature. Satisfies the second half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

ENGLISH R1A Reading and Composition 4 Units

Training in writing expository prose. Instruction in expository writing in conjunction with reading literature. Satisfies the first half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

ENGLISH R1AN First-Year Reading and Composition 3 Units

Training in writing expository prose. Instruction in writing and reading expository prose. Satisfies the first half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

ENGLISH R1B Reading and Composition 4 Units

Training in writing expository prose. Further instruction in expository writing in conjunction with reading literature. Satisfies the second half of the Reading and Composition requirement.

ENGLISH 17 Shakespeare 4 Units

Lectures on Shakespeare and reading of his best works.

ENGLISH 20 Modern British and American Literature 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of major authors of modern British and American literature.

ENGLISH 24 Freshman Seminars 1 Unit

The Berkeley Seminar Program has been designed to provide new students with the opportunity to explore an intellectual topic with a faculty member in a small-seminar setting. Berkeley Seminars are offered in all campus departments, and topics vary from department to department and semester to semester.

ENGLISH 25 English as a Language 4 Units

An introduction to the grammar of English, including phonology (sound structure), morphology (word structure), syntax (sentence structure), semantics (linguistic meaning), and pragmatics (contextual meaning), with consideration of different varieties of English in use within the United States and throughout the world, and comparison of English with other languages.

ENGLISH 26 Introduction to the Study of Poetry 4 Units

Lectures and discussion on poetry intended to develop the student's ability to understand and evaluate a poem. Designed primarily for students whose major is not English, but majors and prospective majors are welcome.

ENGLISH 27 Introduction to the Study of Fiction 4 Units

Lectures and discussion intended to develop the student's ability to understand and evaluate fiction. Designed primarily for students whose major is not English, but majors and prospective majors are welcome.

ENGLISH 28 Introduction to the Study of Drama 4 Units

Lectures and discussion intended to develop the student's ability to read, understand and evaluate plays. Designed primarily for students whose major is not English, but majors and prospective majors are welcome.

ENGLISH 31AC Literature of American Cultures 4 Units

An introduction to the ethnic diversity of American literature. The course will take substantial account of the literature of three or more of the following groups: African Americans, Native Americans, Asian Americans, Chicanos/Latinos, and European Americans. Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" well before the beginning of the semester for details.

ENGLISH 33 African American Literature and Culture 4 Units

Major literary and cultural texts in the African American tradition from origins to the present.

ENGLISH 37 Chicana/o Literature and Culture 4 Units

Major literary and cultural texts in the Chicana/o tradition from origins to the present.

ENGLISH 43A Introduction to the Writing of Short Fiction 4 Units

A workshop course intended for students who have recently begun to write fiction or who have not previously taken a course in creative writing.

ENGLISH 43B Introduction to the Writing of Verse 4 Units

A workshop course intended for students who have recently begun to write verse or who have not previously taken a course in creative writing.

ENGLISH 45A Literature in English: Through Milton 4 Units

Historical survey of literature in English: Beginnings through Milton.

ENGLISH 45B Literature in English: The Late-17th through the Mid-19th Century 4 Units

Historical survey of literature in English: The late-17th through the mid-19th century.

ENGLISH 45C Literature in English: The Mid-19th through the 20th Century 4 Units

Historical survey of literature in English: the mid-19th through the 20th century.

ENGLISH N45A Literature in English 3 Units

ENGLISH N45B Literature in English 3 Units

ENGLISH N45C Literature in English 3 Units

ENGLISH C77 Introduction to Environmental Studies 4 Units

This integrative course, taught by a humanities professor and a science professor, surveys current global environmental issues; introduces the basic intellectual tools of environmental science; investigates ways the human relationship to nature has been imagined in literary and philosophical traditions; and examines how tools of scientific and literary analysis; scientific method, and imaginative thinking can clarify what is at stake in environmental issues and ecological citizenship.

ENGLISH 80K Children's Literature 4 Units

The study of selected works written for children.

ENGLISH 84 Sophomore Seminar 1 or 2 Units

Sophomore seminars are small interactive courses offered by faculty members in departments all across the campus. Sophomore seminars offer opportunity for close, regular intellectual contact between faculty members and students in the crucial second year. The topics vary from department to department and semester to semester. Enrollment limited to 15 sophomores.

ENGLISH 98 Directed Group Study for Freshmen and Sophomores 1 - 4 Units

Group study in a field that may not coincide with that of any regular course and must be specific enough to enable students to write essays based upon their studies.

ENGLISH 98BC Berkeley Connect 1 Unit

Berkeley Connect is a mentoring program, offered through various academic departments, that helps students build intellectual community. Over the course of a semester, enrolled students participate in regular small-group discussions facilitated by a graduate student mentor (following a faculty-directed curriculum), meet with their graduate student mentor for one-on-one academic advising, attend lectures and panel discussions featuring department faculty and alumni, and go on field trips to campus resources. Students are not required to be declared majors in order to participate.

Course may be repeated for credit.

ENGLISH 99 Independent Study 1 - 4 Units

Meetings to be arranged. Reading and regular conference with the instructor in a field that shall not coincide with that of any regular course and shall be specific enough to enable students to write essays based on their studies.

ENGLISH 101 The History of the English Language 4 Units

The history of the English language from its Indo-European roots, through its Old, Middle, and Early Modern periods, as preserved in the literary heritage, to its different forms in use throughout the world today.

ENGLISH 102 Topics in the English Language 4 Units

Topics vary from semester to semester.

ENGLISH 104 Introduction to Old English 4 Units

Basic introduction to the vocabulary, grammar, and syntax of Old English designed to get students reading original texts immediately. Typical Old English texts include: riddles, charms, medical recipes, laws, chronicles, elegies, saints' lives, heroic poetry, and monster lore.

ENGLISH 105 Anglo-Saxon England 4 Units

Instruction in the basic elements of the Old English language with analysis of literary and cultural issues relating to the formative period of the English nation. (Undergraduates who pass 105 with a grade of B+ or higher, or with permission of the 205B instructor, are eligible to enroll in 205B, Beowulf.)

ENGLISH C107 The English Bible As Literature 4 Units

Introduction to the English Bible treated as a literary work.

ENGLISH N107 English Bible as Literature 3 Units

Introduction to the English Bible treated as a literary work.

ENGLISH 110 Medieval Literature 4 Units

Development of literary form and idiom throughout the Christian West from the first to the fifteenth century.

ENGLISH 111 Chaucer 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of Chaucer's major works.

ENGLISH 112 Middle English Literature 4 Units

Middle English literature exclusive of Chaucer studied in the original language.

ENGLISH 114A English Drama 4 Units

English drama to 1603.

ENGLISH 114B English Drama 4 Units

English drama from 1603 to 1700.

ENGLISH N114A English Drama 3 Units

English drama to 1603.

ENGLISH N114B English Drama 3 Units

English drama from 1603 to 1700.

ENGLISH 115A The English Renaissance 4 Units

Beginnings of the English Renaissance and literature of the 16th century.

ENGLISH 115B The English Renaissance 4 Units

Literature of the 17th century.

ENGLISH N115A The English Renaissance 3 Units

Beginnings of the English Renaissance and literature of the 16th century.

ENGLISH N115B The English Renaissance 3 Units

Literature of the 17th century.

ENGLISH 116 Backgrounds of English Literature in the Continental Renaissance 4 Units

A survey of the principal continental documents which are important to an understanding of the English Renaissance.

ENGLISH 117A Shakespeare 4 Units

A chronological survey of Shakespeare's career.

ENGLISH 117B Shakespeare 4 Units

A chronological survey of Shakespeare's career.

ENGLISH 117F Shakespeare and Film 4 Units

Close study of the texts and films based on 8 to 10 plays. Lectures will emphasize the critical implications of transposing plays to film. The goal of the course is the critical understanding of Shakespeare, and the course satisfies the departmental requirement of a course on Shakespeare in the major.

ENGLISH 117J Shakespeare 4 Units

Study of selected plays, with practice in various critical approaches, e.g., establishing text, relation to source, changing concepts of comedy and tragedy, influence of theatrical conditions on technique.

ENGLISH 117S Shakespeare 4 Units

Lectures on Shakespeare and reading of his best works.

ENGLISH 117T Shakespeare in the Theatre 4 Units

The interrelation of Elizabethan plays and stage practices. Classroom exercises, written assignments, and a final examination. The course will usually culminate in the performance of a play.

ENGLISH N117S Shakespeare 3 Units

Lectures on Shakespeare and reading of his best works.

ENGLISH 118 Milton 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of Milton's major works.

ENGLISH N118 Milton 3 Units

Lectures on and discussion of Milton's major works.

ENGLISH 119 Literature of the Restoration and Early Eighteenth Century 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of Dryden, Swift, Pope, and some of their contemporaries.

ENGLISH 120 Literature of the Later 18th Century 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of later eighteenth-century British literature.

ENGLISH 121 Romantic Period 4 Units

Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats, and contemporaries.

ENGLISH N121 Romantic Period 3 Units

Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley, Keats, and contemporaries.

ENGLISH 122 Victorian Period 4 Units

Literature of the Victorian period with an emphasis on poetry and nonfiction prose.

ENGLISH 125A The English Novel 4 Units

Defoe through Scott.

ENGLISH 125B The English Novel 4 Units

Dickens through Conrad.

ENGLISH 125C The European Novel 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of major European novels.

ENGLISH 125D The 20th-Century Novel 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of major novels of the twentieth century.

ENGLISH 125E The Contemporary Novel 4 Units

Important contemporary novels, some of which may be read in translation.

ENGLISH N125B The English Novel 3 Units

Dickens through Conrad.

ENGLISH N125D The 20th-Century Novel 3 Units

Lectures on and discussion of major novels of the twentieth century.

ENGLISH N125E The Contemporary Novel 3 Units

Important contemporary novels, some of which may be read in translation.

ENGLISH 126 British Literature: 1900-1945 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of British literature written between 1900 and 1945.

ENGLISH 127 Modern Poetry 4 Units

British and American poetry: 1900 to the present.

ENGLISH 128 Modern Drama 4 Units

British and American drama: 1860 to the present.

ENGLISH 130A American Literature: Before 1800 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of the major writers of the early American period.

ENGLISH 130B American Literature: 1800-1865 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of the major texts of the American Renaissance.

ENGLISH 130C American Literature: 1865-1900 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of American literature from the Civil War through 1900.

ENGLISH 130D American Literature: 1900-1945 4 Units

A survey of modern American literature.

ENGLISH N130A American Literature: Before 1800 3 Units

Lectures on and discussion of the major writers of the early American period.

ENGLISH N130B American Literature: 1800-1865 3 Units

Lectures on and discussion of the major texts of the American Renaissance.

ENGLISH N130D American Literature: 1900-1945 3 Units

A survey of modern American literature.

ENGLISH 131 American Poetry 4 Units

A historical survey of American poetry and its backgrounds.

ENGLISH 132 American Novel 4 Units

A survey of major American novels.

ENGLISH N132 American Novel 3 Units

A survey of major American novels.

ENGLISH 133A African American Literature and Culture Before 1917 4 Units

Major literary and cultural texts in the African American tradition from origins through World War I.

ENGLISH 133B African American Literature and Culture Since 1917 4 Units

Major literary and cultural texts in the African American tradition from the Harlem Renaissance through the twentieth century.

ENGLISH 133T Topics in African American Literature and Culture 4 Units

Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH 134 Contemporary Literature 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of selected works written since the Second World War.

ENGLISH N134 Contemporary Literature 3 Units

Lectures on and discussion of selected works written since the Second World War.

ENGLISH 135AC Literature of American Cultures 4 Units

Study of the ethnic diversity of American literature. The course will take substantial account of the literature of three or more of the following groups: African Americans, Native Americans, Asian Americans, Chicanos/Latinos, and European Americans. Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" well before the beginning of the semester for details.

ENGLISH N135 Literature of American Cultures 3 Units

Study of the ethnic diversity of American literature. The course will take substantial account of the literature of three or more of the following groups: African Americans, Native Americans, Asian Americans, Chicanos/Latinos, and European Americans. Topics vary from summer to summer.

ENGLISH S135 Literature of American Cultures 3 Units

Study of the ethnic diversity of American literature. The course will take substantial account of the literature of three or more of the following groups: African Americans, Native Americans, Asian Americans, Chicanos/Latinos, and European Americans. Topics vary from semester to semester. Topic for this summer: Theorizing Children's Literature in American Cultures.

ENGLISH C136 Topics in American Studies 4 Units

A course on the intellectual, cultural, historical, and social backgrounds to American literature. Topics will vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for current offerings well before the start of the semester.

ENGLISH 137A Chicana/o Literature and Culture to 1910 4 Units

Major literary and cultural texts in the Chicana/o tradition from origins through the Mexican Revolution of 1910.

ENGLISH 137B Chicana/o Literature and Culture Since 1910 4 Units

Major literary and cultural texts in the Chicana/o tradition from 1910 through the contemporary Chicana/o period.

ENGLISH 137T Topics in Chicana/o Literature and Culture 4 Units

Topics in Chicana/o literature and culture.

ENGLISH 138 Studies in World Literature in English 4 Units

An examination of various aspects of the modern literature written in English in Africa, the Caribbean, India, and Southeast Asia. Topics will vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for current offerings well before the start of the semester.

ENGLISH 139 The Cultures of English 4 Units

Literatures of various regions in which English is one of the spoken languages, such as Canada, the Caribbean, Australia, Africa, India; and the writings of specific groups or distinctive cultures in the English-speaking world, including the U.S. and the British Isles. Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for current offerings well before the start of the semester.

ENGLISH 141 Modes of Writing (Exposition, Fiction, Verse, Etc.) 4 Units

Writing in connection with reading in recent English literature and its continental background.

ENGLISH N141 Modes of Writing (Exposition, Fiction, Verse, Etc.) 3 Units

Writing in connection with reading in recent English literature and its continental background.

ENGLISH 143A Short Fiction 4 Units

A seminar in writing short stories.

ENGLISH 143B Verse 4 Units

A seminar in writing poetry.

ENGLISH 143C Long Narrative 4 Units

Students will work through the semester on a single project, either fiction (novel) or nonfiction (biography, history).

ENGLISH 143D Expository and Critical Writing 4 Units

A seminar in expository and critical writing.

ENGLISH 143E Playwriting 4 Units

A seminar in playwriting.

ENGLISH 143N Prose Nonfiction 4 Units

A seminar in the writing of prose nonfiction as an art.

ENGLISH 143T Poetry Translation Workshop 4 Units

Open to those who wish to assimilate foreign influences for writing poetry or to seek a fuller understanding of any foreign poetry by rendering it into English.

ENGLISH C143V Visual Autobiography 4 Units

Since visual and literary studies have historically been viewed as separate disciplines, we will use theories from both to study those forms of self-representation that defy disciplinary boundaries, or what we call "visual autobiography." The course aims to help students become conversant with the elements of alphabetic literacy (reading and writing) and visual literacy (observing and making) in order to develop a third distinctive textual/visual literacy.

ENGLISH 152 Women Writers 4 Units

Topics will vary from semester to semester.

ENGLISH N152 Women Writers 3 Units

Topics will vary from summer to summer. Topic for this summer: Modern British Women Novelists.

ENGLISH 160 Methods and Materials of Literary Criticism 4 Units

An introduction to issues in literary criticism with emphasis on application of principles and methods to selected literary texts.

ENGLISH 161 Introduction to Literary Theory 4 Units

This class will focus on literary theory.

ENGLISH 165 Special Topics 4 Units

Designed primarily for English majors. Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH 165AC Special Topics in American Cultures 4 Units

Designed primarily for English majors. Study of a special topic related to the diversity of the United States. Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH 166 Special Topics 4 Units

Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH 166AC Special Topics in American Cultures 4 Units

Study of a special topic related to the diversity of the United States. Topics vary from semester to semester. Student's should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH N166 Special Topics 3 Units

Topics vary from summer to summer.

ENGLISH 170 Literature and the Arts 4 Units

Studies in the relationship of literature in English to the arts.

ENGLISH 171 Literature and Sexual Identity 4 Units

Sexual identity in literature in relation to thematics, literary convention, psychology, and the particular politics and sociology of individual cultures. The course may range broadly over Western literature or concentrate on one historical period.

ENGLISH 172 Literature and Psychology 4 Units

Studies in the relationship of literature in English to psychology.

ENGLISH 173 The Language and Literature of Films 4 Units

Studies in film as a mode of representing reality; cinematic techniques and the "language" of film. Lectures, class discussions, and film viewings.

ENGLISH N173 The Language and Literature of Films 3 Units

Studies in film as a mode of representing reality; cinematic techniques and the language of film. Lectures, class discussions, and film viewings.

ENGLISH 174 Literature and History 4 Units

Topics will vary from semester to semester.

ENGLISH 175 Literature and Disability 4 Units

Studies of the relationships among literature, culture, and "disability." The course may range broadly or concentrate on one historical period, genre, or issue.

ENGLISH 176 Literature and Popular Culture 4 Units

Topics will vary from semester to semester.

ENGLISH N176 Literature and Popular Culture 3 Units

ENGLISH 177 Literature and Philosophy 4 Units

Studies in the relationship of literature in English to philosophy.

ENGLISH N177 Literature and Philosophy 3 Units

Studies in the relationship of English literature to philosophy.

ENGLISH 178 British and American Folklore 4 Units

Study of representative forms of folklore and oral literature among the English-speaking people of the British Isles and North America.

ENGLISH 179 Literature and Linguistics 4 Units

Study of the English language as a medium for literature. Topics may include rhyme, alliteration, meter, poetic syntax, metaphor, irony, the language of point of view, narrative tense, orality, literacy, etc.

ENGLISH 180A Autobiography 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of autobiographical forms.

ENGLISH 180C Comedy 4 Units

Studies of representative comic forms, techniques, and points of view.

ENGLISH 180E The Epic 4 Units

Reading and discussion of epics, considering their cultural and historical contexts, the nature of their composition, and the development of the form.

ENGLISH 180H Short Story 4 Units

Lectures on and discussion of the form of the short story.

ENGLISH 180J The Essay 4 Units

Study of the essay as a literary form, the circumstances of its use and development, and its fortunes in twentieth-century culture.

ENGLISH 180L Lyric Verse 4 Units

Study of lyric forms and techniques.

ENGLISH 180N The Novel 4 Units

Study of the novel as a literary genre, its formal development and variations, its technical possibilities, its cultural functions. Topics may vary from semester to semester.

ENGLISH 180R The Romance 4 Units

Study of the romance as a literary genre. Topics may vary from semester to semester; focus may be historical or restricted to a particular period (e.g., medieval, modern).

ENGLISH 180S Satire 4 Units

Study of representative satire forms, techniques, and points of view.

ENGLISH 180T Tragedy 4 Units

Study of representative tragic forms, techniques, and points of view.

ENGLISH 180Z Science Fiction 4 Units

Study of speculative fiction (or science fiction) as a genre. Topics may vary from semester to semester. Focus may be historical or thematic.

ENGLISH N180A Autobiography 3 Units

Lectures on and discussion of autobiographical forms.

ENGLISH N180H Short Story 3 Units

Lectures on and discussion of the form of the short story.

ENGLISH N180Z Science Fiction 3 Units

A survey of science fiction which includes both short stories and novels. The focus will be on the analysis of the texts and on the history and theory of the genre.

ENGLISH 190 Research Seminar 4 Units

Research-oriented and designed for upper-division English majors. Intensive examination of critical approaches, literary theory, or a special topic in literary and cultural studies. Topics vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH H195A Honors Course 4 Units

This is a two-semester course, graded IP at the end of the first semester. During the second semester, each student will write an honors thesis. Completion of the thesis is required for a passing grade in the course.

ENGLISH H195B Honors Course 4 Units

This is a two-semester course, graded IP at the end of the first semester. During the second semester, each student will write an honors thesis. Completion of the thesis is required for a passing grade in the course.

ENGLISH 198 Directed Group Study 1 - 4 Units

Enrollment is restricted by university regulations. Group study in a field that shall not coincide with that of any regular course and shall be specific enough to enable students to write essays based upon their studies.

ENGLISH 198BC Berkeley Connect 1 Unit

Berkeley Connect is a mentoring program, offered through various academic departments, that helps students build intellectual community. Over the course of a semester, enrolled students participate in regular small-group discussions facilitated by a graduate student mentor (following a faculty-directed curriculum), meet with their graduate student mentor for one-on-one academic advising, attend lectures and panel discussions featuring department faculty and alumni, and go on field trips to campus resources. Students are not required to be declared majors in order to participate. Course may be repeated for credit.

ENGLISH 199 Supervised Independent Study for Advanced Undergraduates 1 - 4 Units

Meetings to be arranged. Enrollment is restricted by university regulations. Reading and conference with the instructor in a field that shall not coincide with that of any regular course and shall be specific enough to enable students to write essays based upon their studies.

ENGLISH 200 Problems in the Study of Literature 4 Units

Approaches to literary study, including textual analysis, scholarly methodology and bibliography, critical theory and practice.

ENGLISH 201B Topics in the History of the English Language 4 Units

ENGLISH 203 Graduate Readings 4 Units

Graduate lecture courses surveying broad areas and periods of literary history, and directing students in wide reading. Offerings vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH 205A Old English 4 Units

ENGLISH 205B Old English 4 Units

ENGLISH 211 Chaucer 4 Units

Discussion of Chaucer's major works.

ENGLISH 212 Readings in Middle English 4 Units

Rapid reading of selections in Middle English, from the twelfth century through the fifteenth.

ENGLISH 217 Shakespeare 4 Units

Discussion of selected works of Shakespeare.

ENGLISH 218 Milton 4 Units

Discussion of Milton's major works.

ENGLISH 243A Fiction Writing Workshop 4 Units

A writing workshop in fiction for graduate students.

ENGLISH 243B Poetry Writing Workshop 4 Units

A writing workshop in poetry for graduate students.

ENGLISH 243N Prose Nonfiction Writing Workshop 4 Units

A writing workshop in prose nonfiction for graduate students.

ENGLISH 246C Graduate Proseminars: Renaissance: Sixteenth century (excluding, or at least not prominently featuring, Skakespeare) 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246D Graduate Proseminars: Renaissance: Seventeenth century through Milton 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246E Graduate Proseminars: Restoration and early 18th century 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246F Graduate Proseminars: Later 18th century 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246G Graduate Proseminars: Romantic 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246H Graduate Proseminars: Victorian 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246I Graduate Proseminars: American to 1855 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246J Graduate Proseminars: American 1855 to 1900 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246K Graduate Proseminars: Literature in English 1900 to 1945 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 246L Graduate Proseminars: Literature in English 1945 to Present 4 Units

Proseminars in the major chronological fields of English and American literature providing graduate instruction in scholarly and critical approaches appropriate to each field.

ENGLISH 250 Research Seminars 4 Units

Required of all Ph.D. students. Advanced study in various fields, leading to a substantial piece of writing. Offerings vary from semester to semester. Students should consult the department's "Announcement of Classes" for offerings well before the beginning of the semester.

ENGLISH 298 Special Studies 4 - 12 Units

Normally reserved for students directly engaged upon the doctoral dissertation.

ENGLISH 299 Special Study 1 - 12 Units

Normally reserved for students directly engaged upon the doctoral dissertation.

ENGLISH 310 Field Studies in Tutoring Writing 1 - 3 Units

Tutoring Berkeley undergraduates in College Writing R1A, R1A, R1B, and other writing and/or literature courses. Seminar topics: the writing process, responding to writing, composition theory, grammar, collaborative learning, tutoring methods. Tutors keep a weekly journal, read assigned articles, videotape their tutoring, and write a final paper. This course cannot be used toward fulfillment of the major requirements.

ENGLISH 375 The Teaching of Composition and Literature 3 Units

Discussion of course aims, instructional methods, grading standards, and special problems in the teaching of composition and literature, with practice in handling sample essays. When given for graduate student instructors in the ENGLISH R1A-R1B Program or the English 45 series, the course will include class visitation.

ENGLISH 602 Individual Study for Doctoral Students 1 - 12 Units

Individual study in consultation with the major field adviser, intended to provide an opportunity for qualified students to prepare themselves for the various examinations required of candidates for the Ph.D. May not be used for unit or residence requirements for the doctoral degree.

Faculty

Professors

Elizabeth Abel, Professor. Feminist theory, psychoanalysis, Virginia Woolf, race and gender.
Research Profile

Charles F. Altieri, Professor. Literature and the visual arts, Wittgenstein, Modern American poetry, Contemporary American poetry, history of aesthetic philosophy.
Research Profile

Mitchell Breitwieser, Professor. American literature, philosophy and religion.
Research Profile

Ian Duncan, Professor. English, the novel, British literature 1750-1900, Scottish literature, history and theory of fiction, Scottish enlightenment/romanticism, Scott, literature and the human sciences, Darwin.
Research Profile

Cecil S. Giscombe, Professor.

Steven Goldsmith, Professor.

Dorothy J. Hale, Professor. English, American literature, the novel, narrative theory, Faulkner and the modern novel of consciousness, American Gothic.
Research Profile

Robert L. Hass, Professor. English, poetry, poetry writing, American poetry, history of the short poem in English, contemporary literature, translation, environmental writing, literature and the environment, the natural history tradition in American writing.
Research Profile

Lyn Hejinian, Professor. English, American literature, poetry writing, translation, modernist and postmodern literature, American postwar experimental literature, Gertrude Stein, the objectivists, language writing, Soviet Russian poetry, small press publishing, feminism.
Research Profile

Abdul R. Janmohamed, Professor. English, third world literature in English, African American fiction, colonial literature and critical theory, Richard Wright and the theory of subjection, lynching.
Research Profile

Steven Justice, Professor. English, late medieval literature, medieval Latin, Langland, Chaucer, hagiography, Latin religious thought, literary criticism.
Research Profile

Jeffrey Knapp, Professor. Religion, nationalism, theater, English literature, Shakespeare, English renaissance, Spenser, drama, imperialism, epic poetry, authorship, mass entertainment.
Research Profile

Jerome Mcgann, Professor.

Donald Mcquade, Professor. English, advertising, 20th century American literature and culture, theory and practice of non-fiction, literature and popular culture, the American Renaissance, the essay as literature.
Research Profile

D.A. Miller, Professor. The novel, gay and cultural studies, classic cinema.
Research Profile

Katherine O'Brien O'Keeffe, PhD, Professor. Old English language and literature, textual editing.
Research Profile

Samuel Otter, Professor. English, African American literature, 19th century American literature, 17th and 18th century American literature, Herman Melville, race in American culture, literature and history, discourse and ideology, close reading.
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Genaro M. Padilla, Professor. English, American literature, Chicano literature, minority literature, ethnic autobiography.
Research Profile

Susan Schweik, Professor. Feminist theory, cultural studies, English, American poetry, disability studies, 20th-century poetry, literature and politics, war literature.
Research Profile

George A. Starr, Professor. English, the novel, history, English literature, social and intellectual history 1660-1800, prose style, biography and autobiography, especially in relation to fiction, bibliography and textual criticism, literature of California and the west.
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James G. Turner, Professor. Gender, sexuality, English, 16th-18th-Century English, Italian and French literature, and literature, 17th-Century political writing, landscape and the city, Enlightenment materialism, sexuality in Renaissance art.
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Associate Professors

Oliver Arnold, Associate Professor.

Stephen Michael Best, Associate Professor. Film, English literature, African American literature, literary culture, legal culture.
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Charles Daniel Blanton, Associate Professor. Modernism, modern poetry, 19th- and 20th-century British literature, aesthetic and cultural theory.
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Kathleen Donegan, Associate Professor. Colonial America, early America, Native America, early Caribbean.
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Eric Falci, Associate Professor. 20th-Century Irish and British literature, contemporary Irish and British poetry, poetry and music.
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Mark A. Goble, Associate Professor.

Marcial Gonzalez, Associate Professor. Theory, marxism, Chicano literature, twentieth-century American ethnic literatures, novel, Mexican American, migrant farm worker narratives.
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Kevis Goodman, Associate Professor. Psychoanalysis, English, 18th-century and romantic literature, later 17th-century poetry, sensibility, history of science.
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Kristin Hanson, Associate Professor. Linguistics, English, poetry, meter, rhyme, and alliteration, phonological theory, English grammar and usage.
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Donna V. Jones, Associate Professor. Critical theory, English, modernism, literature and philosophy, literature of the Americas, literature of the African Diaspora, postcolonial literature and theory, narrative and historiography.
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David Landreth, Associate Professor. English Renaissance literature 1500-1660.
Research Profile

Celeste Langan, Associate Professor. English, romantic poetry, 19th century literature, Wordsworth, Carlyle, Hardy, Rousseau, the French Revolution, Marxist theory, literature and the social sciences.
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Colleen Lye, Associate Professor. Postcolonial theory, critical theory, cultural studies, Asian American literature, 20th and 21st century literature, world literature.
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Jennifer Miller, Associate Professor. English, philology, paleography, hagiography, medieval literature, literature in old & middle English, historiography, medieval rhetorical culture, insular political relations, multilingualism, translation & textual transmission, dialectology.
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Maura Bridget Nolan, Associate Professor. Chaucer, drama, Middle English literature, Gower, Lydgate, medieval, 16th century, literary form, style.
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Geoffrey O'Brien, Associate Professor. Modernism, Creative Writing, 20th and 21st century poetry and poetics.
Research Profile

Joanna M Picciotto, Associate Professor.

Kent Puckett, Associate Professor. English, the novel, nineteenth-century British literature and literary theory, sociability, psychoanalysis and affect.
Research Profile

Scott Andrew Saul, Associate Professor. English, African American studies, 20th century American literature and culture, performance studies, jazz studies, histories of the avante-garde.
Research Profile

Katherine Snyder, Associate Professor. Gender studies, masculinity, late 19th-20th- and 21st-century British and American Literature and Culture, narrative and the novel, the city, post-apocalyptic fiction.
Research Profile

Janet Linda Sorensen, Associate Professor.

Elisa C. Tamarkin, Associate Professor. American literature to 1900.
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Bryan Wagner, Associate Professor. Critical theory, African American literature, historiography.
Research Profile

Hertha D. Sweet Wong, Associate Professor. English, American literature, native American literature, autobiography, ethnic American literature.
Research Profile

Assistant Professors

Catherine Flynn, Assistant Professor.

Joseph Lavery, Assistant Professor.

Steven Sunwoo Lee, Assistant Professor.

David Marno, Assistant Professor.

C. Namwali Serpell, Assistant Professor.

Emily V. Thornbury, Assistant Professor. Anglo-Saxon and medieval literature.
Research Profile

Lecturers

Mrs. Melanie Abrams, Lecturer.

Vikram Chandra, Lecturer.

Thomas Farber, Lecturer.

Georgina Kleege, Lecturer.

John Shoptaw, Lecturer.

Contact Information

Department of English

322 Wheeler Hall

Phone: 510-642-3467

Fax: 510-642-8738

Visit Department Website

Department Chair

Katherine O’Brien O’Keefe, PhD

427 Wheeler Hall

kobok@berkeley.edu

Director of Undergraduate Studies

Scott Saul, PhD

441 Wheeler Hall

ssaul@berkeley.edu

Undergraduate Adviser

Ken Mahru

319 Wheeler Hall

Phone: 510-643-2494

kenmahru@berkeley.edu

Graduate Adviser

Samuel Rifkin

319 Wheeler Hall

Phone: 510-642-6732

scrifkin@berkeley.edu

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