English Programs at Brantford
The English Studies program offers students
the opportunity to explore British, American, Canadian and other
literatures from the Medieval period to the present. In keeping with the
lively and vibrant developments in English studies, our undergraduate courses
are organized in various ways: according to historical periods,
national literatures, genres, themes and theoretical issues. The
undergraduate English program encourages the development of skills in
interpreting a variety of literary and cultural works, including
fiction, film, drama, poetry, non-fiction, and the historical,
political, cultural, and discursive frameworks determining their
composition and reception. Courses introduce students to cross-cultural
approaches, particularly in the context of postcolonial and global
texts, and to the close analysis of the language and form of complex
texts. Students also engage strategically with a variety of theories of
writing, reading, and representation, and conduct independent research,
including evaluating a variety of resources (print, audio-visual, and
virtual). These skills promote intellectual growth, interdisciplinary
thinking, and successful careers after university.
English programs in Brantford are administered by the Faculty of Liberal Arts, but the English curriculum is managed by the EN department of the Faculty of Arts.
Honours and Combination Honours BA program and Minors:
- Kathryn Carter, PhD, Professor
- Ian MacRae, PhD
- Kenneth Paradis, PhD, Program Co-ordinator, English
- Lisa Wood, PhD
- Honours BA English
- Honours BA English in Combination with another Honours BA Program
- English Minor
- Youth and Children: Texts and Contexts Minor
- Professional Writing Minor
Students enrolled in the Faculty of Liberal Arts are required to take the Foundations courses. Students in English are encouraged to take BF299 in their first year along with BF190, and BF290 and BF199 in their second year.
EN107 | Literature and Catastrophe | 0.5 |
EN108 | Literature and the Environment | 0.5 |
EN111 | Literature and Crime | 0.5 |
EN112 | Literature and Love | 0.5 |
EN119 | Reading Fiction | 0.5 |
EN165 | Enriched Literary Studies: Elements and Approaches | 0.5 |
EN190 | Introduction to Academic Writing | 0.5 |
EN200 | The Pleasures of Poetry | 0.5 |
EN201 | Children's Literature | 0.5 |
EN203 | Tragic Drama | 0.5 |
EN206 | Writing for Business | 0.5 |
EN207 | Comic Drama | 0.5 |
EN209 | Special Topics | 0.5 |
EN210 | Literature and Social Change | 0.5 |
EN211 | Roots, Race, Resistance: Post-Colonial Literature | 0.5 |
EN213 | The Child in African Literature & Popular Culture | 0.5 |
EN214 | Medieval Poetry of the Fantastic | 0.5 |
EN218 | Contemporary American Literature | 0.5 |
EN220 | Reading Culture: Strategies and Approaches | 0.5 |
EN222 | Literary Adaptation | 0.5 |
EN225 | Contemporary Women’s Writing | 0.5 |
EN231 | Arthurian Traditions | 0.5 |
EN233 | Shakespeare's Comedies and Romances: Gender and Genre | 0.5 |
EN234 | Shakespeare’s Tragedies and Histories | 0.5 |
EN237 | The Fairy Tale | 0.5 |
EN238 | Tolkien and Fantasy | 0.5 |
EN239 | Classic Science Fiction | 0.5 |
EN240 | Critical Reading and Writing | 0.5 |
EN245 | British Literary Tradition I | 0.5 |
EN246 | British Literary Tradition II | 0.5 |
EN249 | Mystery and Crime Fiction | 0.5 |
EN250 | Literature, Nature, Ecocriticism | 0.5 |
EN252 | Multiculturalism and Literature | 0.5 |
EN263 | Canada Then: Exploring Canadian Literature | 0.5 |
EN264 | American Literary Tradition | 0.5 |
EN265 | American Literature to 1900 | 0.5 |
EN266 | American Literature of the Early 20th Century | 0.5 |
EN267 | Canada Now: Contemporary Canadian Literature | 0.5 |
EN271 | The Creative Process | 0.5 |
EN272 | Introduction to Creative Writing | 0.5 |
EN280 | Introduction to Indigenous Literatures | 0.5 |
EN281 | Contemporary Science Fiction | 0.5 |
EN285 | Tween Literature and Culture | 0.5 |
EN286 | Young Adult Literature | 0.5 |
EN292 | Romantic Radicals | 0.5 |
EN293 | Romantic Dystopians | 0.5 |
EN298 | British and Irish Writers 1900-1920 | 0.5 |
EN299 | Modernism and British Literature Between the Wars | 0.5 |
EN301 | Literary Theory | 0.5 |
EN303 | Advanced Academic Writing | 0.5 |
EN304 | Technical Writing | 0.5 |
EN309 | Special Topics | 0.5 |
EN310 | The Politics of Transgression and Desire | 0.5 |
EN313 | West African Literatures & Cultures | 0.5 |
EN322 | Modern Drama: Experiments in Form | 0.5 |
EN324 | Canadian Women's Writing | 0.5 |
EN330 | Human Rights in Contemporary Cultural Forms | 0.5 |
EN335 | Literature of 9/11 and Beyond | 0.5 |
EN344 | 18th-Century Fiction: Sex, Shopping and Scandal | 0.5 |
EN345 | The British Novel in the 19th Century | 0.5 |
EN346 | The 20th–Century Novel | 0.5 |
EN347 | The Narratives of Empire | 0.5 |
EN364 | Colonialism and Indigeneity | 0.5 |
EN369 | Creative Writing: Nonfiction | 0.5 |
EN370 | Creative Writing: Poetry | 0.5 |
EN371 | Creative Writing: Short Story | 0.5 |
EN372 | History of the English Language | 0.5 |
EN381 | Gaming and Narrative Theory | 0.5 |
EN388 | 18th-Century Literature: From Sense to Sensibility | 0.5 |
EN390 | Chaucer and the Middle Ages | 0.5 |
EN392 | Diversity in the Middle Ages | 0.5 |
EN393 | Elizabethan Poetry and Prose | 0.5 |
EN394 | Elizabethan and Jacobean Drama | 0.5 |
EN395 | 17th-Century Literature | 0.5 |
EN396 | Mid-Victorian Literature: Culture and Anarchy | 0.5 |
EN397 | Later Victorian Literature: Dissonance and Decadence | 0.5 |
EN399 | Postmodern Narratives | 0.5 |
EN400 | Studies in Language and Discourse | 0.5 |
EN409 | Special Topics | 0.5 |
EN410 | Topics in Gender | 0.5 |
EN420 | Topics in Genre | 0.5 |
EN430 | Studies of an Individual Author | 0.5 |
EN440 | Advanced Studies of a Period | 0.5 |
EN450 | Texts and Contexts | 0.5 |
EN460 | Topics in Culture | 0.5 |
EN470 | Topics in Theory | 0.5 |
EN489 | Directed Study | 0.5 |