Areas of Study

The Cornell English Department offers a broad perspective on the discipline of English language studies. The areas of expertise professed by its faculty represent the full spectrum of professional sub-fields, and interdisciplinary affiliations further extend the department’s intellectual and creative engagement. These areas and affiliations necessarily overlap and blend; they capture only a partial profile of the diversity of the Department’s contributions to the university and the profession.

Creative Writing

Faculty
Alice Fulton
Phyllis Janowitz
Michael Koch
J. Robert Lennon
Ken McClane
Maureen McCoy
Robert Morgan
Ernesto Quiñonez
Lyrae Van Clief-Stefanon
Stephanie Vaughn
Helena Maria Viramontes
Emeritus
Lamar Herrin
Alison Lurie
Dan McCall
James McConkey
Edgar Rosenberg

epoch officeThe Creative Writing Program offers workshop courses in fiction and poetry writing at the undergraduate and graduate levels. More than 500 undergraduates enroll in the program’s courses annually, many from schools outside the College of Arts and Sciences. English majors may concentrate in creative writing. Classes open to undergraduates from throughout the university are Creative Writing 280-281, Narrative Writing, Verse Writing, and the Senior Writing Seminar. The graduate-level program offers the MFA degree. During the academic year, the Creative Writing Program sponsors readings by distinguished guest writers and writers-in-residence. Students at all levels may participate in the open reading series “The Lounge Hour Reading Series.” A reading by graduating MFA students is held in the spring. Readings and receptions are free and open to all. The award-winning national literary journal Epoch is published by the Department of English and the Creative Writing Program.

Minority, Indigenous, and Third World Studies (MITWS)

Faculty
Mary Pat Brady
Eric Cheyfitz
Laura Donaldson
Grant Farred
Kenneth McClane
Satya Mohanty
Helena Viramontes
Shelley Wong
Dagmawi Woubshet

Kenneth McClaneMITWS is an area of concentration for undergraduates and graduate students in the English Department. Its basic premise is that the literatures of U.S. minority groups and third world (especially postcolonial) societies share and reflect similar histories of imperial conquest, slavery, and colonial rule. Knowledge of these literary and cultural traditions is thus deepened when they are approached both historically and comparatively. Students who take MITWS courses are encouraged to think about literature and culture in a global context, examining theoretical questions about history, politics, and ideology through their close readings of texts. Faculty and teaching assistants offer an unusually wide range of courses to facilitate original and imaginative work within and across African American, Asian American, American Indian, U.S. Latino/a, South Asian, Pacific, Caribbean, and African literatures, as well as other sub-fields in colonial/postcolonial, diaspora, and cultural studies.

American literary studies

Faculty
Kevin Attell
Mary Pat Brady
Jeremy Braddock
Eric Cheyfitz
Debra Fried
Roger Gilbert
Molly Hite
Phyllis Janowitz
Laura Donaldson
Kate McCullough
Jonathan Monroe
Robert R. Morgan
Shirley Samuels
Shelley Wong
Emeritus
Dan E. McCall
Lamar Herrin

writingThe Cornell English Department offers a full range of undergraduate-level courses in American literary history, from the colonial period to the present. Students also have the opportunity to broaden their understanding of the literary texts through courses in the interdisciplinary American Studies Program. Faculty strengths in American studies include genre studies, feminist criticism, cultural studies, lesbian and gay studies, and all of the major areas of ethnic American studies. The Cornell program in American literature is especially supportive of comparative and interdisciplinary work, across and among canonical and non-canonical, and ethnic and mainstream literatures. Graduate students form a strong and active cohort within the department, working in all aspects of American literary studies, from the early national period and Civil War and reform movements, through the study of regional contexts for realism and naturalism, and the international crises of modernism and global contact narratives, to African-American, Asian American, Latino and Latina, and Native American literatures.

The Ph.D. program benefits from the Cornell University Library’s extensive special collections in the field, including the nationally pre-eminent holdings on the history of gender, sexual identity, and family life in the Human Sexuality Collection. Other research strengths include materials from the Abolitionist movement, political documents in the Susan H. Douglas Collection of Political Americana, writings of reform leaders such as Lydia Maria Child and William Lloyd Garrison, the Lindseth Woman Suffrage Collection, documents from the U.S.A. peace movement and activists Daniel Berrigan, Philip Berrigan and William Stringfellow, records of Japanese-American Relocation Centers, and collections on the history of theater, television, popular media, advertising, and material culture. Manuscript collections of American authors include papers of Diane Ackerman, A. R. Ammons, Paul Goodman, Laura (Riding) Jackson, Wyndham Lewis, Alison Lurie, Jay McInerney, Vladimir Nabokov, George Jean Nathan, Gene Saks, Gary Snyder, E. B. White, and Ian Young.

Medieval and Early Modern British literary studies

Faculty
Fredric V. Bogel
Laura Brown
Walter Cohen
Barbara Correll
Andrew Galloway
Thomas D. Hill
Rayna Kalas
Carol Kaske
Philip Lorenz
Jenny Mann
Timothy Murray
Masha Raskolnikov
Carin Ruff
Neil Saccamano
Harry E. Shaw
Samantha Zacher
Emeritus
Winthrop Wetherbee

english departmentThe Cornell English Department maintains a tradition of strength and innovation in the earlier historical periods of British literary studies. Undergraduates choose from a full offering of courses in all the historical periods of early modern British literature, including courses on Shakespeare at all levels of the undergraduate curriculum. Faculty interests range widely from cultural studies and political criticism to feminist theory and queer theory, and from bibliographical and textual criticism to various models of formalist analysis. Graduate students specializing in the Medieval period have the opportunity to study with a substantial cohort of students in other fields, through links with the active, interdisciplinary Ph.D. program in Medieval Studies. Such students also have at hand major and up-to-date library collections of sources and critical studies in Old English, Middle English, Latin, and other medieval languages and literatures, in manuscript, print, and on-line form; the Cornell University library is especially noted for its large array of microfilmed collections of medieval British literary and historical manuscripts, and for its special collections in Dante, Petrarch, and Icelandic materials, the last--the Fiske Icelandic Collection--the largest outside of Iceland.

For doctoral students specializing in the Renaissance and the eighteenth-century, courses on such topics as drama, satire, aesthetic theory, race, gender, and colonialism serve as a means of focusing in on specific literary, aesthetic, philosophical, political, or cultural materials, or of linking these fields to prior or subsequent historical periods. For advanced studies and research, the Cornell University Library offers a complete set of the Shakespeare folios, and substantial holdings of sixteenth-century imprints tracing the evolution of religious dissent, the history of science and technology, and witchcraft. The collections also include the internationally renowned French Revolution Collection, nearly complete printed holdings of the works of Pope and Swift, and substantial representation of Defoe, Johnson, Burney, and others. The aim of the Ph.D. program in Medieval and early modern British literary studies is to provide students with an exposure to the most innovative work in these areas, while building a strong basis in language, history, and literary history.

Nineteenth Century

Faculty
James Eli Adams
Cynthia Chase
Roger Gilbert
Ellis Hanson
Satya Mohanty
A. Reeve Parker
Paul L. Sawyer
Harry E. Shaw
Sandra Siegel
Emerita
Dorothy Mermin

studentIn the more recent eras of British literary studies, a wide range of courses in the major periods and genres of nineteenth-century British literature is available to undergraduates. The Cornell English Department has been a center for major critical work in Romanticism throughout the second half of the twentieth century and into the twenty-first, and the Department is the home base for the Cornell University Press production of the complete works of William Wordsworth. The Cornell University Library’s William Wordsworth Collection is an internationally prominent collection, paralleling that of Dove Cottage, and including nearly comprehensive book holdings on Wordsworth, Coleridge, and related authors. The manuscript collection includes letters, manuscripts, broadsides, pictures, documents, and objects by, to, belonging to, or about Wordsworth and his family. Books by and about Wordsworth include all editions of his published works, books from his personal library, and works on the Lake District. Also included are manuscripts by Samuel Taylor Coleridge, Sara Hutchinson, Dorothy Wordsworth, Mary Wordsworth, Thomas De Quincey, Robert Southey, Lord Byron, and John Keats. Faculty specializing in Romantic drama and poststructuralist analysis also encourage linkages with eighteenth century studies and Victorian studies. In Victorian literature, faculty offer advanced courses in narrative theory, gender and sexuality studies, and colonialism and cultural difference, while a large cohort of graduate students sponsors study groups on various topics, especially nineteenth-century fiction.

Twentieth Century British Literary Studies

Faculty
Kevin Attell
Molly Hite
Satya Mohanty
Jonathan Monroe
Daniel R. Schwarz

facultyFaculty and graduate interests in the twentieth century include feminist and queer theory, formalist and narratological approaches, visual and cultural studies, canon formation and expansion, and political theory. Teaching and research explore how new social, gender, and psychoanalytic theories affected the literary productions of modernism. Classes and graduate reading groups often draw on the extensive manuscript and Rare Books holdings in Cornell’s Kroch Library, including major collections of Ford Madox Ford, Wyndham Lewis, and Laura Riding Jackson materials; an array of Bloomsbury writings published by the Hogarth Press; the Human Sexuality collection; and the James Joyce Collection, a major repository of manuscripts, letters, documents, photographs, bound manuscripts, galley proofs, books, and broadsides by, to or about Joyce, including letters between Joyce and his lover Nora Barnacle, and some fifty letters from Ezra Pound.

Theory

Faculty
Kevin Attell
Fredric Bogel
Mary Pat Brady
Cynthia Chase
Eric Cheyfitz
Barbara Correll
Jonathan Culler
Laura Donaldson
Grant Farred
Ellis Hanson
Satya Mohanty
Timothy Murray
Masha Raskolnikov
Neil Saccamano
Harry E. Shaw
Shelley Wong

stack of booksThe term “theory” names a large and varied field of inquiry that can include texts in anthropology, art history, film studies, gender studies, geography, linguistics, philosophy, political theory, psychoanalysis, science studies, social and intellectual history, and sociology.

Jonathan Culler suggests that the main effect of theory is “the disputing of ‘common sense’: common-sense views about meaning, writing, literature, experience.” Noting that a historical construction may have “come to seem so natural to us that we don’t even see it as a theory,” he cites some questions that theory can address: “What is meaning? What is an author? What is it to read? What is the I or subject who writes, reads, or acts? How do texts relate to the circumstances in which they are produced?”

English faculty offer introductory course on theory at the undergraduate and graduate level. Students can pursue further intensive study in courses emphasizing Marxist, poststructuralist, postcolonial, and narrative theories and cultural studies. Strong faculty interests in cultural difference, queer theory, feminist criticism and gender studies, postcolonial theory and psychoanalytic theory inform many graduate courses. Some Ph.D. students may choose to specialize in theory and define dissertation topics focusing on particular theoretical paradigms. Others may combine their theoretical interests with approaches to literary or other cultural materials.

Cornell is the home of the School of Criticism and Theory, in session over the summer, where English Department graduate students may study intensively a range of theoretical topics in seminars taught by major scholars invited from all over the world.