2026-2027 Graduate English Courses

Please note: courses may be subject to cancellation or modification. Consult the timetables and course descriptions for cancellations or changes, including times and locations. 

Graduate students from other departments at U of T are welcome to enrol in ENG courses without completing a course add form. Non-ENG students should check with their home department to confirm if a course add form is required.

 

2026–2027 F/S/Y Graduate Course Offerings

Timetables for F (first-term) and S (second-term) courses can be found below the course listings. Y (year-long) courses appear in both timetables.

ENG1001HF

Introduction to Old English

Walton, A.

 

Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Friday 3:00 - 5:00 (2 Hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This course equips you to acquire a basic reading knowledge of the earliest literary form of English, the West Saxon dialect of the ninth through eleventh centuries, along with an introduction to the surviving literature. It also allows for some discussion of the metacritical and ideological issues raised by the continued study of Old English in a period of shifting intellectual paradigms in and beyond the academy.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Bright, Old English Grammar (online, in Google Drive folder)
  • Kim, Workbook (online, in Google Drive folder)
  • Baker, Introduction to Old English (online through U of T library and for sale on Amazon)
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Exploratory essay (ca. 3000 words) that contains some element of word study on an Old English text - 40%
  • Midterm assessment - 15%
  • Final - 25% 
  • Participation and quality of class contributions (including any assigned quizzes, short responses, and Blackboard posts) - 20%

ENG1100HF

At the Threshold: Witnessing and Testimony in Canadian Literature

Kamboureli, S.

 

Term: F-Term (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Wednesday 10:00 - 12:00 (2 Hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

This course invites you to take a deep dive into “the poetics and politics of witnessing” (Derrida). Ontologically fraught, witnessing is entangled with memory and ethical responsibility. Neither fully inside the experience witnessed nor fully outside it, the witness inhabits a threshold: the space between event and narration, between speech and silence, self and other. The paradox of witnessing as an act that is at once necessary and impossible finds expression in language as both the medium and the limit of testimony. Through close readings of both theory and Canadian literature as well as a small selection of installation videos, we will examine literature as a threshold medium, a space between fiction and authenticity where the undecidability of witnessing is not resolved but performed. The texts’ range of genres and forms—novels and short fiction, memoirs, autotheory, speculative fiction, epistolary and transmedia writing, and poetry—will allow us to examine the literary devices and tropes employed to express the irreducibility of the experience witnessed.

Course Reading List
 
Tentative Texts:
 
  • Katherina Vermette, The Break
  • Y-Dang Troeung, Landbridge
  • Gil Courtemanche, A Sunday at the Pool in Kigali
  • Douglas Coupland, Microserfs
  • Esi Edugyan, Washington Black
  • Omar El Akkad, One Day, Everyone Will Have Always Been Against This
  • Dionne Brand, Inventory
  • Chava Rosenfarb, “Edgia’s Revenge”
  • Shirley Sterling, (Nlaka’pamux Nation), My Name Is Seepeetza 
  • Jacques Derrida, “Poetics and Politics of Witnessing” & “Demeure: Fiction and Testimony”
  • Leigh Gilmore, Trauma Culture: The Politics of Terror and Loss in Media and Literature (selections) & “What Was I?: Literary Witness and the Testimonial Archive”
  • Shoshana Felman and Dori Laub, Testimony: Crises of Witnessing in Literature and Psychoanalysis and History (selections)
  • Paul Ricoeur, “The Documentary Phase: Archived Memory”
  • Maria Nadal and Monica Calvo, eds. Trauma in Contemporary Literature: Narrative and Representation (selections)
  • Frédérik Detue & Charlotte Lacoste, “What Testimony Does to Literature”

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Active participation - 20%
  • Seminar presentation with handout / class facilitation - 30%
  • Essay proposal with annotated bibliography - 10%
  • Researched paper (20 pages) - 40%

ENG1200HF

Assembling the Afro-Métis Syllabus

Clarke, G.E.

 
Term: F-Term (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Tuesday 12:00 - 2:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

This course reads a representative sample of texts by African-Canadian writers who may be regarded as “Black and Indigenous” and/or “Afro-Métis” and/or who explore this intersectional identity that has been long-obscured, often disputed, and yet indisputably present. Indeed, as more Black Canadians claim or name this identity, so must we attend to their writing out of a dual-racial, or biracial, experience of oppression, protesting both notions of “race purity” and government definitions of who is or can be “status” Indigenous, Inuit, or Métis. For an introduction to the controversies and conundrums around this Black-and-Indigenous self-concept, see George Elliott Clarke, “Assembling the Afro-Métis Syllabus: Some Preliminary Reading,” Zeitschrift für Kanada-Studien, 42 (2022), pp. 10-41.

Course Reading List
 
  • Atkinson, Ricky, The Hard Times and Life Crimes of Ricky Atkinson.
  • Burle-Bailey, Troy, The Pierre Bonga Loops.
  • Coulthard, Glen, Red Skin, White Masks.
  • Fanon, Frantz, Black Skin, White Masks.
  • Jones, El, Abolitionist Intimacies.
  • Proctor-Mills, Dorothy. Chameleon (1995) & “Born Again Indian” (2012)
  • Thomas, Kai, In the Upper Country.
  • Willis, Vivian, Mom Suse: Matriarch of the Preston (NS) Black Communities.
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • 8 response papers (5% each) - 40%
  • Research paper - 40%
  • Participation - 20%

ENG2100HF

Class Migration Through Literacy in 20th-Century American Literature

Dolan, N.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Tuesday 4:00 - 7:00 (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

Many American writers of the twentieth and twenty-first centuries were the first person in their families, over many generations, to acquire advanced literacy. This experience, as documented in a range of remarkable memoirs, novels, stories, and poems published up to the present, has been represented as vastly liberating, but also often acutely painful. It seems to entail both an exhilarating expansion of horizons and a difficult uprooting. In this course we will read a selection of such works in the effort to further our understanding of the ambivalent process of socialization into the modern American-liberal symbolic, and the place of reading therein. We will be especially interested in depictions of what Habermas calls “context shattering” – crisis moments in which the achievement of advanced literacy causes the “spellbinding authority” of long-established traditions to be demystified, destabilized, and perhaps transcended. Habermas argues that such “shatterings” are necessary stages in a forward path towards moral and political emancipation. We will ask whether these works support Habermas’s outlook. May we read the dis-embedded selves painfully achieved and powerfully described in these American bildungs-narratives as figures of human enlightenment? Might these works thus provide secondary symbolic orientation and cohesion for members of dispersed, individualistic, liberal communities no longer gripped and bound by archaic solidarities?

Course Reading List

Primary:
  • Frederick Douglass, Narrative of the Life of… an American Slave… (1845)
  • Anzia Yezierska, The Bread Givers (1925)
  • Richard Wright, Black Boy (1937)
  • James Farrell, My Days of Anger (1943)
  • Mary Doyle Curran, The Parish and the Hill (1948)
  • James Baldwin, “Notes of a Native Son” (1955)
  • Richard Rodriguez, Hunger of Memory (1983)
  • Dorothy Allison, Bastard Out of Carolina (1992)
  • Sherman Alexie, The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-time Indian (2009)
  • Tara Westover, Educated (2018)
  • Souvankham Thammavongsa, How to Spell Knife (2020)

Secondary:

  • from Patrick Joyce, ed. Class [a reader with short selections from many theorists]
  • from Ferdinand Tonnies, Community and Society
  • from Emile Durkheim, The Division of Labour in Society
  • from Max Weber, The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism
  • from Richard Hoggart, The Uses of Literacy
  • from Raymond Williams, The Country and the City
  • from Jurgen Habermas, Theory of Communicative Action (Vol. 2)
  • Frank Parkin, Marxism and Class Theory: a Bourgeois Critique
  • from Pierre Bourdieu, Distinction
  • from Lauren Berlant, The Female Complaint
  • from Rhonda Levine, When Race Meets Class
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Attendance and informed participation in discussion - 20%
  • One in-class presentation - 20%
  • One term paper (4,000-5,000 words) - 60%  

ENG2100HS

Riot, Rebellion, Revolution: American Literatures and the Arts of Resistance

Seitler, D.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Tuesday 11:00 - 1:00 (2 Hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
From nineteenth-century slave revolts to the LA uprising of 1992, from the Haymarket “Riots” of 1886 to southern textile strikes in Gastonia, North Carolina in the 1920s. The draft riots of the Civil War era, the “Red Summer” of 1919, the Watts uprising of 1965, the Black Lives Matter protests of the 2000s. ACT UP! Queer Nation, Lesbian Avengers, Riot Grrrl. U.S. history and its literatures are a rich archive of forms and methods of resistance that this class will explore. Engaging debates around aesthetics and politics, and tracking various aesthetic modes of resistance in literature, this course will explore how themes of resistance get culturally mediated. Rather than focusing on a single historical period, this course takes questions of form, genre, style, and narrative in relation to activist practices of writing as its object. Examining diverse genres, including novels, poetry, memoir, graphic novels, and zines, we will analyze the aesthetic strategies, motifs, and modes by which authors engage questions of power and politics in the context of historical struggle. Along the way, we will examine how cultural forms and practices are a site at which political realities, hopes, and anxieties are not just expressed (both directly and symptomatically) but constitute a space in which politics are (or can be) produced or engendered.
 
Course Reading List
 

We will likely read:

  • Charles Chesnutt, The Marrow of Tradition
  • Frank Harris, The Bomb
  • Mary Heaton Vorse, Strike!
  • Langston Hughes, Beaumont to Detroit: 1943
  • Gwendolyn Brooks, Riot
  • Claude McKay, If We Must Die
  • David Wojnarowicz, Close to the Knives
  • Juliana Spahr, Turnt
  • Rebecca Hall, Wake
  • Gord Hill, The 500 Years of Resistance Comic Book
  • M. E. O’Brien and Eman Abdelhadi, Everything for Everyone

 Other readings will likely include:

  • Henry David Thoreau, Civil Disobedience
  • James Baldwin, The Fire Next Time
  • Audre Lorde, The Uses of Anger
  • Deleuze and Guattari, What is a Minor Literature?
  • Wendy Brown, Edgework
  • Eithne Luibhéid, Abolitionist Intimacies.
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Seminar presentation / experimental analysis - 20%
  • 3 short précis - 15%
  • Conference reflection - 5%
  • Participation -  20%
  • Final research paper - 40%                                                                                                                                    

ENG2200HF

Black Messiah

Durham, I.A.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Monday 3:00 - 6:00 (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

​“Black Messiah is a hell of a name for an album. It can be easily misunderstood. Many will think it’s about religion. Some will jump to the conclusion that I’m calling myself a Black Messiah. For me, the title is about all of us. It’s about the world. It’s about an idea we can aspire to. We should all aspire to be a Black Messiah.
 
It’s about people rising up in Ferguson and in Egypt and in Occupy Wall Street and in every place where a community has had enough and decides to make change happen. It’s not about praising one charismatic leader but celebrating thousands of them. Not every song is politically charged (though many are), but calling this album Black Messiah creates a landscape where these songs can live to the fullest. Black Messiah is not one man. It’s a feeling that, collectively, we are all that leader.

​On December 15, 2014, R&B singer D’Angelo, and his band The Vanguard, released his third studio album Black Messiah. Consisting of twelve tracks, this was his first project in close to 15 years, dating back to his previous two albums, Voodoo (2000) and Brown Sugar (1995). Black Messiah entered the charts at a fever pitch in the racial and hegemonic imaginary as outlined in the aforementioned liner notes. Yet the album is inclusive on a full scale; uses the words “we,” “all,” and “us” throughout the synopsis; situates its message in a transnational frame—all of this suggests that although the album is not about race, it is an album invested in a manner of blackness. What might this mean? This class will wrestle with that question and hopefully pose others in turn, arguing that Black Messiah stages teachable moments in the sonic genealogy of the black aesthetic and radical traditions.

Each track from the album will shape the weekly class meetings as the foundation for provoking critical theory. With the class grounding itself in an album as the ur-text, what better way to approach the album than to theoretically hit SHUFFLE and see what it has to say—the remix to an already mixed and mastered product! Likewise, we will think critically about, among other things, music and its utility as protest and affect, specifically melancholy; love and intimate community; nostalgia and projections of the future for those deemed perpetually homeless/in diaspora; and the album as homage.

Course Reading List
 
  • Beyoncé, “Sugar Mama”
  • Rizvana Bradley, “Reinventing Capacity: Black Femininity's Lyrical Surplus and the Cinematic Limits of 12 Years a Slave” 
  • Dionne Brand, A Map to the Door of No Return
  • Octavia Butler, “Bloodchild” 
  • Aimé Césaire, Notebook of a Return to the Native Land
  • James Cone, “Black Theology and Black Power”
  • Mark Dery, “Black to the Future: Interviews with Samuel R. Delany, Greg Tate, and Tricia Rose” 
  • W. E. B. Du Bois, “Jesus Christ in Texas”
  • Frantz Fanon, Black Skin, White Masks
  • Michel Foucault, “Madness, the Absence of Work” 
  • Sharon Holland, “(Black) (Queer) Love” 
  • Treva B. Lindsey and Jessica Marie Johnson, “Searching for Climax: Black Erotic Lives in Slavery and Freedom”
  • Toni Morrison, Beloved 
  • Fred Moten, “Black Mo’nin’”
  • Tavia Nyong’o, “Unburdening Representation”
  • Peter Schwenger, “Phenomenology of the Scream” 
  • Hortense J. Spillers, “Moving on Down the Line: Variations on the African-American Sermon” 
  • Frank B. Wilderson, III, “The Prison Slave as Hegemony’s (Silent) Scandal”
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Participation - 10% 
  • Class presentation (10-12 pp.) - 20%
  • Critical reflection (3-5 pp.) - 10%
  • Annotated bibliography for syllabus assignment - 20%
  • Syllabus assignment - 40%

ENG4100HF

Gender, Militarization, and Ecology

Hogue, R.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Wednesday 3:00 - 6:00 (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
Since 2001, the United States military has emitted 1.2 billion metric tons of greenhouse gases—more than 140 nations combined—making it the single greatest polluting institution in the world. Militarization—how a society’s institutions, policies, behaviors, thought, and values are devoted to military power and shaped by war—and all of its ecological entanglements, Cynthia Enloe argues, relies on ideas about femininity and masculinity, filled with what Carol Cohn has called the “gendered discourse of national security.” This course thus explores how militarization is environmental, personal, political, and gendered. With specific attention to the discursive, we will examine how writers, scholars, activists, and artists contend with the intersections of gender, militarization, and ecology. Using methods from the Environmental Humanities, Gender and Sexuality Studies, and Critical Indigenous Studies, we will discuss narrative and poetic engagements with militarization in the 20th and 21st centuries, primarily focused in the Pacific, Asia, and North America. Topics will include but are not limited to: environmental justice, waste, surveillance, ecofeminism, militourism, nuclear imperialism, chemical warfare, and toxicity.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Allegories of the Anthropocene, Elizabeth DeLoughrey
  • Settler Garrison, Jodi Kim
  • Hot Spotter's Report, Shiloh Krupar
  • Ocean Passages, Erin Suzuki
  • Tonal Intelligence, Sunny Xiang
  • "Bikinis and Other S/Pacific N/Oceans,” Teresia Teaiwa
  • A Violent Peace, Christine Hong
  • "The Pacific Proving Grounds," Aimee Bahng
  • Iep Jaltok, Kathy Jetnil Kijiner
  • Civilised Girl, Jully Makini
  • Night is a Sharkskin Drum, Haunani Kay Trask
  • Ocean Mother, Arielle Taitano Lowe
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Participation - 20%
  • Weekly discussion posts - 20%
  • Presentation - 25%
  • Final conference paper - 35%

ENG4101HS

Kind of Like: Difference, Similarity, Comparison

Thomas, A.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Wednesday 1:00 - 3:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
How do literary and cultural studies approach the question of similarity without collapsing into sameness? And how do we consider and write through the consequences of comparison? This course takes as its premise the unevenness inherent in any act of comparison across geography, history, group. Rather than treating the incommensurate but proximate as an impasse, this course investigates what methodologies can ethically bring intertwined and/or disparate histories into view and explores how to productively read literatures that arise from contexts of oppression. Readings will focus on Black and Postcolonial Studies, but students are encouraged to do comparative work in their research paper within or beyond these fields.
 
Course Reading List
 
Readings will vary and include student contributions. Longer texts may include:
 
  • Dark Princess, by W. E. B. Du Bois
  • Paradise, by Toni Morrison
  • Zami: A New Spelling of My Name, by Audre Lorde

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Participation - 20% (throughout the semester)
  • Seminar presentation / class facilitation - 20% 
  • Final paper (15 pages) - 50%
  • Course reflection - 10% 

ENG5100HF

London Drama to 1530

Sergi, M.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Monday 10:00 - 12:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
It is obvious that London emerged in the sixteenth century as the single dominant centre of British drama -- eclipsing, and in some cases actively quashing, what had been a pluricentric culture of plays in prior centuries. Scholarship on the drama of those prior centuries, when it is not presented as a generalized pan-British mass, tends to focus on those locations in England from which more texts survive than do in London. This course will resist that tendency by focusing on London drama up to the year 1530 only -- both the extant dramatic texts whose first performances can reasonably be located in London and archival evidence for London performances whose texts are now lost (or did not involve texts in the first place). Providing a quite handy pivot for students of both the medieval and early modern periods, this course will thus tackle a series of questions: To what degree are the sharp differences between "medieval" and "early modern" drama a matter of local-geographical distinction, rather than only a result of cultural changes over time? In what ways was medieval London performance culture continuous, or discontinuous, with other practices elsewhere in Britain? Why was London so decisively the place that rose to dominance (this is not as straightforward a question as it seems) -- and what shaped the quite particular dramatic culture that rose there?
 
Course Reading List
 
Still in development, but will likely include works by:
 
  • John Lydgate, Mummings and Entertainments
  • Henry Medwall, Fulgens & Lucres; Nature
  • John Rastell, The Four Elements
  • John Heywood, probably Johan Johan and one other
  • John Skelton, Magnyfycence
  • And multiple anonymous works (inc. Mundus et Infans, Interlude of Youth, Hickscorner, and others), alongside readings from the three relevant Records of Early English Drama volumes (Ecclesiastical London, Inns of Court, Civic London to 1558)
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Engagement and participation in class discussions (or, if necessary, in substantial email commentary after the fact) - 20%
  • Two 15-minute presentations during class discussions, 15% each - 30%
  • Annotated bibliography assignment, delivered alongside your final presentation - 10%
  • Final project: conference-length research / analysis paper (20 minutes of material, with an option to extend into an article-length study) - 40%

Every student must attend all class sessions (or make them up, as above), must be reachable by and responsive to an email list shared with the full class, and must read all assigned readings and have them ready to hand on the day we are scheduled to discuss them. 


ENG5103HF

Piers Plowman

Gaston, K.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Thursday 10:00 - 12:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
A close reading of Piers Plowman, the fourteenth-century visionary poem famously described as “a commentary on an unknown text.” Piers Plowman represents a literary effort to come to terms with spiritual and social crises of the late fourteenth century, interrogating what it means to “do well” while living in a flawed world. The poem, which stitches together Latin with alliterative English verse, was the subject of ongoing revision by its enigmatic author, Willian Langland. It survives in at least three distinct versions. This course will focus on the B-text of the poem with excursions into the A and C texts, giving special attention to issues including: poverty and economics, legal and literary representation, learning and study, material textuality, and the representation of the natural world. 
 
Course Reading List
 
  • The Vision of Piers Plowman, ed. A. V. C. Schmidt (London, Everyman: 1995).  
  • Emily Steiner, Reading Piers Plowman (Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2013). 

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Participation - 15%
  • Presentation - 15%
  • Annotated passage - 15%
  • Midterm paper - 20%
  • Final paper proposal - 5%
  • Final paper - 30%

ENG5103HS

Medieval Manuscript Culture

Sobecki, S.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Thursday 10:00 - 12:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
The premodern textual condition is messy: writers were not celebrities; some didn’t want to be named, and those who wished to be remembered failed to do so for the most part; we do not have editors but patrons, scribes, censors, copyists, compilers, borrowers, continuators, and interpolators. This course will focus on the production and consumption of medieval manuscripts in late-medieval England. We will examine medieval manuscripts, both in the Thomas Fisher Rare Book Library and in digitised form, encountering many of the most important Middle English manuscripts, including celebrated copies of Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales, Malory’s Morte Darthur, and Langland’s Piers Plowman. We will cover all aspects of manuscripts studies and learn about the production of books and documents in medieval England.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Gillespie, Alexandra, and Daniel Wakelin. The Production of Books in England 1350-1500. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2011.
  • Kerby-Fulton, Kathryn, Maidie Hilmo, and Linda Olson. Opening Up Middle English Manuscripts: Literary and Visual Approaches. Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2012.
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Participation - 10%
  • Adopt-a-manuscript - 10%
  • Presentation - 10%
  • Short essay - 20%
  • Final essay - 50%.

ENG5200HS

Shakespeare's Tragedies

Magnusson, L.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Monday 3:00 - 6:00 (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This course affords an opportunity for seminar members to read Shakespeare’s tragedies closely together and in dialogue with the rich tradition of criticism on the tragedies. Each seminar meeting will focus on a specific tragedy, opening up four areas of discussion. (1) The first topic concerns the structure and larger architecture of each play, considering such topics as generic experimentation, imitation and invention, and elements of plot construction oriented to thematic, rhetorical, or theatrical effect. (2) The second identifies and interrogates major issues that have arisen in the critical conversation, whether interpretive, textual, contextual, or performative. (3) The third focus of discussion will be close reading, experimenting with various rhetorical, linguistic, or critical approaches to a selected scene or episode. (4) Finally, looking to the present and future, we consider new directions and emerging (or unimagined) topics, asking what might constitute productive routes for fresh research. The course should be of interest to all those planning graduate research in Shakespeare and early modern literature, to potential teachers, and to those interested in Shakespeare’s exceptional literary achievement.
 
Course Reading List
 

Texts will include:

  • Titus Andronicus
  • Romeo and Juliet
  • Richard III
  • Julius Caesar
  • Hamlet
  • Othello
  • King Lear
  • Macbeth
  • Antony and Cleopatra
  • Coriolanus

(Or selection thereof), supplemented by critical readings.

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
Seminar members will:
 
  • Exchange short email “issue” sheets and/or brief “First Word” presentations reflecting on the weekly plays and topics - 20%
  • Present one twenty-minute seminar - 25%
  • Participate actively in class discussion - 10%
  • Develop a short colloquium paper (possibly for a final class mini-conference), submitting a written version of about 12 pages (10% + 35%) - 45% 

ENG5201HF

Writing Disability in Early Modern England

Williams, K.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Thursday 12:00 - 2:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

This course asks: how was disability—as lived experience, as cultural concept, as object of a newly-institutional curative imaginary—represented by sixteenth- and seventeenth-century English writers? The bulk of our readings comprise literary works that range across poetry, prose, and drama (by authors such as John Donne, Hester Pulter, John Milton, and Thomas Middleton, for example) and medical, legal, and philosophical texts that attempt to codify and grapple with the unruliness of embodiment (by authors such as Robert Burton and John Bulwer, for example). Alongside these examples, we will attend to artifacts of early modern culture that do not easily comport with ideas of literariness, like recipe books with medicinal applications and curative compendiums; transcriptions of diaries and other forms of life writing; edicts for relief of disabled veterans and Bethlem (or “Bedlam”) hospital records; printed ballads and “monster newes” texts; and accounts of court fooling and occasional entertainments. Theoretical and critical work from early modern disability studies and crip theory will inform our inquiry into disability, understood as both a dynamic interaction between body and environment and a prompt to literary experiment, as site of problem and possibility for writers in early modern England.

Course Reading List
 

Primary texts/16th- and 17th-century English works (selected or in full) are likely to include: 

  • Robert Burton, The Anatomy of Melancholy
  • Thomas Johnson, The Works of that Famous Chirurgion Ambrose Parey
  • John Donne, Devotions Upon Emergent Occasions
  • John Milton, Samson Agonistes
  • Hester Pulter, Made When I Was Sick and other poems
  • William Hay, Of Deformity
  • John Bulwer, Chirologia: Or, the Naturall Language of the Hand
  • Thomas Middleton, The Nice Valour, or The Passionate Madman

Along with other textual and visual artifacts.  

Critical and theoretical texts (selected or in full) likely to include:

  • Elizabeth Bearden, Crip Authority
  • Genevieve Love, Early Modern Theatre and the Figure of Disability
  • Selections from Crip Authorship: Disability as Method (ed. Mills and Sanchez)
  • Allison Hobgood; selections from Recovering Disability in Early Modern England (ed. Hobgood and Wood)
  • Ellen Samuels, Fictions of Identification
  • Susan Schweik, The Ugly Laws: Disability in Public
  • Selections from Crip Genealogies (ed. Chen, Kafer, Kim, Minich)
  • Alison Kafer, Feminist, Queer, Crip
  • Michael Davidson, Distressing Language

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Perfect attendance and engaged participation in seminar discussions - 10%
  • Textual curation - 20%
  • Archive activation - 20%
  • Final project (paper, with collective bibliography contribution, abstract, and class presentation) - 50% (including 10% from requirements in advance of final paper)

ENG5300HS

Reading Clarissa

Dickie, S.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Monday 1:00 - 3:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
A rare opportunity to read, at a manageable pace, one of the longest and most extraordinary novels ever written. Composed entirely in letters, Richardson’s Clarissa tells the almost unbearable story of a young woman who is abducted and then raped by a treacherous libertine, a violation that throws her into a long and eventually fatal illness. We will read the text in 11 installments over the semester and consider a number of important literary and cultural contexts: epistolarity as a literary mode; eighteenth-century sentimentalism; women’s amatory fiction; libertine literature and rake biography; conduct books and devotional texts; the early-modern treatment of rape; representations of madness and the emergence of “hysteria”--and so on. We will also explore, in detail, the heated critical controversy that has surrounded this text since its publication in 1747-8. We will review a range of contemporary reactions to Clarissa and a selection of the voluminous modern criticism it has stimulated (feminist, Marxist, psychoanalytic, deconstructionist, reader-response).
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Richardson, Clarissa (ed. Angus Ross), Penguin
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Five discussion-starters (300-400 words each) - 20%
  • Essay proposal and annotated nibliography (2-3 pp.) - 20%                                     
  • Final paper (3,500-4,000 words) - 45% 
  • Active and informed participation, including follow-on discussion of your seminar starters - 15%

ENG5301HF

Literature and Censorship, Milton to Mill

Keymer, T.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Wednesday 6:00 - 8:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
Censorship is not only an instrument of control or suppression but also, Annabel Patterson has argued, a discipline to which we partly owe our concept of literature as a discourse with characteristics of its own. While supervising what could be said, and how, censorship could also stimulate ingenious strategies of circumvention, from clandestine presses and decoy imprints to elaborate literary techniques of irony and ellipsis. In important ways, the changing institutions and mechanisms of press regulation in Britain, from pre-publication licensing to libel prosecution and the spectacle of the pillory, may have energized literary production as much as they also constrained it. This is a familiar proposition for Renaissance England (also, in Robert Darnton’s work, for Enlightenment France), and we begin with key episodes and texts from the press licensing era, which ended in 1695. At the heart of the course is the eighteenth-century and Romantic-era use of seditious libel prosecution to perform the work of censorship by alternative means, and we examine the implications for poetry, drama, satire, and the novel across the extended period. The course ends with the persistence of blasphemy and obscenity as (in Joss Marsh’s term) “word crimes” in the early Victorian period.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Behn, Oroonoko
  • Cleland, Memoirs of a Woman of Pleasure
  • Defoe, The Shortest Way with the Dissenters
  • Dryden, Satires of Juvenal
  • Godwin, Caleb Williams
  • Fielding, Jonathan Wild
  • Haywood, Letter from H. G.
  • Mill, On Liberty
  • Milton, Areopagitica
  • Shelley, The Mask of Anarchy
  • Southey, Wat Tyler
  • Swift, Gulliver's Travels
  • Bricker, Libel and Lampoon
  • Cummings, Bibliophobia
  • Dabhoiwala, What Is Free Speech?
  • Darnton, Censors at Work
  • Keymer, Poetics of the Pillory
  • Marsh, Word Crimes
  • Patterson, Censorship and Interpretation
  • Ross, Writing in Public
  • Thomas, A Long Time Burning
  • Tomkins, On the Law of Speaking Freely 
     
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Seminar with oral presentations - 20%
  • Informed participation in class discussion - 20%
  • Essay proposal with bibliography  - 10%
  • 20-page research paper - 50%

ENG5400HS

Romantic Anger, Revisited

Weisman, K.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Wednesday 5:00 - 7:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
Romantic-era England bears witness to a remarkable concatenation of passionate responses to heated debates concerning war, revolution, slavery and abolition, imperialism and colonialism, the rights of women, the rights of human beings, the role of religion, and the meaning of nationhood. Many of the salient concerns of Romanticism are related to the period’s changing understanding of “the passions,” and to the fiery rhetoric of new discourses (revolutionary, nationalist, social). This course will survey the field afresh, and will include historical and philosophical contextualization from Aristotle to Shelley.
 
Course Reading List
 

Primary source reading from the following:

  • Mary Robinson, selected poetry
  • Charlotte Smith, selected poetry
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley, selected poetry
  • Lord Byron, selected poetry
  • Mary Prince, The History of Mary Prince
  • Olaudah Equiano, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano; or Gustavus Vassa, The African, Written by Himself
  • Mary Shelley, Frankenstein
  • Mary Wollstonecraft, Maria: or, The Wrongs of Woman
  • Mary Hays, The Victim of Prejudice

Selected other reading from the following:

  • Aristotle, Ethics, Rhetoric
  • Seneca, On Anger
  • Hume, Treatise of Human Nature
  • Locke, Essay Concerning Human Understanding
  • Adam Smith, Theory of Moral Sentiments
  • Hobbes, Leviathan
  • Mary Wollstonecraft,Vindication of the Rights of Woman
  • Burke, Philosophical Enquiry into the Origins of our Ideas of the Sublime and Beautiful
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Article review (orally delivered) - 15%
  • Seminar presentation - 25%
  • Class participation - 10%
  • Final research paper - 50%

ENG5401HF

Melodrama: Form and Function, 1770-1890

Robinson, T.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Friday 1:00 - 3:00  (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
Melodrama—a historically pervasive and popular genre—was deliberately trans-medial and experimental, combining music, poetry, dance, and visual and sonic effects to produce a new affective theatre of suspense. Perhaps surprisingly, audiences encountering melodrama for the first time found in it an astonishing realism. This course offers an exciting opportunity to read and analyze melodramas—from their origins in Germany and France to their flourishing on nineteenth-century English and American stages. We’ll discuss and think through an array of melodramas by playwrights such as Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Thomas Holcroft, Richard Brinsley Peake, Isaac Pocock, Jane Scott, and Augustin Daly. Along the way, we’ll examine the form and function of melodrama: its generic makeup, sensational effects, cultural contexts and concerns. We’ll also investigate the changing spaces and modes of melodramatic performance over the more than 100 years that the form dominated Western stages and explore why melodrama maintains its hold on us, even today.
 
Course Reading List
 

Dramas may include:

  • Jean-Jacques Rousseau, Pygmalion
  • Thomas Holcroft, A Tale of Mystery
  • Guilbert de Pixérécourt, The Dog of Montargis
  • Isaac Pocock, The Miller and His Men
  • John Walker, The Factory Lad
  • Richard Brinsley Peake, The Fate of Frankenstein
  • Jane Scott, The Iron Chest
  • Douglas Jerrold, Black-Eye’d Susan
  • Ira Aldridge, The Black Doctor
  • Augustin Daly, Under the Gaslight
  • Thomas Russell Sullivan, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde, and others.

Critical readings by Michael Booth, Jacky Bratton, Daphne Brooks, Peter Brooks, Jeffrey N. Cox, Michael Gamer, Jane Moody, Emma Raub, Sophie Thomas, Carolyn Williams, and more.

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Active engagement (attendance and informed participation) - 15%
  • In-class presentation with handout - 15%
  • Archival research exercise - 15%
  • Final project proposal with annotated bibliography - 10%
  • Final project - research paper - 45%

ENG5401HS

Ethics and Aesthetics: The Late Victorians

Li, H.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Thursday 2:00 - 4:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This course examines how several late-Victorian authors sought to move beyond the ethical and cultural frameworks of mid-Victorian thought. It focuses in particular on their rethinking of the relations between ethics and aesthetics as a paradigm shift away from forms of moral reasoning that were often rationalist, self-assured, and prescriptive. Through close analysis of literary representations of individual ethos in George Eliot, Thomas Hardy, William Morris, Walter Pater, and Oscar Wilde, the course reconstructs a more subjectivity-centred ethics—one that is personal, speculative, partial, and yet affirmative. We will consider how these writers articulate a new “higher ethics” (Pater) in response to the uncertainties of the modern world. Topics for discussion include dialectics of futuristic envisioning, fantasy and utopia, naturalist affect, and the interplay between sensory experience and intellectual reflection.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Eliot, George. Daniel Deronda (1876), edited by Graham Handley. Oxford UP, 2009.
  • Hardy, Thomas. Jude the Obscure (1895), edited by Patricia Ingham. Oxford UP, 2009.
  • Morris, William. News from Nowhere (1890), edited by David Leopold. Oxford UP, 2009.
  • Pater, Walter. Studies in the History of the Renaissance (1873), edited by Matthew Beaumont. Oxford UP, 2010.
  • Wilde, Oscar. Picture of Dorian Gray (1890), edited by Joseph Bristow. Oxford UP, 2008.
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Seminar presentation - 25%
  • Major essay - 55%
  • Informed class participation - 20%

ENG5500HF

Against the Law: Reading and Writing Male Homosexuality in Post-War England

Morra, I.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Friday 11:00 - 1:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This course explores the aesthetic representation of male same-sex desire in twentieth-century English literature, drama, and film before the partial decriminalization of homosexuality in England and Wales (1967). Throughout the first half of the century, the Oscar Wilde trial acted as a perpetual reminder of the close relationship between literature, the arts, and public (and sometimes judiciary) assumptions about male same-sex desire. This relationship was further enforced by an established environment of cultural policing, where novels and publishers could be put on trial, and where censorship of theatre and film was rigorously enforced. Beginning with an overview of influential Victorian and Edwardian literary tropes, this course examines prominent constructions of homosexual identity and same-sex desire variously associated with Oxbridge aesthetes, the ‘theatrical set’, and the privileged, invariably tragic outsider. Its primary focus then turns to the diverse reworkings, reassertions, and rejections of these associations in post-WWII literature, theatre, and film.   
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Excerpts from the Oscar Wilde trial
  • Oscar Wilde, De Profundis
  • Poems by A.E. Housman, Alfred Douglas, J.A. Symonds
  • Noël Coward lyrics
  • Excerpts from Evelyn Waugh, Put Out More Flags

Novels and Plays:

  • E.M. Forster, Maurice [1971] (London: Penguin)
  • Gillian Freeman, The Leather Boys [1961] (Richmond: Valancourt)
  • Rodney Garland, The Heart in Exile [1953] (Richmond: Valancourt)
  • Christopher Isherwood, Goodbye to Berlin [1939] (London: Penguin)
  • Robin Maugham, The Servant [1948] (Richmond: Valancourt)
  • Terence Rattigan, Separate Tables (Table Number Seven) [1954] (London: Nick Hern)
  • Terence Rattigan, The Deep Blue Sea [1952] (London: Nick Hern)
  • Mary Renault, The Charioteer [1953] (London: Virago)
  • Peter Wildeblood, Against the Law [1955] (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson)
  • Christopher Isherwood, A Single Man [1964] (London: Vintage) 

Films: 

  • The Leather Boys (1964), dir. Sidney J. Furie 
  • The Servant (1963), dir. Joseph Losey
  • Victim (1961), dir. Basil Dearden
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Final essay - 60%
  • Seminar presentation - 20%
  • Participation - 20%

ENG5501HS 

Real Estate Fiction

Radovic, S.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Monday 11:00 - 1:00  (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This course examines real estate in fiction and real estate as fiction. Real estate is fundamental to modern social organization, driving speculative investment, upward mobility, and fictions of self-realization. It has also become “a technology of governance, mode of accumulation, and a terrain of contestation” (Yates, Real Estate and Global Urban History, 15). While it denotes material ownership of spatially situated commodities, real estate also operates in the world of storytelling, fantasy, and projection. Our goal in this course will be twofold: 1) to focus on real estate as the narrative core in select works of literary fiction, and 2) to look at contemporary real estate discourse (from real estate listings and photography to staging blogs and interior design publications) as speculative fiction where the prospective buyer’s aspirational identity projects a utopian future. We will interrogate the real estate paradox of precarious material facts resting on solid fictional foundations.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Edgar Allan Poe, "The Fall of the House of Usher"
  • Shirley Jackson, We Have Always Lived in a Castle
  • V.S. Naipaul, A House for Mr. Biswas
  • Andre Dubus III, House of Sand and Fog
  • J.G. Ballard, High-Rise
  • Selections of theoretical texts on private property and real estate
    • Adam Smith and John Locke on private property (selections)
    • Various online resources and marketing publications for the current real estate market in Toronto
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Participation - 15%
  • Note-taker - 5%
  • Class presentation - 15%
  • Essay prospectus 20%
  • Final essay - 45%

ENG5503HF 

Speaking of What’s Next: Climate and Dystopia in Near Future Fiction

Goldman, M.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Tuesday 2:00 - 4:00  (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
Disruptions to the social and material foundations of global society produced by climate change are now ubiquitous and growing in severity. Writers and popular artists who aim to consider the human future face a narrative challenge: climate change is seemingly indefinite in duration, comprised of an incalculable number of inputs, and difficult to explicate through the traditional paradigm of protagonist and antagonist. How to speak about what’s coming?

Dystopian fiction seems to offer a starting point. Climate may be understood as an intensifier of traditional hazards that dystopian artists and thinkers have long interrogated: plague, resource conflict, brutalized social control, and the perils of new technology. This course will review fictional, near future dystopias, interpolated by recent theoretical work on climate.

Questions to be examined include: Does the traditional dichotomy between literary fiction and genre fiction remain salient in valuing future-facing texts? Have speculative forms like science fiction and dystopia acquired a new primacy ahead of “merely” literary works? Is the book-text alone still capable of mobilizing social action on subjects like climate change or is adaption to visual media now requisite? Must emotional potency come at the expense of scientific nuance? Is alarmism productive or unhelpful in climate fiction?

Course Reading List

Fiction:

  • Kim Stanley Robinson, The Ministry for the Future
  • Paaolo Bacigalupi, The Water Knife
  • Octavia Butler, Parable of the Sower
  • Barbara Kingsolver, Flight Behaviour
  • Adam McKay, dir., Don't Look Up (film)
  • Richard Powers, Bewilderment

Non-Fiction (see the weekly modules for links and PDFs to the materials listed below):

  • Essay by Rebecca Solnit: "‘If You Win the Popular Imagination, You Win the Game’: Why We Need New Stories On Climate”
  • Excerpts from Bruno Latour's Down to Earth: Politics in the New Climate Regime (2018).
  • Excerpts from Paul Huebener's Nature's Brocken Clocks, Reimaginging Time in the Face of the Environmental Crisis (2020)
  • Excerpts from David Wallace Wells's The Uninhabitable Earth: Life after Warming (2019) 
  • Excerpts from Elizabeth Kolbert's The Sixth Extinction (2014)
  • Excerpts froom Rachel Carson's Silent Spring (1962)
  • Thomas R. Dunlap, “Environmentalism, a Secular Faith.” Environmental Values, vol. 15, no. 3, 2006, pp. 321–30
  • Lynn White, “The Historical Roots of Our Ecologic Crisis.” Science (American Association for the Advancement of Science), vol. 155, no. 3767, 1967, pp. 1203–07
  • "Empathy," excerpt from Marlene Goldman's Performing Shame (2023)
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • In-class participation (including some combination of timely responses to posts/group chat questions) - 5%.
  • Eight to ten written responses (350 words approx.; 1-2 page max.) to formal discussion questions: one for each literary work - 15%
  • Seminar presentation (15 min. max.) + short essay (5 pages, 1,250 words) - 30% (oral:10%; written: 20%)
  • Final class presentation on research project - 5%
  • Final research essay (15 pages max. not including endnotes and work cited) - 45%               

ENG6100HF

After Autofiction, After Authenticity

Hammond, A.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Tuesday 10:00 – 12:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
In the 2010s, autofiction was all anyone could talk about. Novels by Sheila Heti, Karl Ove Knausgård, Rachel Cusk, Teju Cole, Ben Lerner, and Tao Lin exerted a gravitational pull on readers and reviewers, drawing them into their tangle of memoir and fabulation, disclosure and invention, betrayal and redemption. And now, a mere decade on, the party is over: the organizers of a 2025 ACLA seminar titled "After Autofiction" begin their CFP with Lauren Oyler's remark, "autofiction was fun." If autofiction is indeed now "over," the time is ripe for critics to begin assessing its origins, impact, and import. Why did autofiction explode when it did? Why did it collapse so quickly? What did it do for readers in the 2010s, and why did it suddenly stop performing this service in the 2020s? Building on the wave of scholarship that has followed Marjorie Worthington's The Story of "Me" (2018), the first monograph on autofiction, this seminar approaches the question from the perspective of its claim to "authenticity." Drawing on theories of literary realism and digital-age simulation, we will investigate the vicissitudes of autofiction's reception in light of this fraught category. Can we read autofiction as mounting a heroic last-gasp defence of authenticity in the period of its threatened obsolescence at the hands of manufactured, performative online culture? Or was it a conservative movement, defending an impossible and outdated conception of the self as autonomous, original, and unique?
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Walter Benjamin, “The Storyteller”
  • Teju Cole, Open City
  • Rachel Cusk, Outline
  • Serge Doubvovsky, “Autobiography/Truth/Psychoanalysis”
  • Catherine Gallagher, “The Rise of Fictionality”
  • Sheila Heti, How Should a Person Be?
  • Karl Ove Knausgård, My Struggle, Vol. 1.
  • Ben Lerner, 10:04
  • Tao Lin, Taipei
  • Hans-Georg Moeller and Paul D'Ambrosio, You and Your Profile: Identity After Authenticity (selections)
  • Lauren Oyler, “I Am the One Who Is Sitting Here, for Hours and Hours and Hours”
  • Edmund White, “Today the Artist Is a Saint Who Writes His Own Life”
Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements
 
  • Annotated bibliography – 10%
  • Seminar presentation & position paper – 25%
  • Research essay proposal – 5%
  • Research essay – 40%
  • Participation – 20%

ENG6100HS

The History of Rhyme, Medieval to Romantic

Robins, W.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Wednesday 11:00 – 1:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
How do elements of poetic form offer writers specific literary affordances and engage readers through distinctive cultural associations? How does the significance of formal design vary across historical periods and social milieux? This course addresses these questions by investigating the changing place of rhyme in English poetry and song from the late tenth to the early nineteenth century. We will consider the emergence of rhyme as a structuring feature of English poetry during the late Middle Ages, the sophistication of Early-Modern metrical experiments, the role played by rhyme in eighteenth-century standards of taste, as well as Romantic approaches to a poetic inheritance freighted with connotations. We will study influential canonical poems alongside popular forms of expression in songs, carols, and nursery rhymes. We will also consider what it meant not to rhyme, whether in alliterative poetry, in blank verse drama and epic, or Blakean prophetic utterances. Formal, dialogic, and cultural concerns will be equally stressed. How was rhyme put to work to create effects of sound and meaning? How did poets distinguish themselves through their handling of sonic effects? And what cultural implications did rhyme possess as it became entangled with social distinctions of class, gender, religion and nation?
 

Course Reading List

Primary readings, which will be chosen to match student interests, will include poems by:

  • Geoffrey Chaucer
  • John Skelton
  • Queen Elizabeth I
  • Thomas Wyatt
  • Mary Herbert
  • William Shakespeare
  • John Milton
  • John Dryden
  • Anne Finch
  • Alexander Pope
  • Anna Letitia Barbauld
  • William Blake
  • William Wordsworth
  • John Keats
  • Felicia Hemans
  • Percy Bysshe Shelley

As well as  anonymous works such as:

  • The Old English "Rhyming Poem"
  • Pearl, select Middle English lyrics
  • Select ballads from Percy’s Reliques and Mother Goose’s Melody

Secondary readings will include a wide range of linguistic, cognitive, literary, theoretical, and cultural-historical studies of poetic form.

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Weekly exercises – 25%
  • Book review – 5%
  • Presentations – 20%
  • Final essay – 40%
  • Participation – 10%

ENG6552HF

Law and Literature

Stern, S.

 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Thursday 2:00 –  4:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

O.W. Holmes: “The life of the law has not been logic but experience.”
O. Wilde: “Experience is the name we give to our past mistakes.”
 
Each week we will read several articles, along with several short stories and novels during the term. We will begin with a consideration of some of the questions and criticisms that scholars have recently raised as they have sought to justify or reorient the field. We will then look at some of the specific problems connecting law and literature at various points since the Renaissance. After a more intensive look at current theoretical debates, we will take up various problems at the intersection of law and literature: legal fictions, forms of legal writing and explanation, and the regulation of literature through copyright law. Next, we will focus on two legal problems that have also occupied literary thinkers: the problem of criminal responsibility and literature’s ability to document human thought and motives, and the question of privacy in criminal law, tort law, and fiction. We will end by considering possible future directions for law and literature. The course requirements will include a final paper and two or three response papers for presentation in class.

Course Reading List

The texts include:

  • A set of readings on methodology
  • A set of judicial decisions
  • Several Sherlock Holmes stories by Arthur Conan Doyle
  • George Sylvester Viereck, The House of the Vampire (1907)
  • Robert Louis Stevenson, Strange Case of Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde (1887)
  • Oscar Wilde, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1890/91)

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Active engagement (attendance and informed participation) - 15%
  • In-class presentation with handout - 15%
  • Archival research exercise - 15%
  • Final project proposal with annotated bibliography - 10%
  • Final project - research paper - 45%

ENG6950Y

Workshop in Creative Writing

Williams, I. (F-Term) | Naga, N. (S-Term)

*This course is mandatory for and restricted to first-year MA CRW students.*

Term: Y-TERM (September 2026 to April 2027)
 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Monday 12:00 - 3:00  (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Friday 2:00 - 5:00  (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
F-Term Course Description (Prof. Williams):

A sustainable creative writing practice operates in a cycle of writing, reading, revising, and sharing. In addition to workshopping, we focus on developing necessary capacities or traits that are essential to your success as a writer in the program and beyond. These capacities include self-discipline, curiosity, risk, vulnerability, empathy, courage, etc.

Course Reading List

N/A (there is no reading list)

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

The final grade will be equally weighted between the two terms. This term’s component will be based on:

  • 2 x 7/7 Project - 15%
  • Iceberg Revision - 15%
  • Blurb and Review - 15%
  • Workshops and in-class activities - 30%
  • Final Portfolio - 25% 

S-Term Course Description (Prof. Naga):

This multi-genre Creative Writing course will include a combination of workshops and discussions about both craft and literary ethics. Each student will be required to submit new material for workshop, provide weekly written and oral feedback for their peers, and facilitate one conversation on a craft topic of their choosing at a scheduled date. At the end of the semester, a final portfolio of revised material will be due, along with an Author’s Statement. 

Course Reading List

N/A (there is no reading list)

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

The final grade will be equally weighted between the two terms. This term’s component will be based on:

  • Workshop submissions - 20%
  • Participation (including workshop feedback) - 20%
  • Discussion facilitation - 20%
  • Final portfolio + Author’s Statement - 40%

ENG6960HY

*CREDIT/NO CREDIT*

Advanced Creative Writing Workshop

Greene, R.

*This course is mandatory for and restricted to second-year MA CRW students.*

Term: Y-TERM (September 2026 to April 2027)
Date/Time: Thursday 3:00 - 6:00 (3 hours) *meets a total of 10 times spread across both terms*
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This course provides a framework for students to complete their thesis while considering other aspects of a writing life. The course priorities include generating thesis material, editing manuscripts, producing a literary journal, preparing for readings, and considering a creative life beyond the program. Please note that this is a half-year course spread across the two academic sessions (Fall/Winter) during which students meet 10 times.
 

Reading List:

There will be no set texts for the course, but the professor will recommend to individual students readily available works that may be helpful to them in the completion of their theses. 

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

In this Credit/No Credit course, credit will be earned for:

  • Class presentation - 20%
  • Class participation - 20%
  • Final portfolio - 60%

ENG6999YF

Critical Topographies: Theory and Practice of Contemporary Literary Studies in English

Downes, P.

*This course is mandatory for and restricted to MA, JD/MA, and first-year PhD U (direct-entry) students.*
 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026) *although a Y course and weighted 1.0 FCE, ENG6999YF meets only in the F-Term*
Date/Time: Wednesday 12:00 –  3:00 (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
The aim of Critical Topographies: Theory and Practice of Contemporary Literary Studies in English is to provide MA students about to embark on professional studies in the discipline of "English" with a comprehensive overview or set of maps with which to understand the discipline and locate themselves in the current state of the field. Contemporary literary studies in English can sometimes appear bewildering in terms of both the issues analyzed and methods applied - so much so that there is now no one unifying paradigm, objective, or methodology. The course aims to address this phenomenon; it aims not only to chart current critical topographies but also to suggest how they came into being and what opportunities they and new modes of critical practice offer for significant future research.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • PDFs on Quercus

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Participation - 20%
  • Reading responses (3 x 20%) - 60%
  • Presentation - 20%

ENG7100HS

Critical Theory and Science & Technology Studies

Slater, A.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Wednesday 9:00 - 11:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
Scholars in the humanities are increasingly drawn into debates concerning the social impact of science and technology. These interdisciplinary conversations often balance the rigors of scientific method alongside the interpretive power of the humanities. How has critical theory combined with science and technology studies (STS) to interpret and challenge scientific discourse across the years? This course will introduce important intersections between critical theory and STS. With an eye to the latest developments in these overlapping fields, we will investigate the nature of these interdisciplinary formations. This course will provide a grounding in the methods and arguments that shape how literary and humanistic inquiry intervene in the world of science and technology.
 
Course Reading List
 
Readings may include:
 
  • Stacey Alaimo, Bodily Natures: Science, Environment, and the Material Self 
  • Ruha Benjamin, excerpts from Race After Technology 
  • Lorraine Daston and Peter Galison, excerpts from Objectivity 
  • Kim TallBear, “An Indigenous, Feminist Approach to DNA Politics”
  • Paul Edwards, excerpts from A Vast Machine: Computer Models, Climate Data, and the Politics of Global Warming
  • Alexander Galloway, excerpts from Protocol: How Control Exists after Decentralization
  • Donna Haraway, “A Manifesto for Cyborgs”
  • Evelyn Fox Keller, excerpts from Refiguring Life: Metaphors of Twentieth-Century Biology 
  • Bruno Latour, excerpts from Science in Action 
  • Luciana Parisi, excerpts from Contagious Architecture: Computation, Aesthetics, and Space 
  • N. Katherine Hayles, excerpts from How We Became Posthuman

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Student presentation with discussion questions - 10%
  • Short paper based on student presentation (3-4 pages, due one week after presentation) - 15%
  • Active engagement during session - 10%
  • Discussion posts (posted within one week of class session) - 10% 
  • Class conference presentation (final two sessions) - 5%
  • Final paper (10-12 double-spaced pages) - 50%

ENG7101HS

Research-Creation: Theory and Practice

McGill, R.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Wednesday 3:00 - 5:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

Research-creation, also known as arts-based research or practice-led research, has been increasingly recognized as a significant form of scholarly inquiry. It has the capacity to employ unique methodologies, produce distinctive kinds of understanding, and engage non-academic communities in direct, multifaceted ways. Considering scholarship that documents and theorizes research-creation, as well as examples of research-creation involving literature and other arts, we’ll examine the many forms that research-creation can take, as well as its affordances, value, risks, and challenges. Along the way, we’ll investigate such topics as the nature of the knowledge generated by fiction; collaborative, interdisciplinary, intersectional, and community-engaged methodologies; Indigenous approaches to research-creation; peer review and questions of assessment; ethical considerations; research-creation in relation to social justice and environmental justice; and research-creation as a complement and alternative to traditional scholarly research. The major project for the course will involve each student producing a work of research-creation, accompanied by a discussion of the work’s methodology and research contributions, or writing an academic article on a subject connected to the course.

Course Reading List

  • Barrett, Estelle. “Foucault’s ‘What Is an Author’: Towards a Critical Discourse of Practice as Research.” Practice as Research: Approaches to Creative Arts Enquiry. Ed. Barrett and Barbara Bolt. Bloomsbury, 2007.
  • Beier, Jessie L. and Jason J. Wallin. “The Disappeared Future of Arts-Based Research, Parts I–VI: Towards a Reality-Without-Givenness.” What Is Art Education? After Deleuze and Guattari. Ed. Jan Jagodzinski. Palgrave Macmillan, 2017.
  • Burge, Amy, et al. “‘. . . But We Are Academics!’ A Reflection on Using Arts-Based Research Activities with University Colleagues.” Teaching in Higher Education 21.6 (2016).
  • Chapman, Owen and Kim Sawchuk. “Research-Creation: Intervention, Analysis and ‘Family Resemblances.’” Canadian Journal of Communication 37.1 (2012).
  • Cox, Andrew et al. “Criteria of Quality in Fiction-Based Research to Promote Debate About the Use of AI and Robots in Higher Education.” Higher Education Research and Development 42.3 (2023).
  • Dennett, Daniel C. Intuition Pumps and Other Tools for Thinking. Norton, 2013. (excerpt)
  • Donnelly, Dianne. “Creative Writing Knowledge.” Key Issues in Creative Writing. Ed. Donnelly and Graeme Harper. Multilingual Matters, 2013.
  • Iser, Wolfgang. “The Significance of Fictionalizing.” Anthropoetics 3.2 (1997-98).
  • Kimmerer, Robin Wall. Braiding Sweetgrass: Indigenous Wisdom, Scientific Knowledge, and the Teachings of Plants. Milkweed, 2013. (excerpt)
  • Leavy, Patricia. “Criteria for Evaluating Arts-Based Research.” Handbook of Arts-Based Research. Ed. Leavy. Guilford, 2017.
  • Loveless, Natalie. “Polydisciplinamory.” How to Make Art at the End of the World: A Manifesto for Research-Creation. Duke UP, 2019.
  • Lowry, Glen. “Un-Settling a Research-Creation Framework.” Knowings and Knots: Methodologies and Ecologies in Research-Creation. Ed. Natalie Loveless. U of Alberta P, 2020.
  • Maynard, Robyn and Leanne Betasamosake Simpson. “On Letter Writing, Commune, and the End of (This) World.” Rehearsals for Living. Haymarket, 2022.
  • O’Brien, M. E. and Eman Abdelhadi. Everything for Everyone: An Oral History of the New York Commune, 2052-2072. Common Notions, 2022. (excerpt)
  • St Hilaire, Emilie. “Who Should Care About Responsible Conduct of Research in Research-Creation?” RACAR 43.1 (2018).
  • Truman, Sarah E. “Theoretical Precursors: Tracing My Methodology for Research-Creation.” Feminist Speculations and the Practice of Research-Creation: Writing Pedagogies and Intertextual Affects. Routledge, 2021.

Texts subject to change.

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Class participation - 15%
  • Readings-based presentation - 15%
  • Project proposal - 10%
  • Project presentation - 20%
  • Project - 40%

ENG8100HS

Electronic Literature

Noh, J.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Tuesday 3:00 - 6:00 (3 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
A seminar on electronic literature from the microprocessor revolution to the development of the internet and algorithmic social media to recent large-language models. Special attention will be paid to the ways experimental writers negotiate an emergent “postprint” condition, following the “rupture in the genealogy of printed books” (Hayles) inaugurated by computational technologies. How have writers used programming languages, computer word processors, and other digital reading and writing technologies to re-imagine authorship and the production and circulation of literature? How have these technological experimentations led to innovations on literary form? What challenges does electronic literature—much of it written in programming languages that are now obsolete and published on floppy diskettes that are gradually degrading and websites that are now defunct—create for literary historians and archivists? To help us explore such questions, we will develop a theoretical vocabulary drawn from media studies, book history, textual criticism, and archival studies.
 
Course Reading List
 
Primary Texts
 
  • bpNichol, First Screening
  • Kamau Brathwaite, Ancestors
  • Shelley Jackson, Patchwork Girl
  • Jennifer Egan, “Black Box”
  • Jordan Abel, Injun 
  • Bhanu Kapil, Ban en Banlieue
  • Eugene Lim, Search History
  • Vauhini Vara, Searches

Secondary Texts 

  • Amaranth Borsuk, The Book 
  • Whitney Trettien, Cut/Copy/Paste (selections)
  • Garrett Stewart, Book, Text, Medium (selections)
  • N. Katherine Hayles, Writing Machines; Postprint (selections)
  • Matthew Kirschenbaum, Mechanisms; Track Changes; Bitstreams (selections)
  • Lisa Nakamura, Digitizing Race (selections)
  • Safiya Noble, Algorithms of Oppression (selections)
  • Sarah Brouillette, “Wattpad’s Fictions of Care” and “Wattpad, Platform Capitalism, and the Feminization of Publishing Work” 

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Sustained participation - 15%
  • Short presentation and discussion facilitation - 25%
    • Presentation handout or slides - 10%
    • Short presentation (10 minutes) - 10%
    • Facilitation (20 minutes) - 5%
  • Final project (12+ pp. research paper, scholarly edition, or public humanities project) - 60%
    • Abstract/proposal - 5%
    • Project bibliography and oral exam - 15%
    • Final project - 40%

ENG9100HS

Theory of the Novel

Schmitt, C.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Tuesday 1:00 - 3:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
When, in 1914-15, Georg Lukács chose the title The Theory of the Novel for his influential work on the modern literary genre par excellence, he named a field of endeavour that has preoccupied literary theorists and critics from the beginning of the twentieth century to the present. Borrowing his title, this course sets out to engage with landmark contributions to the theory of the novel and narrative theory over the last century. In addition to Lukács’s Hegelian (and, later, Marxist) answers to the question of why novels exist and how they function, we will canvass Bakhtinian, Auerbachian, narratological (and feminist narratological), post-structuralist, and postcolonial approaches, among others. We’ll also have one literary text in common to enable deeply informed in-class discussion and analysis, most likely Olive Schreiner’s remarkable and problematic The Story of an African Farm (1883).
 
Course Reading List
 
Theory of the novel and narrative theory by:
 
  • Benedict Anderson
  • Erich Auerbach
  • M. M. Bakhtin
  • Roland Barthes
  • Homi Bhabha
  • Dorrit Cohn
  • Gérard Genette
  • Fredric Jameson
  • Susan S. Lanser
  • Georg Lukács
  • Edward Said
  • Ferdinand de Saussure
  • Viktor Shklovsky
  • Alex Woloch

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Informed participation, including weekly “most important sentence” and “most puzzling sentence” -  10%
  • Three short handwritten reflections (10% each x 3) - 30%
  • One pastiche - 10%
  • Take-home final exam - 50%

ENG9101HS

Bad English(es): A History

Percy, C.

 
Term: S-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Thursday 12:00 - 2:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This course explores the history of English since 1500 through the lens of linguistic stigma—what counts as “bad English,” when, and why. From malapropic Latinisms in the Renaissance to grammatical “blunders” in the eighteenth century, from stigmatized dialects and colonial and Indigenous “New Englishes” to non-native English as a global lingua franca, we’ll examine how certain forms of English have been marginalized, mocked, or policed. We’ll also consider the rise of digital registers—from texting to AI-generated language—and how they challenge traditional norms.
 
Rather than treating these varieties as errors to be corrected, the course focuses on their creative and rhetorical potential in literary and non-literary texts. We’ll read authors who play with stigmatized forms to signal identity, critique authority, or expand expressive possibilities. Alongside close reading, students will engage with the social, political, and pedagogical contexts that shape attitudes toward language. Literary texts will be central, but we’ll also look at journalism, education, digital media, and everyday speech.
 
This course is designed for graduate students in literature and language, especially those interested in teaching, writing, or the politics of English. It offers a fresh way to think about linguistic history—not as a march toward correctness, but as a story of conflict, creativity, and change.
 
Course Reading List
 
Main texts might include:
 
  • Ahmad, Dohra. 2007. Rotten English : A Literary Anthology. 1st ed. New York: W.W. Norton & Co.
  • Culpeper, Jonathan, Paul Kerswill, Ruth Wodak, Tony McEnery, and Francis Katamba, eds. 2018. English Language : Description, Variation and Context. Basingstoke, Hampshire: Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Hodson, Jane. 2014. Dialect in Film and Literature. Houndmills, Basingstoke, Hampshire: Macmillan International.
  • Peterson, Elizabeth. 2019. Making Sense of “Bad English.” Taylor & Francis.

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

  • Anthology entry - 25%
  • Proposal with bibliography - 10%
  • Presentation - 15%
  • Final research paper - 35%
  • Credit/No Credit discussion posts and exercises - 10%
  • Participation - 5%

ENG9400HF

Essential Skills Workshop Series

*CREDIT/NO CREDIT (0.25 FCE)*

Gniadek, M.

*Although the Essential Skills Worship Series is mandatory for all PhD year-1 students and all PhD U year-2 students, who must enroll through ACORN, weekly meetings are open to all interested graduate students (MA or PhD), who do not need to enroll in order to attend any given session or sessions.*
 
Term: F-TERM (September to December 2026)
Date/Time: Thursday 4:00 - 6:00 (2 hours) *meets eight times in the F-Term*
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 

The Essential Skills Workshop Series (ESWS) introduces the incoming cohort of doctoral students to the essential skills they will need in order to succeed in the PhD program in English and beyond. ESWS meets eight times each fall, approximately once a week for two hours from mid-September through mid-November. Most meetings will feature a guest or guests, who, along with the faculty coordinator, will lead an open discussion for students embarking on the doctoral degree at U of T, moving into new pedagogic responsibilities, and entering wider professional and scholarly networks. Occasionally, there will be short, pre-circulated readings. Some sessions may provide students with tangible feedback on work (such as SSHRC proposals) they are already doing as part of their professionalization during the first year of the program.  

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

The Essential Skills Workshop Series meets over 8 weeks in the Fall Term. The course is Credit/No Credit: credit will be earned for attendance and for receiving and providing tangible feedback on a draft SSHRC proposal.

ENG9900HF

Teaching Literature

*CREDIT/NO CREDIT*

Hansen, J.

*This course is mandatory for and restricted to PhD students in either Year 2 or 3 and PhD U students in either Year 3 or 4.*

Term: F-TERM (January to April 2027)
Date/Time: Tuesday 3:00 - 5:00 (2 hours)
Location: TBA
Delivery: In-Person
 
Course Description
 
This seminar, required of and limited to PhD students in either Year 2 or 3 and PhD U students in either Year 3 or 4, addresses the teaching of English literature at the university level. It is designed to provide the foundations for an informed, self-reflexive pedagogy and to help students develop effective methods for teaching English to undergraduate and graduate students. Guest faculty will discuss a range of pedagogical challenges and solutions.
 
Course Reading List
 
  • Elaine Auyoung, “Becoming Sensitive: Literary Study and Learning to Notice”
  • Patrick Carey, “A Time to Teach: Reflections upon Pedagogy in the Life of a Graduate Student”
  • Patrick Collier, “Articulating Goals and Designing Integrated Courses”
  • Paul Corrigan, “Reading and Responding”
  • Paul Corrigan, “The State of Scholarship on Teaching Literature”
  • Paul Corrigan, “Thinking About Pedagogy”
  • Clark and Talbert, [selections on assessment]
  • Mark Edmundson, “Teach the Conflicts”
  • Patricia Eberly, [selection on syllabus design]
  • Jennifer Heinert and Daniel Newman, [readings on engagement]
  • bell hooks, “Engaged Pedagogy,” “Integrity,” and “Teaching as Prophetic Vision”
  • Harvard Bok Center for Teaching and Learning, “Syllabus Design”
  • Eszter Hargittai, “How to Prepare a Syllabus for a College Course”
  • Sherry Lee Linkon, “The Literary Mind”
  • Scott Nail, “What Is Good Writing”
  • Ato Quayson, [selection on anti-racist pedagogy]
  • Deanna Reder, “Using Indigenous-Informed Close-Reading and Research Skills to Unlearn”
  • James Schaeffer, “Two Methods of Instruction”
  • Elaine Showalter, [selection on seminars]
  • Elaine Showalter, “The Anxiety of Teaching”
  • Donald Small, “In Defense of the Lecture”
  • Ted Underwood, “We Can Save What Matters About Writing at a Price”
  • Center for Educational Innovation (UMN), “Writing Your Teaching Philosophy”
  • David Knights, [selection on big lectures]

Method of Evaluation and Course Requirements

In this Credit/No Credit course, credit will be earned for:

  • Discussion
  • Presentations

2026 F-Term Graduate Course Timetable

In this timetable, each course code is linked to its corresponding section heading above. Please open the section and scroll down to find the information about the specific course.

Time Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
10:00 - 12:00

ENG5100HF
Topics in Medieval Literature

London Drama to 1530
M. Sergi
[Room TBA]

ENG6100HF
Topics in Genre and Form

After Autofiction, After Authenticity
A. Hammond
[Room TBA]
ENG1100HF
Topics in Canadian Literature

At the Threshold: Witnessing and Testimony in Canadian Literature
S. Kamboureli
[Room TBA]
ENG5103HF
Topics in Medieval Literature

Piers Plowman
K. Gaston
[Room TBA]
 
11:00 - 1:00         ENG5500HF
Topics in Twentieth-Century and Contemporary Literature

Against the Law: Reading and Writing Male Homosexuality in Post-War England
I. Morra
[Room TBA]
12:00 - 2:00   ENG1200HF
Topics in African Canadian Literature

Assembling the Afro-Métis Syllabus
G.E. Clarke
[Room TBA]
  ENG5201HF
Topics in Early Modern Literature

Writing Disability in Early Modern England
K. Williams
[Room TBA]
 
12:00 - 3:00 ENG6950Y
Workshop in Creative Writing
I. Williams
[Room TBA]
  ENG6999YF
Critical Topographies

P. Downes
[Room TBA]
   
1:00 - 3:00         ENG5401HF
Topics in Romantic and Victorian Literature

Melodrama: Form and Function, 1770-1890
T. Robinson
[Room TBA]
2:00 - 4:00   ENG5503HF
Topics in Twentieth-Century and Contemporary Literature

Speaking of What’s Next: Climate and Dystopia in Near Future Fiction
M. Goldman
[Room TBA]
  ENG6552HF
Law and Literature

S. Stern
[Room TBA]
 
3:00 - 5:00   ENG9900HF
Teaching Literature

J. Hansen
[Room TBA]
    ENG1001HF
Old English I

A. Walton
[Room TBA]
3:00 - 6:00 ENG2200HF
Topics in African American Literature

Black Messiah
I. A. Durham
[Room TBA]
  ENG4100HF
Topics in Diasporic, Postcolonial, and Transnational Literature

Gender, Militarization, and Ecology
R. Hogue
[Room TBA]
ENG6960HY
Advanced Creative Writing Workshop

R. Greene
[Room TBA]
 
4:00 - 6:00       ENG9400HF
Essential Skills Workshop Series

M. Gniadek
[Room TBA]
 
4:00 - 7:00   ENG2100HF
Topics in American Literature

Class Migration Through Literacy in 20th-Century American Literature
N. Dolan
[Room TBA]
     
6:00 - 8:00     ENG5301HF
Topics in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature

Literature and Censorship, Milton to Mill
T. Keymer
[Room TBA]
   

 

2027 S-Term Graduate Course Timetable

In this timetable, each course code is linked to its corresponding section heading above. Please open the section and scroll down to find the information about the specific course.

Time Monday Tuesday Wednesday Thursday Friday
9:00 - 11:00     ENG7100HS
Topics in Interdisciplinary Methods

Critical Theory and Science & Technology Studies
A. Slater
[Room TBA]
   
10:00 - 12:00       ENG5103HS
Topics in Medieval Literature
Medieval Manuscript Culture
S. Sobecki
[Room TBA]
 
11:00 - 1:00

ENG5501HS
Topics in Twentieth-Century and Contemporary Literature

Real Estate Fiction
S. Radovic
[Room TBA]

ENG2100HS
Topics in American Literature

Riot, Rebellion, Revolution: American Literatures and the Arts of Resistance
D. Seitler
[Room TBA]
ENG6100HS
Topics in Genre and Form

The History of Rhyme, Medieval to Romantic
W. Robins
[Room TBA]
 

 

12:00 - 2:00      

ENG9101HS
Topics in Theory

Bad English(es): A History
C. Percy
[Room TBA]

 
1:00 - 3:00

ENG5300HS
Topics in Restoration and Eighteenth-Century Literature

Reading Clarissa
S. Dickie
[Room TBA]

ENG9100HS
Topics in Theory

Theory of the Novel
C. Schmitt
[Room TBA]

ENG4101HS
Topics in Diasporic, Postcolonial, and Transnational Literature

Kind of Like: Difference, Similarity, Comparison
A. Thomas
[Room TBA]
   
2:00 - 4:00      

ENG5401HS
Topics in Romantic and Victorian Literature

Ethics and Aesthetics: The Late Victorians
H. Li
[Room TBA]

 
2:00 - 5:00         ENG6950Y
Workshop in Creative Writing

N. Naga
[Room TBA]
3:00 - 5:00    

ENG7101HS
Topics in Interdisciplinary Methods

Research-Creation: Theory and Practice
R. McGill
[Room TBA]

 

 

3:00 - 6:00

ENG5200HS
Topics in Early Modern Literature

Shakespeare's Tragedies
L. Magnusson
[Room TBA]

ENG8100HS
Topics in Digital Literature

Electronic Literature
J. Noh
[Room TBA]
 

ENG6960HY
Advanced Creative Writing Workshop
R. Greene
[Room TBA]

 
5:00 - 7:00    

ENG5400HS
Topics in Romantic and Victorian Literature

Romantic Anger, Revisited
K. Weisman
[Room TBA]