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English (MA)

This is an archived copy of the 2022-2023 catalog. To access the most recent version of the catalog, please visit .

Degree Requirements

Students may choose from the degree tracks below to complete coursework within a focus area.

Focus Tracks are as follows:

Degrees earned will be distributed as: "Master of Arts in English" without focus area track specifications.

Film Studies Track

Research Courses6
Interdisciplinary Studies in English 1
Master's Project in English
Core Courses15
Select nine hours of 500-level film coursework approved in conjunction with the academic committee 2
Select an additional six hours of elective courses approved in conjunction with the academic committee 3
Department Electives6
Select six hours of coursework in Literature, Rhetoric and Composition, or Linguistics approved in conjunction with the academic committee
Open Electives6
Select six hours of open electives in any area, including film or another area of complementary study, approved in conjunction with the academic committee 4
Total Hours33

Linguistics Track

Distribution Requirement Courses6
Select six credit hours of coursework in Literature, Film, or Rhetoric and Composition approved in conjunction with the academic committee
Linguistics Track Courses24
Linguistics Courses
Select a minimum of five Linguistics courses approved in conjunction with the academic committee
Elective Courses
Select a minimum of three courses from English or complementary fields of study approved in conjunction with the academic committee
Research Course3
Master's Project in English
Total Hours33

Literature Track

Research Component Courses6
Literature, Methods, and the Profession 5
Master's Project in English 6
Distribution Requirement Courses12
Select one course from each of the following four areas listed under "Distribution Requirement Courses" listed below
Literature Elective Courses9
Select three literature courses approved in conjunction with the academic committee 7
Open Elective Courses6
Select two elective courses in English or complementary fields of study approved in conjunction with the academic committee 8
Global Perspective Requirement (Co-Requisite)
See "Global Perspective Requirement" for details below
Total Hours33

Distribution Requirement Courses

Select one course from each of the following areas listed below:

British Literature before 1600

·¡±·³ÒÌý509Old English Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý510Middle English Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý52916th-Century Non-Dramatic English Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý551Chaucer
·¡±·³ÒÌý558Studies In Shakespeare
·¡±·³ÒÌý561Milton
·¡±·³ÒÌý578English Drama To 1642
·¡±·³ÒÌý582Studies in Literature (when topic applies)

British Literature after 1600

·¡±·³ÒÌý550British Romantic Period
·¡±·³ÒÌý560British Victorian Period
·¡±·³ÒÌý56218TH-Century English Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý56318TH-Century English Novel
·¡±·³ÒÌý564Victorian Novel
·¡±·³ÒÌý57020TH-Century British Prose
·¡±·³ÒÌý57120TH-Century British Poetry
·¡±·³ÒÌý572Modern British Drama
·¡±·³ÒÌý579Restoration and 18th-Century Drama
·¡±·³ÒÌý582Studies in Literature

American Literature

·¡±·³ÒÌý531American Colonial Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý548African-American Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý555American Romantic Period
·¡±·³ÒÌý565American Realism and Naturalism
·¡±·³ÒÌý573Modern American Drama
·¡±·³ÒÌý575Southern Writers
·¡±·³ÒÌý57620TH-Century American Poetry
·¡±·³ÒÌý57720th-Century American Prose
·¡±·³ÒÌý580Literary Postmodernism
·¡±·³ÒÌý582Studies in Literature

Rhetoric, Linguistics, Composition, Film Studies, Criticism or Theory

·¡±·³ÒÌý505Writing Program Administration: Theory, Practice, and Research
·¡±·³ÒÌý511Theory and Research In Composition
·¡±·³ÒÌý513Empirical Research In Composition
·¡±·³ÒÌý514History Of Rhetoric
·¡±·³ÒÌý515Rhetoric Of Science and Technology
·¡±·³ÒÌý516Rhetorical Criticism: Theory and Practice
·¡±·³ÒÌý523Language Variation Research Seminar
·¡±·³ÒÌý524Introduction to Linguistics
·¡±·³ÒÌý525Variety In Language
·¡±·³ÒÌý528Sociophonetics
·¡±·³ÒÌý532Narrative Analysis
·¡±·³ÒÌý533Bilingualism and Language Contact
·¡±·³ÒÌý534Quantitative Analysis in Sociolinguistics
·¡±·³ÒÌý536Research Methods in Phonology
·¡±·³ÒÌý539Seminar In World Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý540History Of Literary Criticism
·¡±·³ÒÌý541Literary and Cultural Theory
·¡±·³ÒÌý549Modern African Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý554Contemporary Rhetorical Theory
·¡±·³ÒÌý580Literary Postmodernism
·¡±·³ÒÌý581Visual Rhetoric: Theory and Criticism
·¡±·³ÒÌý582Studies in Literature
·¡±·³ÒÌý583Studies In Rhetoric and Writing
·¡±·³ÒÌý584Studies In Linguistics
·¡±·³ÒÌý586Studies In Theory

Global Perspective Requirement

The Global Perspectives requirement is intended to provide students with a greater understanding of language structure and a globalizing perspective on texts and culture. Student may fulfill this requirement in one of two ways:

  1. Demonstrate language proficiency (by meeting one of the following options):
    1. Taking a reading exam administered by the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures. The Foreign Language Department offers optional preparatory courses for students planning to take the reading exam: ¹ó³¢³§Ìý401 Spanish Graduate Reading, ¹ó³¢¹óÌý401 French Graduate Reading, ¹ó³¢³ÒÌý401 German Graduate Reading.  
    2. Enrolling in and passing with a C- or better a 300-400 level course taught in the language (not translation).*
    3. Having an undergraduate major or minor in a foreign language within the past five years.*
    4. Speaking a language other than English as your first language.*
  2. Take a World Literature course or an approved alternative.  This course will typically count toward the degree as a literature or unrestricted elective, but there may be some instances in which the course can fulfill a core requirement.

If you’re considering doctoral work in literary study, we encourage you to consult with your advisor. In some cases, certifying language proficiency via reading exam may help satisfy a doctoral language requirement later on.

Rhetoric and Composition Track

Core Courses15
Composition
Theory and Research In Composition
Rhetoric Course
Select one of the following courses listed under "Rhetoric Courses" listed below
Rhetoric and Composition Courses
Select two courses from "Rhetoric Courses" or "Research Component Courses" listed below 9
Linguistics Course
Select a Linguistics course approved in conjunction with the academic committee 10
Research Component Course6
Select one additional course from "Research Component Courses" listed below
Master's Project in English 11
Department Electives6
Select six credit hours of coursework in Literature, Rhetoric and Composition, or Linguistics approved in conjunction with the academic committee
Open Elective Courses6
Select two elective courses approved in conjunction with the academic committee 12
Total Hours33

Rhetoric Courses

These courses address major issues and concepts in rhetoric ranging from Greek antiquity to contemporary poststructuralism, and applications from public speeches to popular culture to teaching to technical communication.

Select one of the following courses:
ENG/COM 514History Of Rhetoric
·¡±·³ÒÌý515Rhetoric Of Science and Technology
ENG/COM 516Rhetorical Criticism: Theory and Practice
ENG/COM 554Contemporary Rhetorical Theory

Research Component Courses

Before embarking on your capstone research, select one research methods course congruent with your disciplinary interests.

Select one of the following courses to fulfill the "Research Component Course" requirement:
·¡±·³ÒÌý506Verbal Data Analysis
·¡±·³ÒÌý513Empirical Research In Composition
ENG/COM 516Rhetorical Criticism: Theory and Practice
·¡±·³ÒÌý527Discourse Analysis
·¡±·³ÒÌý532Narrative Analysis
ENG/COM 581Visual Rhetoric: Theory and Criticism
·¡±·³ÒÌý583Studies In Rhetoric and Writing 13
·¡±·³ÒÌý585Studies In Film 14
·¡±·³ÒÌý587Interdisciplinary Studies in English 15

Accelerated Bachelor's/Master's Degree Requirements

The Accelerated Bachelors/Master’s (ABM) degree program allows exceptional undergraduate students at NC State an opportunity to complete the requirements for both the Bachelor’s and Master’s degrees at an accelerated pace. These undergraduate students may double count up to 12 credits and obtain a non-thesis Master’s degree in the same field within 12 months of completing the Bachelor’s degree, or obtain a thesis-based Master’s degree in the same field within 18 months of completing the Bachelor’s degree.

This degree program also provides an opportunity for the Directors of Graduate Programs (DGPs) at NC State to recruit rising juniors in their major to their graduate programs. However, permission to pursue an ABM degree program does not guarantee admission to the Graduate School. Admission is contingent on meeting eligibility requirements at the time of entering the graduate program.

Faculty

  • Christopher M. Anson
  • William Wilton Barnhardt
  • Barbara A. Bennett
  • Belle McQuaide Boggs
  • Eduardo C. Corral
  • Huiling Ding
  • Robin M. Dodsworth
  • Marsha Gabrielle Gordon
  • Hans Dodds Kellner
  • Dorianne Louise Laux
  • Leila S. May
  • Jeffrey Ingle Mielke
  • Jason Miller
  • John D. Morillo
  • James S. Mulholland
  • Miriam E. Orr
  • Juliana Makuchi Nfah-Abbenyi
  • Jeffrey Leo Reaser
  • Laura Ruth Severin
  • Jason Swarts
  • Erik R. Thomas
  • John N. Wall Jr.
  • Walter A. Wolfram
  • Anne Baker
  • Agnes Bolonyai
  • Helen Jane Burgess
  • Christopher James Crosbie
  • Marc K. Dudley
  • Casie J. Fedukovich
  • Paul Camm Fyfe
  • Andrew Robert Johnston
  • Jennifer Anne Nolan
  • Stacey L. Pigg
  • David M. Rieder
  • Margaret Simon
  • Timothy Linwood Stinson
  • Douglas M. Walls
  • Rebecca Ann Walsh
  • Zachary Charles Beare
  • Ronisha Witlee Browdy
  • Sumita Chakraborty
  • Maya L. Kapoor
  • Michelle McMullin
  • Cadwell Turnbull
  • Josie Torres Barth
  • Brian Blackley
  • Anna Marie Gibson-Knowles
  • John J. Kessel
  • James Robert Knowles
  • Jill Collins McCorkle
  • Joseph H. Millar
  • John Paul Stadler
  • Barbara Joan Baines
  • John Balaban
  • James M. Grimwood
  • Antony Howard Harrison
  • Philip E. Blank Jr.
  • Michael P. Carter
  • David H. Covington
  • Robert S. Dicks
  • James W. Clark Jr.
  • Angela Mackie Davis-Gardner
  • Jack D. Durant
  • Joseph A. Gomez
  • Charlotte Gross
  • Linda T. Holley
  • Deborah Hooker
  • Marvin Hunt
  • Susan M. Katz
  • John J. Kessel
  • Margaret Fontaine King
  • Robert C. Kochersberger
  • Lucinda H. MacKethan
  • Walter E. Meyers
  • Carolyn Rae Miller
  • Catherine E. Moore
  • Devin A. Orgeron
  • Ann M. Penrose
  • Carmine A. Prioli
  • Dick J. Reavis
  • Sharon M. Setzer
  • Judy Jo Small
  • Lee Smith
  • Jean J. Smoot
  • Allen Frederick Stein
  • Jon F. Thompson
  • Mary Helen Thuente
  • Robert V. Young Jr.
  • Catherine A. Warren
  • Harry C. West