Course Information

The English Department uses this general system of numbering for our courses:

100–109 and 200-209 Old English
110–119 and 210-219 Middle English
120–129 and 220-229 Renaissance
130–139 and 230-239 17th-c
140–149 and 240-249 18th-c
150–159 and 250-259 Romanticism and 19th-c British
160–169 and 260-269 20th-c and 21st-c
170–179 and 270-279 American
180–189 and 280-289 Modernism, thematic courses mainly modern
190–199 and 290-299 Criticism, Theory

English Concentration Foundational Courses, Class of ’23 & Beyond

Common Courses

English 10: Literature Today

Literature Today focuses on works written since 2000—since most of you were born. It explores how writers from around the world speak to and from their personal and cultural situations, addressing current problems of economic inequality, social displacement, technological change, and divisive politics. We will encounter a range of genres, media, and histories to study contemporary literature as a living, evolving system. The course uniquely blends literary study and creative writing—students will analyze literature and make literature. The conviction that these practices are complementary will inform our approach to the readings and course assignments. 

English 20: Literary Forms

This foundational course for English concentrators examines literary form and genre. We will see kinds of literature as they have changed over time, along with the shapes and forms that writers create, critics describe, and readers learn to recognize. The body of the course looks to the great literary types, or modes, such as epic, tragedy, and lyric, as well as to the workings of literary style in moments of historical change, producing the transformation, recycling, and sometimes mockery of past forms. While each version of English 20 includes a different array of genres and texts from multiple periods, those texts will always include five major works from across literary history: Beowulf (epic), King Lear (tragedy), Persuasion (comic novel), The Souls of Black Folk (essays; expository prose), and Elizabeth Bishop’s poems (lyric). The course integrates creative writing with critical attention: assignments will take creative as well as expository and analytical forms.

English 97: Literary Methods

This course looks at the many questions that arise when we make literature an object of study. What do we do when we read a literary text? Why does it matter who wrote it, with what technology, and within what legal constraints? How does approaching a text with particular assumptions alter its meanings? The course introduces students to broad theoretical questions (e.g. what is an author? what is a text? what are literary canons? how do we compare interpretations?) and critical approaches (e.g. formalist, historicist, feminist, postcolonial, race and ethnicity, gender and sexuality, etc.). The course empowers students to think about the concept of literature, and about what’s at stake in studying it. The course also introduces students to fundamentals of literary research with both primary and secondary materials in the Harvard Libraries. 

English 98r: Junior Tutorial

The Junior Tutorial is a unique experience within the English Department and provides an opportunity to pursue focused, but flexible, study in a topic of shared interest to tutees and tutors. Encouraging in-depth exploration of topics not normally covered in the English curriculum, the Junior Tutorial also enables students to consolidate and refine critical skills gained in Common courses while at the same time exploring possible thesis topics. Rising juniors have the opportunity to identify a thematic, historical, or chronological literary subject they might like to study in their Junior Tutorial. The tutorial is required of all honors concentrators.

Guided Electives

pre1700:

The dynamic periods of English literature known as Medieval, Renaissance, and Early Modern, when English became a literary language, emerging from multiple ethnic and linguistic communities.

1700–1900:

These courses cover the long transition spanning the Enlightenment, Romanticism, and Victorian eras from a feudal and political world of inherited privilege and absolute power to one of increasing democracy, often coupled with imperialism and suppression of indigenous peoples.

1900–2000:

Twentieth century writers from Modernism to Postmodernism and Postcolonialism saw the advent of suffragism, black civil rights, total war, the atom bomb, and life-altering technologies from the airplane to the Internet.

Senior Thesis or Project

English 99r: Senior Tutorial

The Senior Tutorial is the Senior Thesis, which may take the form of an investigation of a critical topic or a creative writing project. 

Open Electives

Undergraduate Seminars: English 90

90-level seminars are introductions to the specialized study of literature and are restricted to undergraduates. Enrollment is limited to 15, but any English concentrator may be admitted with permission from the course head. All honors concentrators are required to take at least one 90-level seminar within the department. While some preference is given to English concentrators, no seats are guaranteed, so we encourage you to begin seminars before senior year.

English 91r: Supervised Reading and Research

The Supervising Reading and Research tutorial is a type of student-driven independent study offering individual instruction in subjects of special interest that cannot be studied in regular courses. English 91r is supervised by a member of the English Department faculty.  It is a graded course and may not be taken more than twice, and only once for concentration credit. Students must submit a proposal and get approval from the faculty member with whom they wish to work.

100-level Lectures

100-level lectures are open enrollment, have a weekly section or discussion session, and are open to undergraduates and graduates.

English Concentration Foundational Courses, Class of ’21 & ‘22

Common Ground Courses and Shakespeare

The English concentration encourages students to develop their own interests while searching out unfamiliar and challenging areas of study. Besides introducing students to some of the greatest works of literature in English, the Common Ground courses and Shakespeare requirement should be seen as invitations to further exploration in the areas and approaches around which they move.

Every concentrator takes three Common Ground courses, each of which investigates important works of English literature from its own perspective, and a course in Shakespeare, the key figure of the English literary canon. Arrivals introduces students to the first thousand years of the English literary tradition, up to 1700: this is a course in literary history. Poets teaches the methods required to read and interpret a variety of kinds of poetry: this is a course in literary form. Migrations follows the spread of English literature to the Americas and beyond from 1700 to the present: this is a course in literary topography and geography.

Each syllabus is individually designed by the professor teaching it, which means that no two Common Ground courses are exactly alike. For most courses, enrollment is limited to ensure that students gain the benefit of close contact with the professor. Preference is given to English concentrators. Enrollments are determined after the first class meeting, so if you are interested in any of the Common Ground courses, please attend the first day of class.

The Common Ground and Shakespeare courses do not pretend to offer a complete map of the field of English studies. They do, however, create a basic template on which students can extend their own maps, while promoting the attentive reading and sharpened writing in literary analysis required by the program.

English 40-49: Literary Arrivals, 700-1700

These courses introduce the literature of medieval and early modern Britain, from the earliest written English poems, such as Beowulf, to the masterpieces of the seventeenth century, such as Paradise Lost. Students learn to read this literature both formally and culturally, in relation to the charged and constantly changing social, political, religious, and linguistic landscape of premodern Britain. Arrivals attends to the early history of literary forms, to the developing idea of a vernacular literary canon, and to the category of the literary itself.

English 50-59: Poets

These courses develop close reading, explication, and the interpretation of poems; consideration of voice, speaker, mood, and tone; and familiarity with lyric, dramatic, meditative, and narrative poetic forms. Students develop a vocabulary to talk about poems, poetic structure, and elements of prosody. Attention is paid to thematic and formal elements as they work together, to tradition and innovation in verse forms, and to the relationships among poems across time. These courses examine poets in more than one period or style.

English 60-69: Literary Migrations: America in Transnational Context

These courses attend to the spread, and the transformation, of literature in English as it became established in North America and other English-speaking sites around the globe. All Migrations courses include American literature from more than one century, and all include, without being restricted to, the literature of the United States, read within a variety of possible transnational contexts. Within these parameters, courses vary widely. Central works of the American literary canon will be studied alongside other literatures or in relation to specific themes.

Shakespeare

The study of Shakespeare has always been central to English departments. If the study of literature concerns its history, its array of forms, its creation of a canon, its methods of analysis, and its dispersal to the ends of the earth, Shakespeare looms large in all of these areas: indeed some of our analytical methods have come into being precisely for the sake of understanding what he did. Shakespeare courses strive to put Shakespeare in the literary-historical, theatrical, and critical contexts in which the shape of his genius can be most clearly felt.

Diversity in Literature

Courses meeting this requirement attend to the creative achievements associated with alternative traditions, counter-publics, and archives of dissent. Students will encounter diverse perspectives and aesthetic traditions without which it is difficult fully to understand long-canonized literatures. Topics include, but are not limited to: (1) the historical construction of markers of difference, such as race, ethnicity, class, gender, and sexuality—and their intersections, including intersections with dialect; and (2) the imaginative and formal innovations produced by disenfranchised groups. (Required for the Class of 2020 and beyond; these fall courses and spring courses will fulfill this distribution requirement.)

Undergraduate Seminars: English 90

90-level seminars are introductions to the specialized study of literature and are restricted to undergraduates. Enrollment is limited to 15, but any English concentrator may be admitted with permission from the course head. All honors concentrators are required to take at least one 90-level seminar within the department. While some preference is given to English concentrators, no seats are guaranteed, so we encourage you to begin seeking enrollment into seminars before senior year.

Undergraduate Tutorials

English 91r: Supervised Reading and Research

The Supervising Reading and Research tutorial is a type of student-driven independent study offering individual instruction in subjects of special interest that cannot be studied in regular courses. English 91r is supervised by a member of the English Department faculty.  It is a graded course and may not be taken more than twice, and only once for concentration credit. Students must submit a proposal and get approval from the faculty member with whom they wish to work.

English 98r: Junior Tutorial

The Junior Tutorial is a unique experience within the English Department and provides an opportunity to pursue focused, but flexible, study in a topic of shared interest to tutees and tutors. Encouraging in-depth exploration of topics not normally covered in the English curriculum, the Junior Tutorial also enables students to consolidate and refine critical skills gained in Common Ground courses while at the same time exploring possible thesis topics. Rising juniors have the opportunity to identify a thematic, historical, or chronological literary subject they might like to study in their Junior Tutorial. The tutorial is required of all honors concentrators.

English 99r: Senior Tutorial

The Senior Tutorial is the Senior Thesis, which may take the form of an investigation of a critical topic or a creative writing project.

Lectures

100-level lectures are open enrollment, have a weekly section or discussion session, and are open to undergraduates and graduates.

 

Graduate Program Courses

Lectures

100-level lectures are open enrollment, have a weekly section or discussion session, and are open to undergraduates and graduates.

Graduate Seminars: English 200

These seminars are primarily for graduate students. Interested undergraduates should consult the course head for more information.

Graduate Directed Study: English 300
 

  • English 301-310 (“Doctoral Conferences”): Course numbers for graduate colloquia
     
  • English 397 (“Directed Study”): Filler course numbers for G1s and G2s who wish to take fewer than four courses in a given term, or G3s who are studying for their Fields Exams
     
  • English 398 (“Direction of Doctoral Dissertations”): Filler course numbers for G3+s who have passed their Fields Exams
     
  • English 399 (“Reading and Research”): Not a substitute for time; an Independent Study which must be approved by the DGS

For more details about 300-levels and filling out your study card as a graduate student, please review the Graduate Study Card Tips document.

Courses Taught Outside the Department

Cross-Listed Courses

Sometimes English Department faculty teach courses outside of the English Department. Most of these courses may be counted for English concentration credit. Students seeking concentration credit should check with the Undergraduate Program staff before registering.

General Education

English Department faculty often teach General Education courses in the Aesthetic and Interpretive Understanding, Culture and Belief, and United States in the World categories. These offerings by English faculty count toward concentration and secondary field credit.

Freshman Seminars

Freshman Seminars taught by English Department faculty count toward concentration elective credit and secondary field seminar or elective credit.