Mar 28, 2024  
2019-2020 General Catalog 
    
2019-2020 General Catalog [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

English (Graduate Program)


 

For information regarding the UNDERGRADUATE PROGRAM, click here.   

Program Overview

The Department of English offers graduate students the opportunity to work with an extraordinarily productive and internationally respected faculty that is particularly strong in interdisciplinary approaches to modern literature and culture. The department continues to build upon its long-standing strengths in critical theory and the literature of the United States. The department is strong in most traditional fields of study, including Renaissance, Victorian literature, and American literature. Special areas of strength include modern fiction, film, cultural studies, women’s and gender studies, African-American literature, Southern literature, Louisiana and Caribbean studies, post-colonial literature, rhetoric, and popular culture. The highly ranked MFA program in creative writing combines individualized supervision of student work and literary study. Students in all three programs—MA, MFA, and PhD—complete all their coursework in small graduate seminars or workshop classes. Each program is distinguished by its flexibility, allowing the student significant input in determining a departmental-level academic course plan.

Administration

Joseph Kronick, Chair
Christopher Rovee, Director of Graduate Studies
TELEPHONE 225-578-5922 or 225-578-7803
FAX 225-578-4129
E-MAIL englishgradapply@lsu.edu
WEBSITE http://www.lsu.edu/hss/english/graduate_program/welcome_page.php

Admission

Applications and supporting materials for all graduate study must be submitted through the online application site for the LSU Graduate School. Official transcripts, official test scores, and other materials that come from third-party sources must be mailed to: LSU Office of Graduate Admissions, 114 West David Boyd Hall, Baton Rouge, LA 70803. These paper documents are stored electronically and departments have access to all materials submitted by and/or on behalf of a student applying to graduate study.

Admission is granted for the fall only. The application deadline for MFA and PhD applicants is January 15. All applicants must take the GRE general examination. A combined total of 308 on the verbal and quantitative elements of this examination is recommended, typically with a minimum of 160 on the verbal portion. A minimum undergraduate GPA of 3.2 is also recommended. International students whose native language is not English must also submit an acceptable TOEFL, IELTS, or PTE score. A writing sample is required of all applicants: eight to ten poems, 20 pages of prose, or a substantial portion of a script for those applying to the MFA program; a 15-20-page sample of sustained critical writing for those applying to the MA or PhD programs. Students should indicate on the writing sample the year it was written and for which degree program, if any.

Financial Assistance

Graduate assistantships are available for most students admitted to graduate study in this department. Editorial assistantships are awarded in conjunction with journals edited in the department. In order to be considered for financial aid, completed applications should be submitted no later than January 15 for PhD and MFA applicants..

Graduate Faculty

(check current faculty listings by department here)

Christine Barrett (7M) • Renaissance British literature, critical theory, Shakespeare, Spenser and Milton
James G. Bennett (EM) • Creative writing, fiction
Jacob Berman (M) • American literature, cultural studies and postcolonial theory
Michael P. Bibler (M) • American studies, Southern studies, sexuality studies, critical theory
William Boelhower (EM) • Atlantic studies, critical theory, American Literature
Lillian Bridwell-Bowles (EM) • Feminist rhetoric, rhetorical and literary history, composition studies
Jason D. Buch (6A) • Screenwriting
James M. Butts (6A) • Rhetoric and Composition
James V. Catano (M) • Rhetorical and critical theory, gender studies, film studies, non-fiction prose
Lauren Coats (M) • American literature
Andrei Codrescu (EM) • Creative writing; literary translation; editor, Exquisite Corpse
Kevin L. Cope (M) • 18th century literature
Brannon Costello (M) • Southern literature, American literature
J. Bainard Cowan (EM) • American and comparative literature, critical theory
Moira Crone (EM) • Creative writing, fiction
Rebecca W. Crump (M) • Victorian literature, bibliography
Jennifer Davis (7M) • Fiction Writing, Literary Journals
Francis A DeCaro (EM) • Folklore
William W. Demastes (M) • Modern drama
Femi Euba (M) • Playwriting, drama, third world literature
Daniel Mark Fogel (EM) • The modern novel, American literature, creative writing
Carl Freedman (M) • 20th-century literature, critical theory, film
Jesse M. Gellrich (M) • Medieval studies, critical theory
Lara Glenum (M) • Creative writing, international modernism, the historical avant-garde
Zachary L. Godshall (6A) • Screenwriting
Richard Godden (6A) • Medieval culture, disability studies, Chaucer
Angeletta Gourdine (M) • Diaspora literary and cultural studies, African-American literature, women’s studies
Barbara A. Heifferon (EM) • Writing (composition and rhetoric), medical rhetoric
Katherine R. Henninger (M) • Southern American literature, women writers, photography and literature
Fahima Ife-Weusi (6A) • English education, African-American studies
Benjamin Kahan (7M) • American literature, queer studies
Rodger Kamenetz (EM) • Creative writing, poetry, nonfiction, Jewish studies
J. Gerald Kennedy (EM) • American literature, short fiction, narrative theory
Emily Lauren King (6A) • Shakespeare and Renaissance drama
Mari Kornhauser (M) • Screenwriting
Joseph G. Kronick (M) • American poetry and nonfiction prose, critical theory
Isiah Lavender III (7M) • African and African-American literature, cultural studies, science fiction
John W. Lowe III (EM) • Southern, African-American, Louisiana, and ethnic literature; humor
David Madden (EM) • Creative writing, fiction, literary and film criticism, the Civil War
Michelle A. Massé (M) • Feminist and psychoanalytic theory, theory of the novel, 19th century British and American literature
Patrick McGee (EM) • Film studies, cultural studies, Joyce and Irish studies
Elsie B. Michie (M) • 19th-century British literature, the novel, women’s studies, critical theory, film
Richard C. Moreland (EM) • American literature, modernism, critical theory
Laura Mullen (M) • poetry, theory, experimental fiction and nonfiction
Anna K. Nardo (EM) • Renaissance literature, Milton, George Eliot
Solimar Otero (7M) • Folklore, Caribbean culture
Peggy W. Prenshaw (EM) • American literature, Southern studies, women’s studies
Pallavi Rastogi (7M) • Colonial and postcolonial literature, postcolonial theory, international cinema
Malcolm Richardson (M) • Technical writing, medieval language and rhetoric
Christopher Rovee (7M) • 18th- and 19th-century British literature; poetry and poetic theory; literature and the arts
Keith A. Sandiford (EM) • 18th-century British literature and cultural studies, colonial West Indian culture and history
Irina Shport (6A) • Linguistics, secondary English education
Dave Smith (EM) • creative writing
Emily Toth (EM) • American popular fiction, biography, women’s studies
Carolyn Ware (M) • Louisiana folklore, women’s folklore
Susan Weinstein (7M) • English education, social literacies, adolescent writing
Sharon A. Weltman (M) • Victorian literature and culture, drama, gender studies, musical theater
Joshua Wheeler (6A) • Creative writing, nonfiction, fiction
James Wilcox (EM) • Creative writing, fiction
Michelle Zerba (7M) • Classics, comparative literature, literary theory, rhetoric

RECENT FACULTY PUBLICATIONS

A representative sample of faculty publications during recent years includes the following:

 

Jacob Berman, American Arabesque: Arabs, Islam, and the 19th-Century Imaginary

Michael P. Bibler, Cotton’s Queer Relations: Same-Sex Intimacy and the Literature of the Southern Plantation, 1936-1968

James Catano, Ragged Dicks: Masculinity, Steel, and the Rhetoric of the Self-Made Man

Brannon Costello, Neon Visions: The Comics of Howard Chaykin

William W. Demastes, Staging Consciousness: Theater and the Materialization of Mind

Carl Freedman, The Incomplete Projects: Marxism, Modernity, and the Politics of Culture

Lara Glenum, Pop Corpse and All Hopped Up on Fleshy Dum Dums

Angeletta Gourdine, The Difference Place Makes: Gender, Sexuality, and Diaspora Identity

Katherine T. Henninger, Ordering the Façade: Photography in Contemporary Southern Women’s Writing

Benjamin Kahan, Celibacies

J. Gerald Kennedy, Strange Nation: Literary Nationalism and Cultural Conflict in the Age of Poe 

Isiah Lavender, ed., Dis-Orienting Planets: Racial Representations of Asia in Science Fiction

Michelle Massé, Over Ten Million Served: Gendered Labor in Language and Literature Workplaces

Elsie Michie, The Vulgar Question of Money: Heiresses, Materialism, and the Novel of Manners from Jane Austen to Henry James

Lauren Mullen, Enduring Freedom and Complicated Grief

Solimar Otero, Afro-Cuban Diasporas in the Atlantic World

Pallavi Rastogi, Afrindian Fictions: Diaspora, Race, and National Desire in South Africa

Malcolm Richardson, Middle Class Writing in Late Medieval London

Christopher Rovee, Imagining the Gallery: The Social Body of British Romanticism​

Susan Weinstein, The Room is on Fire: The History, Pedagogy, and Practice of Youth Spoken Poetry 

Sharon Aronofsky Weltman, Performing the Victorian: John Ruskin and Identity in Theater, Science, and Education James Wilcox, Hunk City

Programs

    Doctor of PhilosophyMaster of ArtsMaster of Fine Arts