The University of Toledo

Department of English Language and Literature : Bachelor of Arts in English:  American Literature Concentration

Skip to menu | Skip to content | Skip to search | Skip to global navigation
  • Home
  • About UT
  • Directions/Maps
  • Campus Directory
  • Contact
  • myUT
  • Advanced Search
  • Feedback
  • Prospective Students
  • Admission
  • Academics
  • Campus Life
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Research
  • Athletics
  • Alumni & Community
  • Print
Department of English Language and Literature
  • Arts & Sciences Home
  • About the College of A&S
  • Student Services
  • College Council
  • Centers & Institutes
  • Faculty & Staff Resources 
  • A&S Alumni
English Department
  • English Home
  • Undergraduate
  • Graduate
  • Linguistics
  • Honors
  • Composition
  • Professional & Technical Writing
  • Information for Students
  • Scholarships
  • Newsletter 
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Faculty Office Hours
  • Advisors
  • Courses
  • Employment
  • Photogallery
Programs
  • Undergraduate
  • Graduate
  • Linguistics
  • Composition
  • Professional & Technical Writing
  • Honors
Undergraduate Programs
  • General Literature Concentration
  • American Literature Concentration
  • General Writing Concentration
  • Creative Writing Concentration
  • Honors in English
  • Linguistics
  • Minor in Linguistics
  • Minor in English

Bachelor of Arts in English:  American Literature Concentration
Requirements for the American Literature Concentration The major core, required of all four concentrations. These courses are offered at least once a year.
  • ENGL 3600: American Literary Traditions
    Introduction to the history of literature in the United States.
  • ENGL 3790: Foundations of Literary Study
    An overview and introduction to the discipline of literary study, its history, its methods, and its specialized languages.
  • ENGL 3510: Linguistic Principles
    Basic principles of sound structure and sentence structure in natural language.
  • ENGL 3810: Shakespeare
    An introduction to Shakespeare as a dramatic artist through close analysis of selected plays.
Specific concentration requirements. Some of these courses are offered in alternate years. A list of courses to be offered in the upcoming semester, including detailed course descriptions, is available at this link and in the English Department office (Field House 1500).
  • One 4000-level course in British literature before 1800, which can be any of the following:
    ENGL 4440: British Literature: The Medieval Period
    ENGL 4420: British Literature: The Renaissance
    ENGL 4440: Early 17th-Century Literature
    ENGL 4460: British Literature: Restoration and 18th Century
    ENGL 4200: British Fiction 18th Century
  • One 4000-level course in British literature after 1800:
    ENGL 4500: British Literature: The Romantic Period
    ENGL 4220: British Fiction: Early 19th Century
    ENGL 4520: British Literature: The Victorian Period
    ENGL 4230: British Fiction: Late 19th Century
    ENGL 4540: British Literature: The 20th Century
    ENGL 4240: British Fiction: 20th Century
  • Five 4000-level course in American literature:
    ENGL 4690: Native American Literature and Culture
    ENGL 4600: Early American Literature
    ENGL 4620: American Romanticism
    ENGL 4630: American Literary Realism
    ENGL 4650: African American Literature Before the 20th Century
    ENGL 4640: Early 20th-Century American Poetry
    ENGL 4280: American Fiction: 20th Century
    ENGL 4680: American Literature Since World War II
    ENGL 4660: African American Literature in the 20th Century
  • One 4000-level course examining an American single author in depth:
    ENGL 4860: Studies in the Work of an American Author  Topic varies; examples have included William Faulkner, Langston Hughes, Ralph Ellison, Toni Morrison, Richard Wright, Tom Robbins, Emily Dickinson, Wallace Stevens


Related fields The major requires 18 total credit hours in related fields outside of English, half of which must be on the 3000- or 4000-level. These are usually chosen from the other humanities, the social sciences, and interdisciplinary programs. The related area requirement may also be satisfied by taking a minor.

Back to concentrations

Page updated: July 17, 2009
Page top
  • Prospective Students
  • Admission
  • Academics
  • Campus Life
  • Current Students
  • Faculty & Staff
  • Research
  • Athletics
  • Alumni & Community
The University of Toledo • 2801 W. Bancroft • Toledo, OH 43606-3390 • 1.800.586.5336
© 2006-2008 The University of Toledo. All rights reserved. • Send all feedback / comments to webmaster.
  • Terms of Use