Literature
303 Humanities 1
(831) 459-4778
http://literature.ucsc.edu/
Changes to 2009-10 Catalog Highlighted | Faculty | Courses
Program Description
The study of literature at UCSC is organized as an interdisciplinary
field coordinated through a single Department of Literature, rather than
through separate departments of English, modern languages, and classics.
This structure fosters innovative and comparative approaches to literature
among both faculty and students. Courses in the major encompass traditional
literary history and interpretation as well as cross-cultural inquiry
and current theoretical debates.
The literature major permits focused work in national literary traditions.
Students may concentrate in English-language literatures; in French, German,
or Italian; in Latin and/or Greek; or in Spanish/Latin American/Latino
literatures. Alternatively, students may organize their studies by historical
period. Students who choose pre- and early modern studies focus on early
literary traditions from antiquity through the Middle Ages, the Renaissance,
and the neo-classical period, while those engaged in modern literary studies
concentrate on literature of the 18th, 19th, 20th, and 21st centuries.
In addition, the world literature and cultural studies concentration emphasizes
non-Western literatures, literature in a global context, as well as non-literary
forms of cultural production. Finally, the Literature Department also
offers a concentration in creative writing in which, in addition to studying
literature, students work with faculty in upper-division workshops to
improve their own creative writing skills.
Literature majors at UCSC are trained in critical reading, writing,
and thinking, as well as in literary interpretation. These skills have
wide applicability: they may lead to careers in other media such as film,
theater, video, the visual arts, and electronic media; and they offer
avenues into related disciplines such as history, philosophy, psychology,
sociology, anthropology, politics, and history of art and visual culture.
Literature majors traditionally enter a wide variety of careers ranging
from law and journalism to management, government, international studies,
publishing, technical writing, and teaching at all levels.
The Literature Department faculty requires that all literature majors have
proficiency in a second language. Proficiency in more than one language
vastly enhances understanding of any literature and culture in general.
Graduate programs in literature and other humanities disciplines generally
require competence in a language other than English.
Letter Grade Requirement
Letter grades are required for 75 percent of courses applied toward
the literature major, including the senior seminar, which must be taken
for a letter grade.
Declaring the Major or Minor
Students must complete Literature 1 or its equivalent prior to declaring
the major or minor. Students declare a major or minor in literature by
completing and submitting a Proposed Study Plan and Declaration of Major/Minor
petition. All students considering a literature major or minor should
consult with staff and/or faculty advisers as early as possible and declare
the major or minor before the end of their sophomore year. Transfer students
are urged to declare the major or minor in the first quarter at UCSC.
Literature Major Options
Students wishing to major in literature may choose either the standard
literature major or the intensive literature major. The intensive literature
major is recommended particularly for students who plan to continue their
studies in graduate school. The requirements for the intensive major include
the study of literature in two languages; proficiency in a second language
is therefore required.
The Standard Literature Major
The literature major requires: (1) proficiency in a second language;
and (2) 12 courses in literature.
- Language proficiency: One year (three quarters or equivalent) of college
level study of a non-English language or demonstrated
reading ability at this level.
- The 12 required courses must include two lower-division and 10 upper-division
courses.
Lower-Division Courses
Lower-division courses are introductions to critical reading and writing.
Students should complete their lower-division course work before beginning
upper-division work.
Two lower-division courses are required:
- Literature 1, Literary Interpretation: close reading and
analysis of literary texts
- One Literature 61-series course: categories,
methodologies, and problems of literary study, or one
Literature 80-series course: topical, thematic, and comparative studies
of literary texts
Language proficiency: One year (three quarters or
equivalent) of college level study of a non-English language or demonstrated
reading ability at this level
Upper-Division Courses
Upper-division courses provide more detailed treatment of literary and
theoretical problems, themes, and periods. Students are strongly encouraged
to take courses across chronological periods and national boundaries.
Students must successfully complete the language proficiency requirement
before enrolling in Literature 102.
Ten upper-division courses are required:
- Literature 101, Theory and Interpretation: approaches to
literary and cultural theories
- Literature 102, Translation Theory: approaches to
literary and cultural translation, or one upper-division
non-English literature course studied in the original language. Students
must successfully complete the language proficiency requirement before
enrolling in Literature 102
- six upper-division courses in an area of concentration (described
below)
- two upper-division electives in literature
Distribution requirements. Among the 10 upper-division courses,
at least two must focus on literature written prior to the year 1750;
one course must focus on non-Western literature or literature in a global
perspective; and one course must focus on poetry. One of the upper-division
courses must be a Senior Seminar, which can be used to satisfy the campus
comprehensive (exit) requirement. Some courses fulfill more than one
distribution requirement . A list of annual course offerings indicating
distribution codes for each course is available in the department office
or on the Literature Department web page at http://literature.ucsc.edu/courses.
With prior permission from the literature undergraduate program director,
one upper-division literature elective may be replaced by an upper-division
course related to the student’s area of concentration and chosen
from another program in the humanities, arts, or social sciences.
The Intensive Literature Major
The Intensive Literature major requires (1) proficiency in a second
language, and (2) 14 courses in literature.
- Language proficiency: in addition to the Standard Literature major
requirement of one-year (three quarters or equivalent) of college- level
study of a non-English language, or demonstrated reading
ability at this level, students must complete at leas two upper-division
courses in a second-language literature studied in the original language.
In many languages, two years of college-level study (or comparable ability)
are needed before a student is prepared to enter an upper-division course.
In a few languages (Greek, Latin, Middle Egyptian Hieroglyphs), less
time is needed for this purpose.
- The 14 required courses must include two lower-division and 12 upper-division
courses.
Lower-Division Courses
The same requirements apply as for the standard literature major. Students
who choose the intensive literature major are required to achieve competence
in a second-language literature. Upper-division literature course work
requires completion of a lower-division language sequence or the equivalent.
Upper-Division Courses
The intensive major requires 12 upper-division courses. Distribution
requirements for the intensive major are the same as those for the standard
literature major. In addition, students must complete at least two courses
in a second-language literature studied in the original language. As in
the standard major, with prior permission from the literature undergraduate
program director, one upper-division literature elective may be replaced
by an upper-division course related to the student’s area of concentration
and chosen from another program in the humanities, arts, or social sciences.
The Concentrations
The purpose of the upper-division area of concentration is to help students
shape a coherent program of study. The department provides several defined
concentrations, described below. For all concentrations except national/
transnational literatures, texts may be read in the original or in translation.
National/Transnational Literatures
These concentrations examine literature within the frameworks of particular
languages or national and regional traditions. National/transnational
concentrations require that texts be read in the original language.
The study of French and Francophone literatures, languages, and cultural
practices of France, Africa, and the Caribbean.
The study of the literature, language, and cultural practices of the
German-speaking areas of central Europe including Germany, Austria, and
Switzerland.
- Greek and Latin literatures
The study of the literature, languages, and cultural practices of ancient
Greece and Rome. Students may choose to concentrate in Greek or Latin
or both.
The study of Italian literature, language, and cultural practices from
the Middle Ages to the present.
- Spanish/Latin American/Latino literatures
The study of literatures, language, and cultural practices of Spain,
Latin America, and Latino populations in the United States.
Creative Writing
The Department of Literature offers a sequence of workshops from introductory
through advanced levels in both poetry and fiction. Other activities available
to interested students include participation in the production of literary
journals on campus, attendance at readings by visiting writers, and use
of a creative writing reading room.
Admission to this concentration is selective. Interested students are
required to take one lower-division creative writing workshop at UCSC
before applying to the creative writing concentration; however, students
are strongly encouraged to complete two lower-division
workshops (at least one at UCSC) before applying.
Students accepted into the concentration must complete three advanced
writing workshops and a senior project (e.g., a group of stories, a significant
portion of a novel, a collection of poems). To apply for admission to
the creative writing concentration, students should submit a completed
application form (available at the Literature Department office) and a
thoughtful selection from their work (8–10 pages of poetry or fiction).
Once accepted into the concentration, students are required to declare
(or redeclare) the major in literature. At that time, students should
meet with their adviser to discuss plans for a senior project.
Pre- and Early Modern Studies
The interdisciplinary study of literatures and cultures from antiquity
through the early eighteenth century, especially in Europe. This concentration
includes the study of popular culture and everyday life as well as readings
in masterpieces of classical, medieval, early modern (Renaissance), and
neo-classical literature.
Modern Literary Studies
The study of literature of the eighteenth, nineteenth, twentieth, and
twenty-first centuries. This concentration examines ways in which modernity
in general and literary modernism and postmodernism in particular emerge
and develop in different countries and cultures.
World Literature and Cultural Studies
The study of literature and cultural production both within a global
context and within specific histories and economies. Courses move beyond
the literary text to include nonverbal forms of representation such as
social movements and everyday life practices.
Disciplinary Communication (DC) Requirement
Students of every major must satisfy that major's upper-division Disciplinary
Communication (DC) requirement. The DC requirement will normally be met
within one to three courses already required for the major. For detailed
information on this major's DC requirement, consult your major adviser
or see the 2010-11 general catalog.
Comprehensive Requirement
Students must successfully complete Literature 101 before taking any
comprehensive requirement.
- Seniors must select one of the following options to satisfy the campus
exit requirement:
Senior seminar. The senior seminar may be counted as one of
the required upper-division courses. The senior seminar need not be in
the student’s area of concentration. Several senior seminars are
offered each quarter; extensive writing is required in all seminars.
Senior thesis. A student who wishes to propose a senior thesis
(30–40 pages) must apply to a Literature Department faculty sponsor
at least two quarters before the projected date of graduation. The application
must include a proposed subject, a brief outline, a bibliography, and
a sample of previous written work. Only those students who have received
written permission from a faculty supervisor may complete a thesis to
satisfy the senior exit requirement. A student whose application has been
approved may receive course credit toward the major for one independent
study (course 195) in a literature concentration.
For students in the creative writing concentration, a creative writing
project under the supervision of a faculty member (Literature/Creative
Writing 194 or 195) is required.
The Literature Minor
The minor in literature requires seven courses.
Two lower-division courses are required:
- Literature 1, Literary Interpretation: close reading and
analysis of literary texts
- One Literature 61-series course: categories, methodologies, and problems
of literary study, or one Literature 80-series course: topical, thematic,
and comparative studies of literary texts
Five upper-division courses are required:
- Literature 101, Theory and Interpretation
- Four other upper-division literature courses (except Creative Writing)
The Literature minor does not require second-language proficiency
or a senior seminar.
General Information
Transfer credit. A student may petition to receive credit
toward the lower-division requirements of the major or minor for up to
two courses taken at other institutions. An introduction to literature
course may be used to satisfy the Literature 1 course requirement. Any
other literature course may be applied toward the Literature 61 or the
Literature 80 course requirement.
Transfer students planning to major in literature are urged to complete
the equivalent of one year college-level study of a language other than
English before entering UCSC.
Creative writing courses. Any qualified student may take creative
writing courses for credit toward graduation. Only students accepted into
the creative writing concentration, however, may use Literature/Creative
Writing 180, 183, 194, and 195 to satisfy major requirements.
Credit for repeated courses. Courses that vary significantly
in material or methodology from one presentation to the next may be repeated
for credit and are so designated in the course description in the UCSC
General Catalog.
Advising. Faculty advisers are available in the Literature
Department office throughout each academic term; students may make appointments
in advance to meet with them. Staff advisers are available by appointment
and on a drop-in basis. Students are encouraged to consult with a faculty
adviser once a quarter.
Senior checklist. Three quarters before anticipated graduation,
all literature majors must complete a checklist in collaboration with
a department adviser. The purpose of the checklist is to confirm progress
toward graduation and the satisfaction of all major requirements. Completion
and approval of a senior checklist are required for graduation.
Opportunities for study abroad. The University of California’s
Education Abroad Program (EAP) operates study centers in countries throughout
the world, all associated with host institutions of high academic standing.
EAP serves over 1500 upper-division students from the nine UC campuses
every year. Students who participate in a UC Education Abroad Program
study year may petition to apply up to three upper-division courses from
EAP toward the literature major, or two upper-division courses toward
the literature minor.
Latin American and Latino Studies and Literature combined major.
The departments of Latin American and Latino Studies and Literature offer
a combined major. See Latin American and Latino Studies for additional
information.
The Graduate Programs
The Doctoral Program
The UCSC doctoral program in Literature offers an innovative multidisciplinary
approach to literary studies Because the program is relatively small,
students are able to work closely with faculty throughout their graduate
careers and are encouraged to take advantage of the rich array of events,
research clusters, and lectures offered on campus.
The doctoral program reflects wide-ranging faculty interests in interdisciplinary
study organized by area formations (literatures of the Americas, Asia/Pacific,
Colonial Atlantic, European Studies, Mediterranean Studies); by approaches
and historical categories (classics, world literature and cultural studies,
pre- and early modern studies, modern literary studies); and by generic
and thematic categories, such as gender and sexuality studies; race; post-colonial
and emergent literatures; poetry and poetics; the novel; and textual studies.
Students may elect to participate in cooperative programs between literature
and feminist studies, Latin American and Latino studies, or American studies
and receive a designated emphasis in the form of a parenthetical notation
on their doctoral degree.
The program requires significant literary work in two languages. All
students are required to complete a minimum of two courses in a second-language
literature in which the reading is done in the original language. The
second literature must serve as a component of the qualifying examination.
The common requirements are:
- a one-quarter proseminar, Literature 200, to be taken in the first year;
- quarterly two-credit advising courses (independent studies);
- 12 courses leading to the definition of an area of concentration. At
least two courses must be in a second-language literature; at least one
must focus on pre-1750 literature and culture. U p to four courses may
be taken in other departments; up to three may be independent studies
one two-credit advising course per quarter;
- teaching assistant training, administered as a course offered by the
Literature Department;
- three quarters of supervised teaching experience;
- the Literature Department’s Graduate Summer Language Program
(an intensive three-week course) or equivalent;
- a qualifying examination (with written and oral components);
- a prospectus
outlining and defining the dissertation project;
- a dissertation.
A master’s degree is conferred upon request to Ph.D. candidates
who have completed the course work required for the doctorate. (The teaching
assistant training and supervised teaching experience are not required
for the M.A.) In addition , students must write a master’s thesis
under the supervision of a faculty adviser or successfully complete the
Literature Ph.D. Qualifying Exam.
Applications and requirements for obtaining these notations are available
at the respective program and department offices. More detailed information
for prospective graduate students, including application and admission
to graduate studies, examinations, and requirements for the doctor of
philosophy degree, is available from the Division of Graduate Studies
and on the department web site: http://literature.ucsc.edu/.
The Master’s Program
A separate master of arts degree program in literature is intended for
students whose aim is to deepen and expand their literary/critical training
and to proceed to a Ph.D. program at another institution. Priority for
admission is given to students interested in underrepresented areas of
study within the Literature Department’s offerings, such as the
non-English language literatures and, more broadly, critical theory.
The M.A. program requires students to complete the equivalent of nine
seminars of graduate-level study in literature, including a written capstone
requirement, the master’s thesis. Requirements may not be completed
in less than one year; the maximum time to obtain a degree is two years.
The common requirements are as follows:
- Literature 200, a one-quarter proseminar to be taken in the first year;
- seven courses leading to the definition of an area of concentration.
Up to two courses may be taken in other departments, and one may be an
independent study course;
- a thesis (written in conjunction with Literature 299, Thesis
Research).
Typically, a thesis will range in length from 35– 50 pages, plus
a bibliography.
The Literature Department does not normally provide financial support
to students pursuing the M.A. degree; teaching assistantships do, however,
sometimes become available. Admission to the M.A. program does not constitute
admission to the Ph.D. program, nor may students automatically transfer
into the Ph.D. program from the M.A. program; they must reapply. Further
information and application materials are available from the Division
of Graduate Studies: http://graddiv.ucsc.edu.
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