2017-2018 Undergraduate Academic Catalogue 
    
    Mar 28, 2024  
2017-2018 Undergraduate Academic Catalogue [ARCHIVED CATALOG]

English


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Office: Humanities Center, Room 242f
Telephone: 410‑617‑2418
Website: www.loyola.edu/academics/english

Chair: Paul Lukacs, Associate Professor

Professors: Carol N. Abromaitis; David C. Dougherty (emeritus); Jean Lee Cole; Juniper Lee Ellis; Kathleen Forni; Robert S. Miola; Brian Norman; Mark Osteen; Thomas E. Scheye
Associate Professors: Bryan L. Crockett; Paul Lukacs; Gayla McGlamery; Nicholas A. Miller
Assistant Professors: Melissa A. Girard; Giuseppina Iacono Lobo; Daniel R. Mangiavellano
Affiliate Faculty: Sondra Guttman; Erin Wilson

The chief goal of the English Department is literacy, which means more than just the ability to read and write. It means being fully at home with language, being able to enter into critical dialogue with the writers we read, and being able to use our native language to organize and present our own thoughts and feelings.

Courses in the English Department introduce students to a variety of the most excitingly literate men and women of the past and present. These courses aim to train the student to read accurately and imaginatively, to think critically, to write clearly and forcefully, and to enjoy the potential for creative play afforded by our rich and complex language. They cultivate habits of critical inquiry, serious reflection, aesthetic appreciation, and considered response. Critical writing is a key component of practically every English course.

Learning Aims

In addition to the goals for the core program, all of which apply to the major program, the English Department sets the following as goals for its majors:

  • Students will develop a basic knowledge of literary history, including an understanding of how authors write with an awareness of those who have written before them and how works of literature affect and reflect the cultural environments in which they are written.
  • Students will recognize that texts can be approached in multiple ways.
  • Students will learn to write about literature with precision, depth, and clarity, especially by structuring cogent and persuasive written arguments using the skills necessary to both primary textual analysis and academic literary research.
  • Students will develop a lifelong habit of reading literature for the pleasure of intellectual and emotional engagement by cultivating their understanding of the ways diverse works speak to us personally and directly.

Programs

    MajorMinor

    Courses

      English

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