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Graduate Programs
Trent University Cultural
Studies PhD Program
This intensive four-year program has a strong
commitment to theory and its bearing in the study of arts,
media, and technology. Successful applicants will have an
MA in a cognate discipline completed by July 2008 and a
defined dissertation project in mind, evidence of a capacity
to work independently in a context of ongoing discussions
with a range of faculty and peers, and an interest in the
innovative nature of our dissertation.
For more details about the structure of the program please
consult the website (http://www.trentu.ca/culturalstudiesphd/)
including the Year One link. Please direct inquiries, including
a brief description of the project, to the program at culturalstudies-phd@trentu.ca.
Bowling Green State University
Now that the academic year is fully underway, many second
year MA students across the country are looking ahead and
exploring doctoral programs. From inquiries I get each fall,
I know that a fair number of them (students in literature,
rhetoric and composition, technical communication, and other
areas) aspire to faculty positions in which undergraduate
writing classes will be an important part of their teaching
careers. You may know of such students in your MA program.
If so, perhaps you would share this note with them. For,
in a very real sense, the Bowling Green’s doctoral program
in rhetoric and composition is designed for MA graduates
with that aspiration.
The Rhetoric & Writing PhD Program seeks to prepare
women and men to be scholar-teachers who understand the
professional synergy of mastering knowledge, advancing it
through their own inquiry, and sharing knowledge and habits
of inquiry with students in the writing courses they teach
and administer. In pursuing this broad goal, students and
faculty in the program utilize a range of the intellectual
approaches (rhetorical, cultural, empirical, political)
that characterize the field of rhetoric and composition.
Our website,
http://www.bgsu.edu/departments/english/rcweb/rchome.htm,
has lots of information about the Rhetoric & Writing
PhD Program (though, like most websites, it is in a constant
state of revision and updating). So I will just mention
here that the program requires seven core courses -- Rhetorical
Theory, Rhetorical History (2 seminars), Research, Computer-Mediated
Writing, Scholarly Publication, and a Special-Topic Seminar--as
well as a number of additional Rhetoric & Writing electives
(or for those with an MA in rhetoric and composition, an
optional cognate in an area like administration, literature,
technical writing, or women's studies).
I would be glad to hear from students in your MA program.
And I would be delighted to find well-qualified students
from your department among our applicants for 2007.
Richard Gebhardt
Professor of English
Bowling Green State University
Director, Rhetoric & Writing PhD Program
http://www.bgsu.edu/departments/english/rcweb/rchome.htm
The
University of Texas at San Antonio
Our Ph.D., now in its fourth year, is unique
in its focus, preparing students as well as specialists
in cross-cultural, transnational approaches to English language
and literature, as well as in the theory and practice of
teaching composition. Students are required to take courses
in Latino/a literature and cultural studies, and are offered
options in a wide array of other courses such as rhetoric,
linguistics, and literary theory. Our faculty have been
awarded Fulbright Fellowships, NEH Fellowships, Ford Foundation
Fellowships, Rockefeller Foundation grants, and many other
awards. We are very proud that our students have been selected
for prestigious Ford Foundation Diversity Fellowships, as
well as American Association of University Women awards.
Our program has grown in
the last four years, as our university has grown: we currently
have 27 students enrolled in the doctoral program, and 90
students in our masters program. We offer a number of fellowships
each year, which include tuition, fees, and benefits, along
with a stipend. We have much to offer your students, and
invite them to visit our web site (http://colfa.utsa.edu/ecpc/),
where they can obtain further information, including an
online application. We encourage students to begin the application
process soon, since the application deadline for 2006 admissions
is February 1.
English
Graduate Program Michigan State University PhD Program
The PhD program is flexible and responsive to
students' research interests. Students have the freedom
to organize a course of study oriented toward completing
the degree requirements efficiently and maximizing their
professional training. To assist students, the department
of English has established several doctoral emphasis areas:
Literatures of the Americas, Medieval and Early Modern Studies,
Narrative Theory, Postcolonial and Diaspora Studies, and
Transatlantic Modernities.
More info: http://www.english.msu.edu
Graduate
Study at the University of Tennessee
We believe
that the Ph.D. in English and the Ph.D. with Creative Dissertation
offer outstanding training in the many facets of our discipline.
In addition to breadth of faculty expertise, we have been
cultivating particular areas of strength in Medieval and
Renaissance studies, Modern and Contemporary Literature
and Culture, and Rhetoric and Composition, as well as other
nexus points of research. Our nationally recognized faculty
work closely with graduate students, providing excellent
instruction, mentoring relationships, and research opportunities
that develop the intellectual and professional potential
of our students.
Our Website
explains more about who we are and how we support our students,
financially and intellectually, in all of our M.A. and Ph.D.
programs.
Graduate
Study at the University of Tulsa
Please let
me take a moment to introduce the possibilities for graduate
study in English at the University of Tulsa. By design,
our program is small and intensive, offering qualified students
the chance to pursue MA and PhD degrees. In addition, we
have now created a combined MA/PhD program which can be
completed in five years. We seek to provide generous support
for graduate students in the form of fellowships, teaching
assistantships, and editorial internships at the James Joyce
Quarterly, Tulsa Studies in Women's Literature, and the
Modernist Journals Project. Although the faculty teach and
work in almost all areas, we have particular expertise in
British, Irish, and American literatures from the nineteenth
to twentieth centuries.
For more detailed information on our program and on research
opportunities and support, please consult our webpage: http://www.cas.utulsa.edu/english.
Sean Latham
Editor, James Joyce Quarterly
Director, Modernist Journals Project
Chair, Graduate Committee
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