Nov 23, 2024  
2024-2025 General Catalog 
  
2024-2025 General Catalog

English: Literature Emphasis - BA, BS


College of Humanities and Social Sciences

Department of English

About This Degree

With its small class sizes and nationally published faculty members, the English Department helps students develop skills in analysis, production, and understanding of texts in the English language. Students learn to write, think, and communicate effectively in a technologically and culturally complex world. Students develop skills in the areas most valued by employers, including critical thinking, teamwork, and oral and written communication, which will prepare them to enter into a wide range of career options.

Because the English Department is home to faculty that are heavily involved in research, students are provided with numerous opportunities to pursue undergraduate research projects and creative projects with individual attention from professors.

Students receive a by completing all required courses in the major. To receive a BA, students must also gain proficiency in one or more foreign languages.

Literature Emphasis: Literary studies students read, analyze, and research texts and writers in American, British, and other world literatures as well as their cultural contexts. Students in literary studies develop critical thinking and communication skills that prepare them for a variety of careers.

Minimum University Requirements


Admission Requirements For This Program


  • New freshmen must be admitted to USU in Good Standing.
  • Transfer students from other institutions or other programs at USU: 2.5 GPA

Additional Information


Students in this emphasis learn the value of literature as they practice important career skills: writing, speaking, researching, collaborating, and thinking critically.

Literature students learn to solve problems both logically and creatively, both independently and in teams. Graduates will thus be well prepared to pursue their individual goals in a wide variety of educational and professional paths, including (but not limited to) business and marketing, publishing, teaching, museum and library work, arts organizations, and legal students–in short, any field that requires strong communication skills, cultural awareness, and critical thinking. Literature graduates can also look forward to a lifetime of intellectual curiosity and cultural enrichment.

ENGL 2600  is an introductory course in Literary Analysis, which teaches students to read texts closely, draw connections between form and content, make interpretative claims, and write persuasive arguments.

Students in 3000-level and 4000-level courses learn to draw connections between literature and its historical, cultural, social, and biographical contexts. These courses put texts in conversation with one another and with the conventions of different genres. 

The Advanced Seminars at the 5000 level serve as a capstone to the student’s Literature emphasis. ENGL 5300  is a Special Topics course, which brings together diverse literary texts in imaginative ways, encouraging students to think across historical, biographical, and generic boundaries. ENGL 5310  is a course on Contemporary Literature, in which students bring literary history up to the present day. ENGL 5320  and ENGL 5330  explore literary and cultural representations of, respectively, gender identities and sexualities, and racial and ethnic identities. ENGL 5340 , a course on Multimedia Literature, gives students a chance to explore new and emerging forms of literary and cultural representation.

The emphasis includes nine elective credits: three additional English courses in Literature or any other area of the department. Students may devote three of these credits to an internship that combines their academic skills with their professional interests.

English General Education Requirements

Students must complete the General Education Requirements.

Students must also complete the University Studies Depth Requirements:

Major Requirements (45 credits)


Minimum GPA for Graduation: 2.75 within major courses; 2.0 USU cumulative; 2.0 career total

Minimum Grade Accepted: C within major courses (no grades of pass/fail)

Credits in Residence: Students must complete 21 credits of major-applicable coursework at Utah State University.

Emphasis Requirements (33 credits)


D. English Electives (9 credits)


Select 9 elective credits from ENGL courses numbered 3000 and higher or TCR courses numbered 2000 and higher.

No more than three elective credits may be taken as ENGL 4900: Internship/Cooperative Work Experience .

Open Electives


Total elective credit is determined by General Education courses taken, degree type selected, additional credits earned, and any additional math or other prerequisite courses needed. Please consult your  Academic Advisor for details.

Total Credits: 120


Suggested Degree Map - English: Literature Emphasis BA, BS