Please note:
To view the current Academic Calendar, go to www.sfu.ca/students/calendar.html
English Honours
This program is for those with special interest in literature, writing and rhetoric, or creative writing who wish to pursue studies beyond the major program. The honours essay (ENGL 496) allows for independent research and writing on a topic of the student's choice. Students who are planning to enter the honours program are encouraged to consult the Undergraduate Advisor or Undergraduate Chair.
Program Requirements
Students complete 120 units, as specified below. Completion of ENGL 364 is required prior to admission to the honours program.
Lower Division Requirements
Students proposing to enter the honours program will complete the same lower division ENGL courses as English majors (see below). Normally a 3.5 GPA in all 間眅埶AV English courses and a CGPA of 3.0 are required for acceptance and continuance.
Students complete any two 100-division English courses. Such courses may include:
Examines literary classics, variously defined, apprehending them both on their own terms and within larger critical conversations. May incorporate the comparative study of work in related artistic fields and engage relevant media trends. Includes attention to writing skills. Students with credit for ENGL 101W may not take this course for further credit. Writing/Breadth-Humanities.
Introduces students to plays and performance works created and adapted for the stage, and/or the performative dimensions of other literary forms. May be organized historically, generically or thematically. The course may also explore the links between literary and performance theory. Includes attention to writing skills. Students with credit for ENGL 103W may not take this course for further credit. Writing/Breadth-Humanities.
Section | Instructor | Day/Time | Location |
---|---|---|---|
Ronda Arab |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, Wed, 12:301:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D101 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, 8:309:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D103 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, 9:3010:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D104 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, 9:3010:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D105 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, 10:3011:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D106 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 8:309:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D107 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 8:309:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D108 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 9:3010:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D109 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 9:3010:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D110 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 1:302:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D111 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 2:303:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D112 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 2:303:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
Introduces students to the relationships between writing and purpose, between the features of texts and their meaning and effects. May focus on one or more literary or non-literary genres, including (but not limited to) essays, oratory, autobiography, poetry, and journalism. Includes attention to writing skills. Students with credit for ENGL 104W may not take this course for further credit. Writing/Breadth-Humanities.
An Introduction to the study of literature within the wider cultural field, with a focus on contemporary issues across genres and media. Students with credit for ENGL 105W may not take this course for further credit. Writing/Breadth-Humanities.
An introduction to reading and writing from a rhetorical perspective. The course treats reading and writing as activities that take place in particular circumstances and situations, in contrast to the traditional emphasis on decontextualized, formal features of texts. It prepares students for reading and writing challenges they are likely to encounter within and beyond the classroom. Prerequisite: 12 units. Students with credit for ENGL 199 may not take this course for further credit. Writing.
Section | Instructor | Day/Time | Location |
---|---|---|---|
Alys Avalos Rivera |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 2:305:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
Online | |||
Online |
Students also complete any four 200-division English courses. Such courses may include:
Explores how literature and language imagine the natural world and engage with environmental and ecological crisis. Topics may include ecocriticism: eco-poetics; approaches to the natural world; local, imperial, and Indigenous ecologies. May be further organized by historical period or genre. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course. Breadth-Humanities.
Section | Instructor | Day/Time | Location |
---|---|---|---|
Margaret Linley |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, Wed, 9:3010:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D101 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, 8:309:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D103 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Mon, 10:3011:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D104 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 8:309:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D106 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Wed, 10:3011:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
Considers how sexuality and gender are articulated, understood, explored, and negotiated through literature and language. May be further organized by historical period, genre, or critical approach. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course. Breadth-Humanities.
Examines how literature and language work to reflect, perform, complicate, and critique constructions of race, ethnicity, and national and diasporic identities and spaces. May draw from post-colonial approaches, critical race theory, and Indigenous and decolonizing methodologies. May be further organized by historical period, genre, or critical approach. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course. Breadth-Humanities.
Considers how identity - construed psychologically, culturally, or socially - is performed and interrogated through literature and language. May be further organized by historical period, genre, or critical approach. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course. Breadth-Humanities.
Examines literature and language within specific social, cultural, geographical, and textual environments to explore the mutually informing relationship between history and text. May be further organized by historical period, genre, or critical approach. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course. Breadth-Humanities.
Section | Instructor | Day/Time | Location |
---|---|---|---|
Mary Ann Gillies |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Tue, 12:302:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D101 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Tue, 8:309:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D102 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Tue, 10:3011:20 a.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D103 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Tue, 11:30 a.m.12:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
|
D105 |
May 8 Aug 4, 2023: Thu, 12:301:20 p.m.
|
Burnaby |
Explores texts in relation to their different material forms, including oral, manuscript, print, film, and digital media. May be further organized by methodology (e.g. book history, textual scholarship, media studies, adaptation studies, digital humanities), historical period, or genre. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course. Breadth-Humanities.
Introduction to the history and principles of rhetoric, and their application to the creation and analysis of written, visual, and other forms of persuasion. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course.
The study of selected works in the history of literary criticism, up to and including modern and contemporary movements in criticism. Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course.
A study of different historical methods of measuring poetry in English, with practice in scanning and analyzing poems using different methods of quantitative analysis (e.g. Syllabic, rhythmic, alliterative). Prerequisite: 12 units or one 100-division English course. Students with credit for ENGL 212 may not take this course for further credit. Quantitative.
An introduction to the art of reading for creative writers, focusing on the linguistic, literary, and conceptual tools writers use to manipulate language to create different experiences for those encountering it, and exposing new writers to innovative literature. Prerequisite: ENGL 111W, 112W, 113W, 114W, or 115W; or WL 105W; or PUB 101. Breadth-Humanities.
Students wishing to major in English are strongly advised to submit a formal declaration to this effect to the undergraduate advisor upon completing all lower division requirements.
* any one, but not more than one of these courses may be replaced by any three unspecified transfer units in English or in ENGL-Writing
** any one, but not more than one, of these courses may be replaced by any three unspecified 200 division transfer units in English
strongly recommended for honours students
Upper Division Requirements
English honours students must obtain 48 upper division ENGL units. A minimum of 20 of these units must be at the 400-level, excluding Directed Studies Courses (ENGL 490, 491).
A minimum of four units must be from the following group of courses, focused on Canadian and/or Indigenous Literature:
Study of selected works of Canadian literature, including Indigenous, diasporic, and settler texts. May draw from a variety of methods, critical debates, regions, and historical periods. This course may be repeated for credit if a different topic is taught. Prerequisite: 30 units or two 200-division English courses.
Section | Instructor | Day/Time | Location |
---|---|---|---|
Online | |||
Online |
Examines works of popular fiction by Indigenous authors, and their use of specific genres (e.g. the mystery novel, vampire thriller, sci fi, comic book). This course may be repeated for credit if a different topic is taught. Prerequisite: 30 units or two 200-division English courses. Students who have taken FNST 322 under this topic, or FNST 360 may not take this course for further credit.
Advanced seminar on selected works by Indigenous writers. May be organized by author, genre, or critical approach. This course may be repeated for credit if a different topic is taught. Prerequisite: 45 units or two 300-division English courses. Strongly recommended: At least one Indigenous studies course. Writing.
Advanced seminar in Canadian literature. May be organized by author, genre, or critical approach. This course may be repeated for credit if a different topic is taught. Prerequisite: 45 units or two 300-division English courses. Writing.
Students must complete all of the following courses:
The study and application of select literary theories. Prerequisite: 30 units or two 200-division English courses. Recommended: ENGL 216.
Introduces students enrolled in the English honours program to the basic methodological issues and procedures that define the field, and provides them with the opportunity to work with a faculty supervisor in researching a specific topic for their honours graduating essay. Prerequisite: Permission of the department, plus normally a minimum of 90 units, including credit or standing in two 100-division English courses, two 200-division English courses, and four 300 or 400-division English courses, one of which must be ENGL 364.
Prerequisite: Lower division requirements for the English major. Open only to students who have been accepted into the English honours program, and who have completed ENGL 494.
Section | Instructor | Day/Time | Location |
---|---|---|---|
TBD |
漍 Courses may be taken in advance of (preferred) or concurrent with ENGL 494.
Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences Honours Degree Requirements
For all bachelor of arts (BA) honours programs, students complete at least 120 units, which includes
- at least 60 units that must be completed at 間眅埶AV
- satisfaction of the writing, quantitative, and breadth requirements
- students complete at least 60 upper division units, which must include at least 48 units in upper division courses in a Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences honours program; no more than 15 upper division units that have been transferred from another institution can be used toward this requirement
- at least 60 units (including 21 upper division units) in Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences courses
- students complete lower division requirements for at least one Faculty of Arts and Social Sciences honours program
- students are required to achieve an overall cumulative grade point average (CGPA) and upper division CGPA of at least 3.0, and an honours program CGPA and upper division CGPA of at least 3.0
Writing, Quantitative, and Breadth Requirements
Students admitted to 間眅埶AV beginning in the fall 2006 term must meet writing, quantitative and breadth requirements as part of any degree program they may undertake. See Writing, Quantitative, and Breadth Requirements for university-wide information.
WQB Graduation Requirements
A grade of C- or better is required to earn W, Q or B credit
Requirement |
Units |
Notes | |
W - Writing |
6 |
Must include at least one upper division course, taken at 間眅埶AV within the students major subject | |
Q - Quantitative |
6 |
Q courses may be lower or upper division | |
B - Breadth |
18 |
Designated Breadth | Must be outside the students major subject, and may be lower or upper division 6 units Social Sciences: B-Soc 6 units Humanities: B-Hum 6 units Sciences: B-Sci |
6 |
Additional Breadth | 6 units outside the students major subject (may or may not be B-designated courses, and will likely help fulfil individual degree program requirements) Students choosing to complete a joint major, joint honours, double major, two extended minors, an extended minor and a minor, or two minors may satisfy the breadth requirements (designated or not designated) with courses completed in either one or both program areas. |
泭
Residency Requirements and Transfer Credit
- At least half of the program's total units must be earned through 間眅埶AV study.
- At least two thirds of the program's total upper division units must be earned through 間眅埶AV study.
Elective Courses
In addition to the courses listed above, students should consult an academic advisor to plan the remaining required elective courses.