Literature Department of English

The Bachelor of Arts in English offers a comprehensive education in literature, language, and writing, preparing you for a wide range of careers in today's competitive job market. Available Online or Onsite.
Learn More
The MA in English can be completed either online or onsite (funded) and provides training with top scholars in an array of fields, including Linguistics, Comparative/Global Literatures and Translation, Film and Media Studies, American Literature, and British Literature.
Learn More
Our PhD in English is a funded and onsite degree that allows you to learn alongside major scholars in the field while strengthening your research abilities.
Learn MoreAreas of Study
Early British Literature
Later British Literature
American Literature
Marked by the transnational turn in literary studies in the late twentieth century, American literary studies today has undergone a critical reconfiguration, moving from the locus of the Americas and through the transoceanic movements that encompass the evolution of the Atlantic commercial circuit, the formation of the Black Atlantic, and the reimagining of Asia Pacific. Not only has the "New England mind" been reconsidered in relation to "the darker side of Western modernity" and Indigenous experiences, but the South, the West, the Southwest, and the American Pacific have also been re-examined in light of critical regionalism, borderland discourse, environmental justice, and critiques of American exceptionalism. Learn more about American Literature.
Comparative Literature, Globalization, and Translation (CLGT)
Book History and Digital Humanities
Book history—also called the history of the book—studies the creation, production, circulation, and reception of texts in the broadest possible definition, from oral, written, and printed texts to contemporary forms of visual and digital media. This field includes consideration of the social, cultural, economic, and political history of these different types of texts and considers the various actors and agents at various stages, including authors, printers, binders, publishers, booksellers, readers, and the like.
Digital humanities, in its broadest definition, simply means using digital resources to carry out or to present research in any field of the humanities. Such scholarship in the field of English can include many types of work, including building a digital collection or archive; creating a database; performing textual analysis with Python, R, or similar coding languages; data visualization; and much more. Learn more about Book History and Digital Humanities.
Film and Media Studies
Literature, Social Justice, and Environment (LSJE)
Department of English
-
Address
P.O. Box 43091 Lubbock, TX 79409-3091 -
Phone
806.742.2501 -
Email
english@ttu.edu