English - Critical Studies in Literatures, Cultures, and Film Emphasis
Learn to critique literature, society, and culture from multiple angles — including from a historic, generic, cultural, ethnic, theoretical, and national perspective
Read Between the Lines
The critical studies emphasis is an excellent choice for those who regularly ask deeper questions about movies, video games, books, and social media, or find themselves assessing the significance of everyday texts like an advertisement or song lyric. Coursework throughout the major will teach you to read literary, critical, and cinematic texts and reveal how they construct meaning and shape frameworks of power that mediate human relationships.
With the goal of providing maximum flexibility and personalization, the majority of the critical studies degree is made up of courses chosen by you. Study British, American, world/post-colonial, American ethnic, and women's literature and culture. Explore courses in theory, film, and popular culture. Dive deeper into your electives with a creative writing workshop, or learn more about linguistics, or the rhetorics of science, technology, and culture. This holistic, all-encompassing approach shapes our graduates into extremely knowledgeable and culturally competent experts and prepares them well for countless career paths.
Upon graduation, you'll be able to critically engage with texts of various genres and media to uncover meanings and interpretations — a skill that makes critical studies majors highly sought after. Our grads go on to work at law offices, advertising firms, public relations companies, publishing houses, and nonprofit organizations, making a positive impact wherever they go.
Program Details
Blugold Stories
Where can the critical studies in literatures, cultures, and film program lead me after graduation?
From marketing assistants at regional banks to contributing authors at Eau Claire's very own Volume One magazine, graduates of our critical studies major go on to excel in a variety of challenging and creative jobs all over the country.
The emphasis on close reading and critical analysis of complex textual materials also makes this program an excellent gateway to law school. According to the Law School Admission Council (LSAC), English is among the top 10 most common pre-law majors for students accepted into ABA-accredited schools.
Example Careers
- Academic advisor
- Literacy coach
- Legal advocate
- Creative director
- Advertising copywriter
- Entrepreneur
- Technical writer
- Editor
- Publications specialist
- Marketing manager
- Librarian
- Professor
Throughout the major, you'll learn the tools of interpretation — including narrative, figurative language, critical theory, language and rhetoric in cultural context and intertextuality — as applied to a variety of both literary and social texts. Courses will have you analyze films, TV shows, and literature using an array of critical methods and approaches, as well as concepts of role representation and ideology; race, class, and gender; economics and history; aesthetics and politics; and genre and form.
Here are a few courses in English - Critical Studies in Literatures, Cultures, and Film Emphasis at UW-Eau Claire.
ENGL 210
Introduction to Critical Studies
Students learn methods for understanding how texts construct meaning and shape frameworks of power that mediate human relationships.
ENGL 281
Critical Perspectives on Film, Television, and Moving-Image Culture
Engagement with critical perspectives on film, television, and/or moving image culture. Students will analyze films, TV shows, and/or moving-image texts using a variety of critical methods and approaches.
ENGL 362
Studies in Transatlantic Romanticism
Examines Romanticism as an Anglo-American literary dialogue concerned with topics such as abolition of slavery, environmental preservation, women's rights, etc. Explores how the successes and failures of political, poetical, and industrial revolutions shaped Romantic literature.
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