Futures for English Studies brings together chapters by leading writers across the curriculum area of English to investigate how the component parts of English (literature, language, and creative writing) are located institutionally in higher education and to explore the interdisciplinary prospects of a subject which spans the humanities and social sciences. Through explorations of changing foci in a variety of contexts, the book examines the value and purpose of teaching and researching English language, literature and creative writing in the twenty-first century, both within Anglophone countries and the wider world. The contributors, all practicing educators and researchers in the field, bring a wide range of perspectives to the theme of the development of the discipline, and illustrate that the strengths of English Studies as an academic subject lie not only in its traditional breadth and depth, but also in a readiness to adapt, experiment, and engage with other subjects.
Table des matières
Introduction: Futures for English Studies; Lynda Prescott, Ann Hewings and Philip Seargeant
SECTION A THE SHAPE OF THE DISCIPLINE
1. English Pasts, English Futures; Ronald Carter
2. Discipline or Perish: English at the Tipping Point and Styles of Thinking in the Twenty First Century; Patricia Waugh
3. The Rise of Creative Writing; Andrew Cowan
4. English Language Studies: A Critical Appraisal; Ann Hewings and Philip Seargeant
SECTION B INTERNATIONAL DIMENSIONS
5. TESOL and the Discipline of English; John Gray
6. English Studies in Indian Higher Education; Suman Gupta
7. The Role of Policy in Shaping English as a University Subject in Denmark; Anna Kristina Hultgren
8. The Literary and the Literate: The Study and Teaching of Writing in US English Departments; David R. Russell
SECTION C EMERGING TRENDS
9. Digital Humanities and The Future of English; Marilyn Deegan and Matthew Hayler
10. The Contribution of Children’s Literature Studies; Dena Attar and Janet Maybin
11. On Collaborating with Shakespeare’s Globe: Reflections on the Future of Postgraduate English; Gordon Mc Mullan
12. English Language Studies from Rhetoric to Applied English; Peter Stockwell
13. Interdiscipline English! A Series of Provocations and Projections; Rob Pope
A propos de l’auteur
Ann Hewings is Director of the Centre for Language and Communication, The Open University, UK. She is editor of the ‘Worlds of English’ series (2012, Routledge), and The Politics of English: Conflict, Competition, Co-existence (with Caroline Tagg, 2012, Routledge), and author of Grammar and Context (with Martin Hewings, 2005, Routledge).Lynda Prescott is Head of the Department of English, The Open University, UK. She is editor of A World of Difference – an anthology of short stories from five continents (2008, Palgrave Macmillan) and author of Open University teaching materials on nineteenth- and twentieth-century literature. Philip Seargeant is Senior Lecturer in Applied Linguistics in the Centre for Language and Communication, The Open University, UK. He is author of The Idea of English in Japan: Ideology and the Evolution of a Global Language (2009, Multilingual Matters), Exploring World Englishes: Language in a Global Context (2012, Routledge), and From Language to Creative Writing (with Bill Greenwell, 2013, Bloomsbury), and editor of English in Japan in the Era of Globalization (2011, Palgrave Macmillan) and English in the World: History, Diversity, Change (with Joan Swann, 2012, Routledge).