Doctor's degree in English Writing, History, & Theory (WHiT) at Case Western Reserve University

 

online students

Doctor's Degree in English Writing, History, & Theory (WHiT) at Case Western Reserve University

Case Western Reserve University
Doctor's degree
English
Writing, History, & Theory (WHiT)

- Quick Request -

Request Information
from Case Western Reserve University
Now!
Email me this page.
Add to MyList
View MyList
-Degree Requirements-
School Location
English Graduate students at the Ph.D. level can elect to take the concentration in Writing History and Theory (WHiT) as part of their graduate coursework. The WHiT program, developed by the Department of English in 2000, can function as a primary or secondary concentration: You can elect WHiT as your main area of study -- or you can pursue the concentration as secondary or supplemental to some other area of graduate study in English.

The concentration in Writing History and Theory examines the practice of "writing" as historically, culturally, and technologically situated. Students will study rhetoric theory and history, the history of writing and publishing practices, linguistics and semiotics, and digital communication theory. The program focuses on the relationship between textual features (e.g., word-image interface, lexical and grammatical choices, document design) and global and rhetorical issues, such as text production and circulation, copyright, audience, ethics, and rhetorical effect. The aim of the program is to develop a deeper understanding of the way that writing functions in disciplines, in organizations, in institutions (like business and academia), in society, and in cultures more generally.

Students will take a core course in rhetoric theory (ENGL 501), which will function as an overview course for the program. They will also take at least two courses in three general areas: history of writing, digital writing, and linguistics and semiotics. While providing students with a theoretical and historical background to the study of writing, the WHiT concentration also requires practical courses in writing and teaching designed to prepare teachers and professional writers.

For Ph.D. students, the WHiT concentration will prepare them for an academic job market that, increasingly, calls on them to teach in a number of areas (composition, literature, linguistics, technical writing) and, increasingly, in computer-networked environments.

View more details on Case Western Reserve University.

Request Information
from Case Western Reserve University
Now!