Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- The Changing Picture of School English
- From A-Level to HE: Working Towards a Shared Future?
- English Outreach: Academics in the Classroom
- From Provider to Stager: The Future of Teaching English in HE
- Pedagogic Criticism: An Introduction
- Exquisite Tensions – Narrating the BAME ECA Experience
- Postgraduate Futures: Voices and Views
- Shared Futures: Early Career Academics in English Studies
- Some Reflections on the Funding of English Departments
- English: The Future of Publishing
- Digital Futures
- A View from the United States: The Crisis in the Humanities; the Liberal Arts; and English in the Military Academy
- The Future of Borders
- ‘Between and Across Languages’: Writing in Scotland and Wales
- Exploring Intersections between Creative and Critical Writing: An Interview with Elleke Boehmer
- Integrating English
- Employability in English Studies
- Creative Living: How Creative Writing Courses Help to Prepare for Life-long Careers
- Practice at Large: How Creative Writing can Enhance University Research Environments
- ‘And who can turn away?’ Witnessing a Shared Dystopia
- English and the Public Good
- ‘Can Wisdom be put in a silver rod? / Or Love in a golden bowl?’ On Not Defending the Humanities
- ‘Something Real to Carry Home When Day Is Done’: The Reader in Future
- Afterword
- Index
Integrating English
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 15 October 2019
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Notes on Contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- The Changing Picture of School English
- From A-Level to HE: Working Towards a Shared Future?
- English Outreach: Academics in the Classroom
- From Provider to Stager: The Future of Teaching English in HE
- Pedagogic Criticism: An Introduction
- Exquisite Tensions – Narrating the BAME ECA Experience
- Postgraduate Futures: Voices and Views
- Shared Futures: Early Career Academics in English Studies
- Some Reflections on the Funding of English Departments
- English: The Future of Publishing
- Digital Futures
- A View from the United States: The Crisis in the Humanities; the Liberal Arts; and English in the Military Academy
- The Future of Borders
- ‘Between and Across Languages’: Writing in Scotland and Wales
- Exploring Intersections between Creative and Critical Writing: An Interview with Elleke Boehmer
- Integrating English
- Employability in English Studies
- Creative Living: How Creative Writing Courses Help to Prepare for Life-long Careers
- Practice at Large: How Creative Writing can Enhance University Research Environments
- ‘And who can turn away?’ Witnessing a Shared Dystopia
- English and the Public Good
- ‘Can Wisdom be put in a silver rod? / Or Love in a golden bowl?’ On Not Defending the Humanities
- ‘Something Real to Carry Home When Day Is Done’: The Reader in Future
- Afterword
- Index
Summary
This chapter discusses the origins, activities so far, and future plans of the Integrating English project (http://integratingenglish.org). This project has aims that are very much in line with those of the English: Shared Futures project, since it seeks to celebrate the diversity of the discipline while also seeing the diverse range of activities it encompasses as unified. They are unified by their focus on how texts are produced, understood, circulated and evaluated. In this essay, we present a brief account of the origins and development of Integrating English, explain the project's approach to the nature of English as a diverse academic discipline and describe some of the activities we have carried out so far. We also highlight connections with English: Shared Futures, including some reflection on activities at the conference in Newcastle in 2017, and conclude with thoughts about how we see the future direction of the project. The main conclusions are that the view of English advocated by our project is timely, beneficial and suggests reasons for optimism about the futures of English.
Origins and Development
The project began in response to informal discussions with undergraduate students and university staff. Students approached more than one member of the project team asking about ‘lang-lit’ work. Some of these students had taken A-Level Language and Literature and moved on to BA programmes with titles such as ‘English’ or ‘English Language and Literature’. They had noticed that the modules they were now taking each focused either on aspects of language or on aspects of literature. Very few, if any, genuinely involved ‘lang-lit’ work understood as work that included integrated linguistic and literary study. These conversations suggested that students were used to doing integrated linguistic and literary work at AS and A-Level. We later discovered that this was not an accurate impression. At this stage, we discussed these comments with colleagues in other HE institutions who pointed out that many of their programmes were combinations or had ‘joint honours’ structures. Here too, there appeared to be no more connection between work on language and on literature than there would have been if they had combined one of these with any other subject.
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- English: Shared Futures , pp. 144 - 151Publisher: Boydell & BrewerPrint publication year: 2018
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