Graduate School: Mixing Literature and Classical Political Philosophy
-
I'm interested in (further) graduate studies combining Political Philosophy/Theory and Literature. Any ideas about finding programs that mesh the two? I have a year left of a MA in Classical - Modern (no Post-modern) Philosophy alongside a mixture of Ancient Greek and British Literature program. Since starting I've developed a major interest in Classical Political Philosophy and its relationship to Literature. More specifically I'm fascinated by Plato's literary style and the art of the modern novel. I know precisely how I can combine the two, but where can I go to study such? I know it's rather particular, but that's what I'm interested in. I also realize "The Novel" is a bit general, but it's the genre as a whole I study: Don Quixote, Dostoevsky, Joyce, et cetera. Will I have to pretty much design my curriculum to make it some interdisciplinary studies thing? I have no interest in Marxist, Post-modern/Post-structuralism theory. I'm familiar with it and that's all I need or care for. I'm interested in teaching but I have no delusions of grandeur. Actually, I'm currently looking to teach high school English and Government/Civics. No need to tell me about abysmal tenure availability at university level and such. Also, I have no debt and cost isn't too much of an issue either. (Not that I'm looking to pay.) Oh. My BA is in English. Thanks.
-
Answer:
Do you read Greek? Are you good at languages generally? If you can do real research on Plato in Greek (not just pass the departmental reading exams), I think you have a better shot at making a career of this... My (relatively uniformed thinking) is that programs interested in the Philosophy/Literature angles are more likely to want you to also study post-modern approaches. Anyways... here's a list of Philosophy/Literature programs: http://www.iapl.info/GRADUATE_PROGRAMS/GraduateProgramListing.htm It's not clear to me what questions you are interested in... but from the little you write it seems like you'd be looking at primarily literature programs and doing some cognate work in Philosophy and not the other way around. Philosophy/Lit programs might be overkill.
Outis at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source
Other answers
Dealing with political-theory concepts in literature is so common you should be able to do it anywhere good. Likewise, I would bet you could write a dissertation about how political theory affects literature in most any top-notch lit program. Doing either would probably mean having someone from the other department on your committee, but that's common enough. But you shouldn't. If you're going to teach high school, go to an education program. If you want to teach at the university level in literature/political theory, don't even bother unless you are a freakish genius. If you're just interested, organize an in-person or online reading group without wasting 5--10 years on getting a PhD.
ROU_Xenophobe
If you want to teach high school, why go through the pain of a PhD?
k8t
Yes, you can do what you want in pretty much any literature program I can think of. I'm honestly a little confused why this would even be a question to someone who's already doing graduate study in the humanities. But honestly, you should listen to ROU_Xenophobe. A Ph.D. in literature is a hard enough slog when you're committed to it as the start of an academic career; without a professional need for the degree I don't think it is an enjoyable or advisable way to spend six to ten years.
RogerB
Thanks Jahaza. As of yet I only have a basic introduction to ancient Greek. I can read anglicized alright, but need quite a bit more in the original department. I've got some books but don't much at the time at my current grad school. I had the option of Ancient Greek but didn't feel I could devote enough time to it to justify it. I'm thinking that I'll go the high school teaching route, try and teach myself some Greek, study more texts on my own. I'll try and pick up a comparative literature MA along the way and, if super lucky, an MA in Philosophy at a school where I don't haven't to deal with the misguided Post-Modern theory stuff. It'll take a while but I've got the time. Age 22 upon graduation of current MA.
Outis
Related Q & A:
- Will I get admission in Graduate school?Best solution by princetonreview.com
- If I major in sociology can I go to graduate school for a masters in social work and how long will it take?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- Is it bad to reapply to the same graduate school over and over again?Best solution by lawschoolexpert.com
- How long should I give a prof to write a letter of recommendation for a graduate school application?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
- Graduate School in the UK.Best solution by Quora
Just Added Q & A:
- How many active mobile subscribers are there in China?Best solution by Quora
- How to find the right vacation?Best solution by bookit.com
- How To Make Your Own Primer?Best solution by thekrazycouponlady.com
- How do you get the domain & range?Best solution by ChaCha
- How do you open pop up blockers?Best solution by Yahoo! Answers
For every problem there is a solution! Proved by Solucija.
-
Got an issue and looking for advice?
-
Ask Solucija to search every corner of the Web for help.
-
Get workable solutions and helpful tips in a moment.
Just ask Solucija about an issue you face and immediately get a list of ready solutions, answers and tips from other Internet users. We always provide the most suitable and complete answer to your question at the top, along with a few good alternatives below.