Spring 2026 Registration and Course Information

General registration for spring opens on November 6, typically at 9am eastern (when the Registrar’s office manually activates the system on that morning, it’s not automated, so it might not open at 9:00 sharp). If you need assistance with registration note that the current PACT advisor for the MA program is Chris Hernandez at chernandez85@mercy.edu. We’re planning to run three graduate courses in the spring and will expand the schedule beyond this if needs demand. For the spring you will find these course options available for registration starting on 11/6:

  • ENGL 505 Transformations of the Epic (Dr. Sax)

This course is based on the conception of the epic as an encyclopedic narrative of substantial length featuring a central figure who reflects the values of a particular culture. It will proceed chronologically, studying the taxonomy and transformations of the epic, from its earliest Classical manifestations, through its emergence in Medieval and Renaissance texts, to its incorporation after the Renaissance into modern writing. Fulfills the Writing & Literary Forms requirement or an elective by default, but can fulfill a Literature Group 1 or Literature Group 2 requirement upon request.

  • ENGL 515: Reel Stories: Literature & Film (Dr. Loots)

This course explores story as presented through writings and film from around the world and back across time, with an eye to considering questions such as: What is the point, value, or power of story overall, culturally speaking or otherwise, whether written or filmed? Why do some of us create stories, whether written or filmed? And why do so many of us like to experience stories, whether written or filmed? What advantages are there to storytelling through each of these different mediums? What technical aspects and considerations go into the creation of stories in these two different mediums? Why do people create or experience tragic works if they depict such heavy material that it might make us sad? And what value is there to studying story, whether written or filmed, at all, in the university? We will talk about all of this and more throughout the semester. Basically, if you like thinking, and conversing, and stories, and movies, and exploring your ideas about such in a supportive environment, this is the class for you. Fulfills an elective by default but can fulfill a Literature Group 1 or Literature Group 2 requirement upon request.

  • ENGL 525 Victorian Age in Literature (Dr. Dugan)

If one were asked to define the timeline of Victorian literature, one might be hard-pressed to do so. As literary genres are fluid, it is hard to determine when the Romantic Period ends and the Victorian Period begins; and when the Victorian Period ends and Modernism begins. Whatever the dates, a defining characteristic of Victorian England would be change, change matched with a belief in progress: societal, religious, economic, and artistic. While some benefited from these changes, others did not. The semester we will look closely, through Victorian literature, at issues that challenge the notions of change and progress, notably the role of women, industrialism, gender roles, and poverty as shown in fiction, poetry, and drama of the Victorian age. Fulfills a Literature Group 1 requirement or an elective by default, but can fulfill a Literature Group 2 requirement or the Writing & Literary Forms requirement upon request.

Faculty Speaking Event: Dr. Sax Discusses his forthcoming book

Good news for grad students able to reach the Dobbs Ferry campus: Our own Dr. Boria Sax will be discussing his forthcoming book The Butterfly Who Dreamt He Was a Man this Thursday, October 30, at 10:30am in the Maher Hall Conference Room. This is part of the School of Liberal Arts’ 2025-26 thematic series of events on Bodies. The MA English Lit program strongly encourages anyone in the area to come over to campus on Thursday morning. For directions to Maher Hall or more info, write to cloots@mercy.edu.

Seeking Students for a School of Liberal Arts Themed Event: “Psyche & Soma in the Age of Cyberculture”

Hi all! Each year the MercyU School of Liberal Arts (SLA) launches a theme and then encourages faculty and students to create events based on the theme. The SLA theme this year is “bodies.” Faculty in the grad program are hoping to gather students together for a themed-event called “Psyche and Soma in the Age of Cyberculture.” Just what would the event actually involve? And when would it happen? We don’t yet know! But it would somehow have something to do with the question and mystery of the mind, the self, one’s psychical quidditas (psyche) in relation to one’s physical body (soma) in this age of cyberculture, meaning the age of the internet, phones, computers, AI, virtual reality, augmented reality, MMORPGS and other co-op shared gaming and virtual environments, social media, etc.

We’re first just looking to see who from our grad program would be interested in joining together to do something on the theme. Then, from there we’d confer and determine just what that something might be. The most standard thing would be some sort of a panel event, where a series of presenters would share something (perhaps a scholarly paper, perhaps a creative-writing piece, perhaps something of the studio-arts or digital arts, perhaps something musical, perhaps something cinematic, perhaps something like dance, etc.) each somehow related to the question, issue, mystery of “Psyche and Soma in the Age of Cyberculture.” But perhaps there’s some other sort of event that we might imagine.

If any student in the grad program is curious about or interested in this, please write to cloots@mercy.edu by October 25. Reaching out does not bespeak a commitment, so if you’re at all intrigued, just reach out. Let’s just get in view who all might be interested in banding together for this event. Once we have that in view, we’ll take it from there and figure out what we each might do, and when, and in what modality.