German Languages and Literatures

Study for higher degrees in the Department of Germanic Languages and Literatures is intended as preparation for a career in teaching and research. The program empha­sizes literature, literary history, and cultural studies, rather than the language itself.

For complete information on the requirements for the Older Germanic Languages, Literatures, and Cultures track, please consult the director of graduate studies.

 

Advising

• The department assigns each incoming graduate student a faculty advisor, matching the student’s scholarly interest. Both the advisor and the director of graduate studies counsel and assist students prior to the dissertation. When students start working on their dissertations, the dissertation director becomes the principal advisor. The di­rector of graduate studies approves and signs all study cards.

• Students choose the director and two readers of their dissertations, in consultation with the director of graduate studies and the prospective director. They advise the student during the writing of the dissertation.

• Students who wish to change their advisor or dissertation director may consult with the director of graduate studies or the chair of the department.

 

Master of Arts (AM)

All students, except those admitted with the AM degree from another university, take the master’s examination at the start of their fourth term. Permission to proceed to the PhD is granted on the basis of coursework, performance in the AM examination, and scholarly potential as judged by the department. A student denied permission to proceed terminates graduate study with the AM degree.

 

The requirements for the AM degree are as follows:

• A minimum of three terms of full-time study. For financial residence requirements, see the GSAS Guide to Admission and Financial Aid or this handbook.

• The satisfactory completion of an approved program of eight half-courses or the equivalent. Four of these courses must be in the group designated in Courses of In­struction as “Primarily for Graduates.” Two of the half-courses must consist of Ger­man 226r (the Proseminar) and a seminar. One half-course must be wholly or partly philological or linguistic in character, normally German 255 (Middle High German) or German 225 (History of the German Language). Students may substitute Lin­guistics 168 (Introduction to Germanic Linguistics) or Linguistics 247 (Topics in Germanic Linguistics) for German 225. Linguistics 200 (Second Language Acqui­sition: Theory and Methodology) and courses taken to fulfill language requirements or deficiencies are not included in the minimum requirement.

• A four-hour written examination, administered at the start of the student's fourth term, in which the student demonstrates an ability to interpret literary texts and to place them in their historical contexts. A one-hour oral examination one week later, which includes a brief presentation in German, is required. The AM examination is based on a departmental reading list. No master’s thesis is required.

 

Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Academic Requirements

• A minimum of six terms of full-time study, which includes reading courses and teaching. Credit for graduate work done elsewhere may be granted in accordance with procedures detailed in this handbook. For financial residence requirements, see the GSAS Guide to Admission and Financial Aid or this handbook.

 

Course Requirements

• The satisfactory completion of an approved program of eight half-courses beyond the AM degree. All graduate students are required to take German 226r (the Proseminar). PhD students must also take at least two half-courses in philology or linguistics, nor­mally German 200 (Middle High German) and German 225 (History of the German Language). Students may substitute Linguistics 168 (Introduction to Germanic Lin­guistics) or Linguistics 247 (Topics in Germanic Linguistics) for German 225. Not more than two half-courses from the group “For Undergraduates and Graduates” may be counted, including courses taken for the AM degree, unless the student arranges with the instructor to upgrade the course; all others must be “Primarily for Graduates.” With the permission of the director of graduate studies, students may take courses in other departments that relate to their program of study. Linguistics 200 (Second Lan­guage Acquisition: Theory and Methodology) and courses taken to fulfill language re­quirements or deficiencies are not included in the minimum requirement.

• Completion of the seminars taught in the department by department faculty mem­bers with a grade of A- in at least one of the seminars.

• A grade record showing more As than Bs, and no grade lower than B-. A grade of Incomplete must be converted into a letter grade before the end of the next registration period or it will become permanent, unless the student has successfully petitioned the GSAS Dean’s office for an extension.

 

Foreign Language Requirements

Graduate students normally must satisfy the requirement in French and, where appli­cable, in Latin before they can be admitted to the PhD general examination.

• Reading proficiency in French. This requirement can be fulfilled by passing French Ax (Reading Modern French), offered by Harvard’s Department of Romance Lan­guages and Literatures, with a grade of A or A-, or by passing a French Ax final ex­amination, administered by the instructor of the course, with a grade of A or A-. Any student failing the language examination must consult the director of graduate stud­ies in order to plan satisfactory remedial steps to remove the deficiency.

• Considerable reading ability in Latin only for those students wishing to specialize (i.e., to write their dissertations) in philology (historical linguistics) or in the litera­ture of the earlier periods (medieval, sixteenth century, the Baroque). This require­ment may be fulfilled by a department examination. The texts to be translated or summarized will be taken from Latin works of literary merit written by German au­thors, mainly during the medieval period. The requirement may also be fulfilled by an honor grade (B-or higher) in any course in medieval Latin or in any intermediate course of readings of classical authors given by Harvard’s Department of the Clas­sics. Any student failing the language examination must consult the director of grad­uate studies in order to plan satisfactory remedial steps to remove the deficiency.

 

Teaching

• Experience teaching the German language, normally for at least two terms at Har­vard. All students must meet this requirement before receiving their PhD.

 

General Examinations

• The satisfactory completion of a written examination taken after the student has completed coursework and met the language requirement(s). Students entering the program with an AM degree or its equivalent from another university take the ex­amination at the end of their second year; students taking the AM degree at Harvard take the examination at the end of their third year of residence. The written exami­nation consists of two four-hour sessions a week apart. The first examination covers any one of the following periods: (i) medieval literature, (ii) 1500–1750, (iii) 1750– 1830, (iv) 1830–1910, (v) 1890–1945, (vi) 1945–present. Students are responsible both for the principal literary texts in their chosen period and for the pertinent schol­arship. The second examination covers any one of the following fields: (i) lyric poetry, (ii) drama, (iii) narrative fiction, (iv) a special topic defined by the student in con­sultation with the examination committee, (v) Germanic philology (linguistics). Fi­nal reading lists for the examination are due four months before the date of the examination.

• The satisfactory completion of a two-hour oral examination within two weeks after the written examination.

• For more specific information regarding the general examinations, see the depart­ment’s “General Examination Schedule and Guidelines.”

 

Dissertation

• After consultation with the advisor, a dissertation prospectus submitted for approval three months following completion of the general examination. PhD candidates are urged to think about a dissertation topic before their general examination and to start work on the dissertation soon after passing the examination. The dissertation sub­ject normally falls within the area where the student’s special period and special field converge. The object of the dissertation is to show the candidate’s ability to pursue independent research and to present the results of this research in a cogent and convincing form.

Candidates first devise a topic in rough outline and discuss it with one or more members of the faculty with the goals of developing the topic further and finding a director. When a member of the faculty has agreed to serve as a director, the candidate informs the department of this arrangement in writing; he or she also lists two other faculty members as second and third readers, one of whom must be a member of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences.
The prospectus (1,500 to 3,000 words plus bibliography) lays out the main question(s) that the dissertation is to address, along with a tentative chapter-by­chapter description of the work. The prospectus is discussed and approved by the department faculty.
Once the prospectus is approved, the candidate and dissertation director design a writing schedule with two goals: 1) that the project be completed within three years, and 2) that sections comprising approximately one-fifth of the anticipated whole be submitted every six months. Candidates must adhere to this timetable in order to remain in good standing.

 

• A dissertation directed by a department faculty member, and read and approved by the director and by two additional readers, one of whom must be a member of FAS. Two copies of the completed and approved dissertation must be submitted to the registrar by the deadline set by the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences.

• A dissertation defense if the student wishes it or there is some doubt in the depart­ment about the dissertation. 

 
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