IGNOU MEG Courses

IGNOU MA English Syllabus, Courses

IGNOU MA English Syllabus & Courses

The Indira Gandhi National Open University has divided the IGNOU MA English Syllabus or courses into two years. Also, all the courses has been divided into 6 modules and 2 compulsory courses.

In both years, student has to select four courses each.

Also, check out how can we download IGNOU ID Card?

In first year, MEG-5 course is compulsory. The students have to select remaining 3 courses from 6 available modules.

In second year also the students has to study 4 courses where IGNOU MEG-4 course is compulsory. The rest of the 3 courses has to be chosen from six module of courses.

IGNOU MA English Courses

Each IGNOU MA English course has some credit associated with it where one credit is equivalent to 30 study hours of students comprising all the learning activities.

Therefore, if any course has two credits associated with it then its means the students has to give 60 hours for its study.

Below we have provided the list of IGNOU MEG Courses that students need to pass out or complete by students to obtain the Master degree in English literature.

Here below find the list of Course Code and Course names for IGNOU MA English programme.

It is a 64 credit programme in which 1 Credit is equal to 30 study hours. These courses are offered by university in 2 tier structure.

IGNOU MA English First Year Syllabus

Course Code  Course Name Credits

First Year

Compulsory Course

MEG-05  Literary Criticism and Theory  8

Second Year

Compulsory Course

MEG-04  Aspects of Language  8

OR

MEG-15  Comparative Literature: Theory and Practice  8

Optional Courses

Module-1: British Literature

MEG-01  British Poetry  8
MEG-02  British Drama  8
MEG-03  British Novel  8

Module-2: New Literature in English

Optional Courses (Choose any Three)

MEG-08 New Literatures in English  8
MEG-09 Australian Literature  8
MEG-12 A Survey Course in 20th Century Canadian Literature  8
MEG-19 Australian Novel  8

Module-3: Writing from the margins

MEG-13 Writings from the Margins  8
MEG-14 Contemporary Indian Literature in English Translation  8
MEG-16 Indian Folk Literature  8

Module-4: Writing from INDIA

MEG-07 Indian English Literature  8
MEG-10 English Studies in India  8
MEG-14 Contemporary Indian Literature in English Translation  8

Module-5: American Literature

Optional Courses (Choose any Three)

MEG-06 American Literature 8
MEG-11 American Novel  8
MEG-17 American Drama l  8
MEG-18 American Poetry  8

Module-6: The Novel

MEG-03  British Novel  8
MEG-11 American Novel  8
MEG-19 Australian Novel  8
Total  64

The IGNOU School of Humanities (SOH) has developed very easy to understand IGNOU MA English syllabus for its students so that they do not face any difficulty.

IGNOU MA English Syllabus

Below we have provided IGNOU MA English first Year and Second year syllabus in detail:

IGNOU MA English First Year Syllabus & IGNOU MA English Second Year Syllabus

MEG 01: British Poetry

Block I: Orientations for the Study of Poetry & the Medieval Poet Chaucer

  • Unit 1: From the Evaluation of Portraits towards the Explication of Poems (1370 – 80)
  • Unit 2: A Prelude to the Study of Poetry (Rhetoric & Prosody), Iambic, Trochaic, Anapest, Dactylic, Amphibrachic, Strong stress metres, quantitative metres, syllabis metres, rhythm, rhyme schemes, etc
  • Unit 3: The Age of Chaucer
  • Unit 4: Chaucer’s Poetry: A General Survey : Roman de la Rose, The Book of the Duchess, The House of Fame, Parliament of Fowls, Prologue to the Legend of Good Women, The Nun’s Priest’s Tale, Troilus and Criseyde, The Canterbury Tales,
  • Unit 5: The General Prologue to The Canterbury Tales
  • Unit 6: ‘A Study of the Nonne Preestes Tale’ I
  • Unit 7: ‘A Study of the Nonne Preestes Tale’ II

Block 2: Renaissance Poets: Undertaking a Study of Spenser

  • Unit 8: The Renaissance Age
  • Unit 9: Edmund Spenser
  • Unit 10: Spenser’s Poetry: The Amoretti Sonnets, Sonnet 34, Sonnet 67, Sonnet 77
  • Unit 11: Spenser’s Poetry – II: The Epithalamion, The Prothalamion,

Block 3: The Metaphysical Poets: Donne, Herbert & Marvell

  • Unit 12: British Poetry in the 17th Century (pre-Restoration): Historical Background, Cultural Background, The Astronomical Revolution, Spenserians (– Phineas Fletcher, Giles Fletcher, Wither, William Browne), the Cavalier Poets (- Robbert Herrick, Thomas Carew, Sir John Suckling, Richard Lovelace), the Metaphysical Poets (- Henry Vaughan, Richard Crashaw, Thomas Traherne), the Early Augustans (- Edmund Waller, Sir William Davenant, Sir John Denham, Abraham Cowley)
  • Unit 13: John Donne: Portrait of the Man, His Thematic and Technical Innovations and Textual Study of four Love Poems; The Flea, Twicknam Garden, The Good Morrow, The Extasie
  • Unit 1 4: John Donne: Further Explorations into Poems of Love and Faith: The Canonization, A Valediction: Forbidding Mourning, A Nocturnal Upon S Lucies Day, Batter My Heart, Three Person’d God, Hymn To God The Father
  • Unit 15: George Herbert: A Study of His Poems: Affliction, The Collar, Easter Wings, Love (3), The Pulley, Redemption, The Windows, Aaron
  • Unit 16: Andrew Marvell: A Study of His Poems: To His Coy Mistress, The Garden, An Horation Ode Upon Cromwell’s Return From Ireland

Block 4: Renaissance Poets: Studying Milton

  • Unit 17: The Late Renaissance
  • Unit 18: Milton: The Life
  • Unit 19: A Survey of Milton’s Lesser Poems & Prose: On the Death of An Infant, At A Vacation Exercise
  • Unit 20: On The Morning of Christ’s Nativity & Lycidas
  • Unit 21: L’Allegro, Il Penseroso &the Sonnets 19 & 23

Block 5: The Neoclassical Poets: Dryden & Pope

  • Unit 22: The Age of Dryden
  • Unit 23: John Dryden
  • Unit 24: Mac Flecknoe, (Alexander’s Feast Or The Power of Music An Ode In Honour of St Cecilia’s Day)
  • Unit 25: Pope: A Background to An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot
  • Unit 26: Pope: The Study of An Epistle to Dr Arbuthnot

Block 6: The Romantic Poets: Blake, Wordsworth & Coleridge

  • Unit 27: Introduction to Romantic Poetry: Early Romantic Poets (- James Thomson, Mark Akenside, Joseph Warton, William Collins, Thomas Gray, William Cowper, Robert Burns, Blake, Wordsworth, Coleridge, Byron, Shelley & Keats)
  • Unit 28: William Blake: Songs of Innocence & Songs of Experience, The Lamb, The Chimney Sweeper,  The Divine Image, The Sick Rose, London, The Tyger,
  • Unit 29: Wordsworth’s The Prelude, Book I: A Critical Analysis
  • Unit 30: Coleridge: Kubla Khan & Dejection: An Ode

Block 7: The Second Generation Romantic Poets: Shelley & Keats

  • Unit 31: The Volcanic Voice of Hope: P B Shelley
  • Unit 32: A Study of The Triumph of Life
  • Unit-33 Keats: Hyperion: A Fragment-I
  • Unit 34: Keats: Hyperion: A Fragment, II
  • Unit 35: The Romantic Age: A Review

Block 8: The Victorian Poets: Robert Browning, D G & Christina Georgiana Rossetti, Oscar Wilde

  • Unit 36: The Victorian Age: Selected Studies
  • Unit 37: Robert Browning: Life & Aspirations: Sordello in Mantua
  • Unit 38: Robert Browning: Two Early Poems: Porphyria’s Lover, The Bishop Orders His Tomb at St Praxed’s Church
  • Unit 39: Two Poems from Men and Women: Childe Roland To The Dark Tower Came, Fra Lippo Lippi
  • Unit 40: The Pre- Raphaelite Brotherhood: Dante Gabriel Rossetti & Christina Georgina Rossetti: My Sister’s Sleep, The Blessed Damozel; Goblin Market
  • Unit 41: Oscar Wilde: The Ballad of Reading Gaol

Block 9: The Modernist Poets

  • Unit 42: Modern British Poetry: An Introduction
  • Unit 43: W B Yeats: Background, System, and Poetic Career until 1910: Adam’s Curse, No Second Troy
  • Unit 44: The Later Poetry of W B Yeats: Easter 1916, Sailing To Byzantium, Lapis Lazuli
  • Unit 45: T S Eliot: The Waste Land (I)
  • Unit 46: T S Eliot: The Waste Land (II)
  • Unit 47: T S Eliot: The Waste Land (III)

Block 10: The Modernist & Post Modernist Poets: Dylan Thomas, Philip Larkin, Sylvia Plath, A Symposium & Essays and Evaluations

  • Unit 48: Dylan Thomas: And Death Shall Have No Dominion, Poem in October, Fern Hill, A Refusal to Mourn the Death by Fire, Of Child in London
  • Unit 49: Philip Larkin: I Remember, I Remember, Toads, Toads Revisited, Mr Bleaney, Church Going, The Whitsun Weddings, At Grass
  • Unit 50: Sylvia Plath & Confessional Poetry: The Colossus, Daddy, Lasy Lazrun, Purdah, Ariel, Pursuit, The Applicant, Fever 103°
  • Unit 51: So! Now! What is Poetry? Once Again: A Symposium Unit 52: Essays & Evaluations

MEG 02: British Drama

Block I: Christopher Marlowe : Doctor Faustus

  • Unit-1 Christopher Marlowe And The Elizabethan Drama
  • Unit-2 The Tragic Drama of Doctor Faustus
  • Unit-3 Irony And The Tragic Dilemma In Doctor Faustus
  • Unit-4 The Renaissance And Reformation In Doctor Faustus
  • Unit-5 Dramatic Poetry In Doctor Faustus
  • Unit-6 The Performance Of Doctor Faustus

Block II: Shakespeare: A Midsummer Night’s Dream

  • Unit-1 Background : Performance
  • Unit-2 Romantic Comedy and the Language of the Play
  • Unit-3 A Midsummer Night’s Dream-I
  • Unit-4 A Midsummer Night’s Dream-II
  • Unit-5 The Mechanicals

Block III: Shakespeare: Hamlet

  • Unit-1 Background
  • Unit-2 Interpretations
  • Unit-3 Language of Literature
  • Unit-4 Hamlet : Other Dimensions
  • Unit-5 “The World As Stage” : Wider Perspective
  • Unit-6 Current Critical Approaches to Hamlet

Block IV: Ben Jonson: The Alchemist

  • Unit-1 The Dramatic Career of Ben Jonson
  • Unit-2 Jonsonian Comedy and The Alchemist
  • Unit-3 The Structure of The Alchemist
  • Unit-4 The Alchemist in the Theatre
  • Unit-5 Characterization and Language

Block V: John Millington Synge: The Playboy of the Western World

  • Unit-1 Background to the Playboy
  • Unit-2 Critical Annotations to the Playboy
  • Unit-3 Close Analysis of the Playboy
  • Unit-4 The Playboy: A Discussion
  • Unit-5 The Playboy: A Discussion (contd.)

Block VI: George Bernard Shaw: Pygmalion

  • Unit-1 Background of English Drama from the Restoration Period to Bernard Shaw
  • Unit-2 Pygmalion : Themes and Issues
  • Unit-3 Dramatic Structure and Mingling of Genres
  • Unit-4 Language and Style

Block VII: T S Eliot: Murder in the Cathedral

  • Unit-1 T.S.Eliot’s Essays And Other Works Related to the Play
  • Unit-2 Background, Production and Performance History
  • Unit-3 Critical Approaches to Play-I
  • Unit-4 Critical Approaches to Play-II
  • Unit-5 General Comments and other Reading

Block VIII: John Osborne: Look Back in Anger

  • Unit-1 Background to the Play
  • Unit-2 The Characters
  • Unit-3 Language and Speech in Look Back in Anger
  • Unit-4 Critical Approaches in Look Back in Anger
  • Unit-5 Anger and After: The Play’s Subsequent Importance

Block IX: Samuel Beckett: Waiting for Godot

  • Unit-1 Waiting for Godot: An Avant Garde Play
  • Unit-2 Godot: A Critical Analysis- I
  • Unit-3 Critical Analysis- II
  • Unit-4 Themes and Issues- I
  • Unit-5 Themes and Issues- II

MEG 03: British Novel

  • Block I: Henry Fieldings: The History of Tom Jones A Foundling (1749)
  • Block II: Jane Austen: Pride and Prejudice (1813)
  • Block III: Emily Bronte: Wuthering Heights (1847)
  • Block IV: Charles Dickens: Great Expectations (1860 -1861, 1861, 1862)
  • Block V: George Eliot: Middlemarch (1871)
  • Block VI: Josef Conrad: Heart of Darkness (1898 -1899)
  • Block VII: James Joyce: A Portrait of the Artist As A Young Man (1916)
  • Block VIII: Edward Morgan Forster: A Passage to India (1912-14)

MEG 05: Literary Theory & Criticism

  • Block I: An Introduction
  • Block II: Classical Criticism
  • Block III: Romantic Criticism
  • Block IV: New Criticism
  • Block V: Marxist View of Literature
  • Block VI: Feminists Theories
  • Block VII: Deconstruction
  • Block VIII: Contemporary Literary Theory

MEG 04: Aspects of Language

  • Block I: What is Language?
  • Block II: A History of the English Language
  • Block III: Phonetics & Phonology I
  • Block IV: Phonetics & Phonology II
  • Block V: English Syntax
  • Block VI: Language In Use – I
  • Block VII: Language In Use – II
  • Block VIII: The Spread of English
  • Block IX: Stylistics

MEG 06: American Literature

  • Block I: Contexts of American Literature: The Puritans & the Enlightenment
  • Block II: American Fiction – I
  • Block III: American Fiction – II
  • Block IV: American Prose
  • Block V: American Poetry – I
  • Block VI: American Poetry – II
  • Block VII: American Short Story
  • Block VIII: American Drama
  • Block IX: Toni Morrison: The Bluest Eye

MEG 07: Indian Writing In English

  • Block I: Non- Fictional Prose
  • Block II: Mulk Raj Anand: Untouchable
  • Block III: Raja Rao: Kanthapura
  • Block IV: Anita Desai: Clear Light of Day Block V: Salman Rushdie: Midnight’s Children
  • Block VI: The Short Story
  • Block VII: Poetry
  • Block VIII: Mahesh Dattani: Tara

MEG 08: New Literatures in English

Block 1: Introduction

  • Unit 1: Naming the Discipline
  • Unit 2: African Literature: Culture and Post – Nationalist Politics in Kenya and Nigeria
  • Unit 3: Caribbean Literature: The Aesthetics of Diaspora
  • Unit 4: South Asian Literature
  • Unit 5: Australian Literature: Interrogating National Myths
  • Unit 6: Canadian Literature: Scanning the Literary Landscape

Block 2: A Grain of Wheat: Ngugi Wa Thiong’o

  • Unit 1: Africa – The Dark Continent and Kenya – The Land of Gikuyu and Mumbi
  • Unit 2: Literature and Politics
  • Unit 3: Modern Novel in Africa
  • Unit 4: A Grain of Wheat – Summary
  • Unit 5: A Grain of Wheat – An Evaluation

Block 3: A Dance of the Forests: Wole Soyinka

  • Unit 1: An Introduction to Nigeria and to the Yoruba World
  • Unit 2: Wole Soyinka’s Life and Works
  • Unit 3: A Dance of the Forests: Summary
  • Unit 4: Critical Commentary on A Dance of the Forests
  • Unit 5: Wole Soyinka’s Major Dramatic Works

Block 4: Ice- Candy – Man: Bapsi Sidhwa

  • Unit 1: The Author: Background, Works, and Significance of the Title
  • Unit 2: The Narrative Voice in Ice- Candy- Man
  • Unit 3: Feminist Inscriptions in Ice- Candy- Man
  • Unit 4: Parsi Identity in Ice- Candy- Man
  • Unit 5: Ice- Candy- Man as a Novel of the Partition
  • Unit 6: Bapsi Sidhwa’s Ice- Candy- Man: A Postcolonial Perspective

Block 5: A House for Mr Biswas: V S Naipaul

  • Unit 1: Naipaul and his critics
  • Unit 2: Mr Biswas and the Tulsis
  • Unit 3: Mr Biswas and his Dream House
  • Unit 4: Why did Mr Biswas want a House?
  • Unit 5: Putting A House for Mr Biswas in Perspective

Block 6: Caribbean Poetry: Derek Walcott & Edward Brathwaite

  • Unit 1: Introduction to Caribbean Poetry
  • Unit 2: Derek Walcott – I
  • Unit 3: Derek Walcott – II
    Unit 4: (Edward) Kamau Braithwaite – I
  • Unit 5: (Edward) Kamau Braithwaite – II
    Unit 6: The Theoretical Paradigms for Caribbean Literature

Block 7: The Solid Mandala: Patrick White

  • Unit 1: The Novelist and the Novel
  • Unit 2: Openings and Preoccupations
  • Unit 3: Denizens of the Australian Emptiness
  • Unit 4: Messages in Motifs
  • Unit 5: Techniques
  • Unit 6: Perspectives

Block 8: The Stone Angel: Margaret Laurence

  • Unit 1: The Novelist and her Main Thematic Concerns
  • Unit 2: Hagar and the Theme of Self- Alienation
  • Unit 3: The Stone Angel: A Novel of Awakening
  • Unit 4: Major Aspects of the Novel

MEG 09: Australian Literature

Block 1: An Introduction to Australian Literature

  • Unit 1: Australian Literature
  • Unit 2: Australia – Land and History
  • Unit 3: Australia – People and Culture
  • Unit 4: Literary Beginnings – Oral Literature
  • Unit 5: Early Literature
  • Unit 6: Themes and Trends

Block 2: Nineteenth Century Australian Poetry

  • Unit 1: 19th Century Australian Poetry: An Introduction
  • Unit 2: W C Wentworth: Australasia, Wild Colonial Boy
  • Unit 3: Charles Harpur: The Bush Fire, A Mid- Summer Noon in the Australian Forest
  • Unit 4: Henry Kendall: Bell – Birds, After Many Years
  • Unit 5: A L Gordon & A B Paterson: The Sick Stockrider; The Man From Snowy River
  • Unit 6: Ada Cambridge: An Answer

Block 3: Introduction to Short Fiction

  • Unit 1: Introduction to short fiction /story
  • Unit 2: Marcus Clarke: The Seizure of the Cyprus
  • Unit 3: Barbara Baynton: The Chosen Vessel
  • Unit 4: Henry Lawson: The Drover’s Wife; The Union Buries It’s Dead
  • Unit 5: Arthur Hoey Davis: Cranky Jack
  • Unit 6: Christina Stead: The Old School

Block 4: Modern Australian Poetry (1901 -1970)

  • Unit 1: Introduction: An Overview
  • Unit 2: Beginnings: Christopher Brennan – Each Day I See the Long Ships Coming Into Port; John Shaw Neilson – The Orange Tree
    Unit 3: The Notion of Australia: Kenneth Slessor – South Country; R D Fitzgerald – This Night’s Orbit
  • Unit 4: Keepers of the Flame: Judith Wright: Legend, Bullocky; David Campbell – The Australian Dream;
  • Unit 5: Coming of Age: James McAuley – Terra Australis; A D Hope – Australia, Moschus Moschiferus;
  • Unit 6: The Marginalised Voice: Rosemary Dobson – Cock Crow; Oodgeroo Noonuccal – We Are Going;
    Rex Ingamells – History, Moorawathimeering; ‘Ern Malley’ – Durer: Innsbruck, 1495; Ania Walwicz – Australia (prose); John Farrell – From Australia; Douglas Stewart –Terra Australis; Bernard O’ Dowd- Australia, The Southern Call

Block 5: Voss: Patrick White

  • Unit 1: Rise and Development of the Australian Novel
  • Unit 2: As We First Read Voss
  • Unit 3: Romantic Elements in Voss
  • Unit 4: Multiple Themes in Voss
  • Unit 5: Modern Readings: Some Important Areas

Block 6: Contemporary Australian Poetry (1970 Onwards)

  • Unit 1: Contemporary Australia
  • Unit 2: Bruce Dawe & Les Murray: At Shagger’s Funeral; The Quality of Sprawl, Blood
  • Unit 3: Chris Wallace- Crabbe & Gwen Harwood: Melbourne; In The Park
  • Unit 4: Ee Tiang & Kevin Gilbert: Coming To; Mister Man
  • Unit 5: Mudrooroo Narogin & Gig Ryan: Harijan; If I Had A Gun

Block 7: Remembering Babylon: David Malouf

  • Unit 1: Contemporary Australian Fiction: An Overview
  • Unit 2: The Author, His Creativity and Remembering Babylon
  • Unit 3: Structure, Characters and Metaphors
  • Unit 4: Narrative Strategies and Communication
  • Unit 5: Themes

Block 8: The Removalists: David Williamson

  • Unit 1: An Overview of Austalian Drama
  • Unit 2: David Williamson’s Dramatic World
  • Unit 3: Reading The Removalists
  • Unit 4: Themes and Techniques

MEG 10: English Studies in India

Block 1: Institutionalisation of English Studies in India

  • Unit 1: Entry of English: A Historical Overview
  • Unit 2: Macaulay, Raja Ram Mohun Roy and Charles E Trevelyan
  • Unit 3: A View of Post Independence Debates
  • Unit 4: Settling Down of English as Studies and Medium

Block 2: Beginnings of Indian English Writing

  • Unit 1: The Context of the Earliest Indian English Writings
  • Unit 2: Henry Louis Vivian Deroizo and the Early Voice of Identity
  • Unit 3: Michael Madhusudan Dutt and the Evolution of Modernity
  • Unit 4: Toru Dutt: Assertions of Indian Life

Block 3: Beginnings of the Indian English Novel

  • Unit 1: The Contexts of Bankim
  • Unit 2: Themes in Rajmohan’s Wife – I
  • Unit 3: Themes in Rajmohan’s Wife – II
  • Unit 4: Marriage and Transgression in Bankim’s Other Novels

Block 4: Different Englishes

  • Unit 1: Evolution of English
  • Unit 2: Nativisation of English in Post Independent India (Functions of English)
  • Unit 3: Nativisation of English Discourse: Syntax, Morphology, Phonology
  • Unit 4: Intelligibility of Indian English Globally
  • Unit 5: Debate Over Native and Non- Native Englishes
  • Unit 6: Space of English in the Indian Multilingual Setting

Block 5: Problems of Teaching and Learning English Literature

  • Unit 1: Problems of Teaching and Learning English Literature
  • Unit 2: The March of TELI in India
  • Unit 3: Role and Function of TELI in the contemporary context
  • Unit 4: English Teaching in India
  • Unit 5: The Lie of the Land: English in India
  • Unit 6: Publishing in India and English Studies

Block 6: Questioning the ‘Canon’

  • Unit 1: Questioning the Canon, Ideology and Assumptions of the Canon
  • Unit 2: The Rise of English and Issues Concerning the Canon
  • Unit 3: Possibilities of New Agreements
  • Unit 4: Exploding English: Criticism, Theory, and Culture
  • Unit 5: The Crisis in English Studies
  • Unit 6: Resistance to Reading and the Question of Material Base

Block 7: Evolutions of Canons in Indian English Writing

  • Unit 1: Canon Making in the Era of Gandhi, Nehru, Socialism
  • Unit 2: Tagore, Premchand, Mulk Raj Anand, and Raja Rao
  • Unit 3: Feminism: Indian English Writers
  • Unit 4: The Dalit Canon

Block 8: Decolonising the Mind

  • Unit 1: Orientalism and After
  • Unit 2: Literature and Nationalism
  • Unit 3: Decolonising the Mind
  • Unit 4: Civilizational Conflicts in Literature
  • Unit 5: Resisting Colonization and Re- colonization

MEG 11: American Novel

Block 1: James F Cooper: The Last of the Mohicans

  • Unit 1: The Beginnings
  • Unit 2: The Man, The Milieu, And the Moment
  • Unit 3: The Last of the Mohicans: An Analysis
  • Unit 4: Perspectives on the Novel- I
    Unit 5: Perspectives on the Novel- II

Block 2: Theodore Dreiser: Sister Carrie

  • Unit 1: The Literary Context
  • Unit 2: Theodore Dreiser: The Man and the Writer
  • Unit 3: Sister Carrie: A Critical Summary
  • Unit 4: Sister Carrie: A Critical Study of the Major Themes
  • Unit 5: Language and Art in Sister Carrie

Block 3: F Scott Fitzgerald: The Great Gatsby

  • Unit 1: The Man, The Milieu, And the Moment
  • Unit 2: The Plot and the Self- Improving Hero
  • Unit 3: The Great Gatsby and Fable, Symbol and Allegory
  • Unit 4: The Great Gatsby: The Narrative Technique
  • Unit 5: Critics and Criticism: An Overview

Block 4: William Faulkner: Light in August

  • Unit 1: American Fiction in 1920s and 1930s
  • Unit 2: The Novel in the South
  • Unit 3: Light in August: Structure and Narrative Strategies
  • Unit 4: Characterisation and Critical Approaches

Block 5: Henry Miller: Black Spring

  • Unit 1: Sexual Revolution in Modern American Literature
  • Unit 2: The Great Tradition
  • Unit 3: The Outsider
  • Unit 4: The Indelible Impact
  • Unit 5: Henry Miller’s: Black Spring
  • Unit 6: Critical Approaches

Block 6: J D Salinger: The Catcher in the Rye

  • Unit 1: The Author and the Plot
  • Unit 2: The Main Themes and Characters
  • Unit 3: The Language in The Catcher in the Rye
  • Unit 4: Critical Interpretations

Block 7: John Barth: Floating Opera

  • Unit 1: The Postwar American Novel
  • Unit 2: The Experimental Novel
  • Unit 3: The Floating Opera: An Analysis of the Text
  • Unit 4: Philosophical Formulations and the Farce of Reasons
  • Unit 5: From Modernity to Post Modernity

Block 8: Scott Momaday: A House Made of Dawn

  • Unit 1: Native American Literature
  • Unit 2: Native American Fiction
  • Unit 3: The Making of Monaday
  • Unit 4: A House Made of Dawn: An Analysis
  • Unit 5: Critical perspectives

Block 9: Alice Walker: The Color Purple

  • Unit 1: The Woman, the Moment, And the Milieu – I
  • Unit 2: The Woman, the Moment, And the Milieu – II
  • Unit 3: The Color Purple and its structure
  • Unit 4: Analysis of Celie’s Letters – I
  • Unit 5: Analysis of Celie’s Letters – II
  • Unit 6: Themes Emerging from Celie’s Letters

MEG-12: A Survey Course in 20th Century Canadian Literature

Block 1: Contexts of Canadian Writing

  • Unit 1: Canada: Land And People
  • Unit 2: Literary Beginnings
  • Unit 3: English Canadian Theatre and Drama
  • Unit 4: Canadian Discourse on Nature and Technology

Block 2: Recent Canadian Poetry

  • Unit 5: The Growth of Canadian Poetry
  • Unit 6: Recent Commonwealth Poetry and Canada’s place in it
  • Unit 7: Two major Novelists as Poets: Margaret Atwood – A sibyl and Michael Ondaatje – Letters and Other Worlds
  • Unit 8: Five Other Important Poets

Block 3: Surfacing: Margaret Atwood

  • Unit 9: Development of the Canadian Novel
  • Unit 10: Margaret Atwood: Life and Works
  • Unit 11: Surfacing: Theme, Structure, Technique and Characterization
  • Unit 12: Surfacing: Language

Block 4: THE TIN FLUTE: GABRIELLE ROY

  • Unit 13: French Canadian Writing (Quebec)
  • Unit 14: Gabrielle Roy: Life and Works
  • Unit 15: The Tin Flute: Structure and Theme
  • Unit 16: The Tin Flute: Characterization and Technique


Block 5: The English Patient: Michael Ondaatje

  • Unit 17: Canadian – South Asian Diasporic Writing
  • Unit 18: Ondaatje: Life and Works
  • Unit 19: The English Patient: Theme, Structure and Characterization
  • Unit 20: The English Patient: Technique


Block 6: Canadian Short Story

  • Unit 21: Short Fiction in General and the Canadian Short Story
  • Unit 22: ‘A Mother in India’: Sara Jenette Duncan
  • Unit 23: ‘Sunday Afternoon’: Alice Munro; ‘Where Is The Voice Coming From’: Rudy Wiebe
  • Unit 24: ‘Swimming Lessons’: Rohinton Mistry; ‘The Door I Shut Behind Me’: Uma Parameswaran

Block 7: The Ecstasy of Rita Joe: Drama: George Ryga

  • Unit 25: Canadian Drama: The General Dramatic Scene
  • Unit 26: Introduction to the Writer and the Structure of the Play
  • Unit 27: The Ecstasy of Rita Joe: Theme and Characterization
  • Unit 28: Dramatic Technique in The Ecstasy of Rita Joe and the Brechtian Angle

Block 8: Development of Canadian Criticism

  • Unit 29: The recent developments of Canadian Criticism
  • Unit 30: Northrop Frye
  • Unit 31: Linda Hutcheon
  • Unit 32: Smaro Kamboureli

MEG-13: Writings from the Margins

Block 1: Theory, Culture and History of Dalits

  • Unit 1 Historical Background
  • Unit 2 Dalit Canon
  • Unit 3 Dalit Discourse
  • Unit 4 Dalit Identity and Culture
  • Unit 5 Dalit Viewpoints and Voices – I
  • Unit 6 Dalit Viewpoints and Voices – II

Block 2: Fiction and Autobiographical Writings

  • Unit 1 Balbir Madhopuri: Changia Rukh: Against the Night – I
  • Unit 2 Balbir Madhopuri: Changia Rukh: Against the Night – II
  • Unit 3 Bama: Sangati – I
  • Unit 4 Bama: Sangati – II

Block 3: Poetry

  • Unit 1 Sunny Kavikkad: Two Poems “Naked Truths”, “With Love”
  • Unit 2 Kalekuri Prasad: “For a Fistful of Self Respect” Adigopula Venkataratnam: “Jasmine Creeper under a Banayan Tree”
  • Unit 3 Basudev Sunani: “Coaching Centre”
  • Unit 4 Hira Bansode: “Yashodhara” L.S. Rokade: “To Be or Not to be Born”

Block 4: Drama and Short Fiction

  • Unit 1 Contexualising Dalit Writing
  • Unit 2 Datta Bhagat: Routes and Escape Routes
  • Unit 3 Short Stories: “The Poisoned Bread” and “The Storeyed House”
  • Unit 4 Short Stories: “The Flame” and “Fear”

Block 5: Theory, Culture and This History of Tribals

  • Unit 1 Historical Background
  • Unit 2 Tribal World View
  • Unit 3 Tribal Discourse
  • Unit 4 Nature and Celebration in Tribal Life
  • Unit 5 Tribal Thought: Some Voices-I
  • Unit 6 Tribal Thought: Some Voices-II

Block 6: Oral Narratives

  • Unit 1 Santal Folk Tales
  • Unit 2 Legend of the Lepchas (Folk Tales)
  • Unit 3 Folk Tales of Mizoram and Meghalaya
  • Unit 4 Folk Songs of the Oraons

Block 7: Fiction and Autobiography

  • Unit 1 Mother Forest: The Unfinished Story of C..K. Janu
  • Unit 2 Kocharethi: The Araya Woman – Background to the Text and Context
  • Unit 3 Kocharethi: The Araya Woman – A Study of the Novel

Block 8: Poetry, Drama and Short Fiction

  • Unit 1 Marchal Hembrom: “I Must Pick Up the Bow” Nirmala Putul: “If You Were In My Place”
  • Unit 2 Poem: “Song of Netarhaat: Victory Trumpet is Sounding”
  • Unit 3 Contextualising Tribal Literature
  • Unit 4 Budhan: An Analysis
  • Unit 5 Writers of Short Fiction: Temsula AO and Lummer Dai

MEG-14: Contemporary Indian Literature in English Translation

Block 1: Background Studies

  • Unit 1: The Concept of Indian Literature
  • Unit 2: The Concept of Indian Literature: Modern Period
  • Unit 3: Comparative Studies in Indian Literature
  • Unit 4: English Translation of Indian Literature

Block 2: Samskara: U R Anantha Murthy

  • Unit 1: The Writer and his Literary Context
  • Unit 2: Samskara: The Narrative
  • Unit 3: Samskara: Form and Themes
  • Unit 4: Samskara: Characters, Titles, Literary Criticism and Contemporary Relevance

Block 3: Tamas: Bhisham Sahni

  • Unit 1: The Writer and the Partition
  • Unit 2: Getting to Know the Text
  • Unit 3: Making Sense of the Narrative
  • Unit 4: Characters and Characterisation
  • Unit 5: An Overview

Block 4: Short Story – I

  • Unit 1: Mahasweta Devi: Salt [Noon: Bangla]
  • Unit 2: Vaikom Muhammad Basheer: Birthday [Janmadinam: Malayalam]
  • Unit 3: Nirmal Verma: Birds [Parinde]
  • Unit 4: Ismat Chughtai: Tiny’s Granny [Nanhi Ki Naani: Urdu]
  • Unit 5: Gopinath Mohanty: Tadpa [Tadpa: Oriya]

Block 5: Short Story – II

  • Unit 1: The Empty Chest
  • Unit 2: Very Lonely, She
  • Unit 3: Headmaster, Prawn, Chanchur
  • Unit 4: The Compromise

Block 6: Poetry

  • Unit 1: K S Nonkynrih: Requiem (Khasi); Chandra Kanta Murasingh: The Stone Speaks in the Forest
    (Kokborok); Yumlembam Ibocha Singh: The Last Dream
  • Unit 2 : Haribhajan singh: Tree and the Sage [Rukh Te Rishi/ Punjabi]; Raghuvir Sahay: The Stare [Taktaki/ Hindi]
  • Unit 3 : Dina Nath Nadim: The Moon [Zoon/ Kashmiri]; Padma Sachdev: The Moment  of  Courage [Dogri]
  • Unit 4 : Kondepudo Nirmala: Mother Serious [Telugu]; Vimala: Kitchen [Telugu]; K Ayyappa Paniker: I Met Walt Whitman Yesterday: An Interview [Njaan Innale Walt Whitmaane Kandu – Oru Interview/ Malayalam]
  • Unit 5 : Ramakanta Rath: Sri Radha [Oriya]; Shakti Chattopadhyay: Just One Try [Akbar Tumi/ Bangla]
  • Unit 6 : Sitanshu Yashashchandra: Orpheus [Gujarati]; Namdeo Dhasal: A Notebook of Poems and
    Autobiography [Kavetechi Vahi; Atmacharithra/ Marathi]

Block 7: TUGHLAQ: Girish Karnad

  • Unit 1: Introducing Contemporary Indian Theatre
  • Unit 2: Introducing the Author and the Play
  • Unit 3: Tughlaq: Structure, Themes and Motifs
  • Unit 4: Characters and Critical Comments on the Play

Block 8: Non- Fictional Prose

  • Unit 1: Amrita rai: Premchand: His Life and Times [Kalam Ka Sipahi: Biography/ Hindi]
  • Unit 2: Bama /Faustina Mary Fatima Rani: Karukku [Karukku: Autobiography/ Tamil]
  • Unit 3: Saadat Hasan Manto: On Ismat [Ismat Chugtai: Pen Sketch, Urdu]
  • Unit 4: Umaprasad Mukhopadhyaya: Manimahesh [Manimahesh: Travel Writing/ Bengali

MEG-15 Comparative Literature: Theory and Practice

  • Block-1 Introduction
  • Block-2 Comparative Indian Literature-1
  • Block-3 Comparative Indian Literature-2
  • Block-4 Comparative World Literature-1
  • Block-5 Comparative World Literature-2
  • Block-6 Literature and Culture: Exchanges and Negotiations-1
  • Block-7 Literature and Culture: Exchanges and Negotiations-2

MEG-16 Indian Folk Literature

  • Block-1 Folk Literature and Language : Research and Pedagogy
  • Block-2 Identity and Hybridity : Kshetra and Desha
  • Block-3 Folk Literature : Sources, Characteristics, Classifications and Functions
  • Block-4 Folktales of India : Motifs, Modes and Mores
  • Block-5 Folk Poetry
  • Block-6 Folk in Contemporary Indian Fiction
  • Block-7 Folk Theatre

MEG-17 American Drama

  • Block-1 American Drama: An Introduction
  • Block-2 Musicals and Farce
  • Block-3 Naturalism/Realism
  • Block-4 The Twentieth Century Poetic Drama
  • Block-5 Absurd Drama
  • Block-6 Expressionism
  • Block-7 Avant-gardism

MEG-18 American Poetry

  • Block-1 An Introduction to American Poetry: Themes and Issues
  • Block-2 Eighteen and the Nineteenth Century-I
  • Block-3 Eighteen and the Nineteenth Century-II
  • Block-4 Early Twentieth Century
  • Block-5 Mid Twentieth Century
  • Block-6 Late Twentieth Century
  • Block-7 Contemporary Poetry

MEG-19 The Australian Novel

  • Block-1 The Australian Novel: the Beginnings
  • Block-2 From Colony to Federation
  • Block-3 New Directions
  • Block-4 War Novels
  • Block-5 Fiction by Indigenous Writers
  • Block-6 Multicultural Writing
  • Block-7 Contemporary Novel (1)
  • Block-8 Contemporary Novel (2)

IGNOU MA English Syllabus 2023 pdf

On the demand of many MA English students, we have created IGNOU MA English syllabus 2023 pdf  and upload it on our website.

Students can download the complete syllabus of IGNOU MA English first and second year courses on a single click.

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