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Here they are again, Dalhousie and Queen's! They're different mainly because I want something to distinguish between them and also because they've got slightly different aims and formats.



Graduate Coordinator
Department of English
Dalhousie University
6135 University Avenue
Room 1186
Halifax, NS

To whom it may concern:

I'm Randy McDonald, a student at the University of Prince Edward Island who is currently preparing for my master's degree in English literature. For a variety of reasons, including Dalhousie University's excellent reputation as an institution, I would be interested in pursuing my career as a graduate student at Dalhousie beginning in the 2003-2004 academic year.

Over the course of my academic career, I have developed a strong interest in examining the interactions between sociological realities and Canadian literatures, of the impact of cultural, geographical, and economic realities upon individual literary works and broader literary canons. I believe very strongly that it is important to introduce insights from other disciplines--particularly history and the social sciences--to the study of literature in order to gain a better understanding of these works’ external contexts and their internal workings. This understanding can in many cases surpass that provided by a simple reading of the text without reference to the environment in which it was composed.

So far, I have found that this approach has produced numerous interesting results. I have applied this theory to my Honours English essay, which is a comparative study of representative works from different Canadian regional literatures, seen through the perspectives of Immanuel Wallerstein's world-systems theory (which posits a three-fold division of the world economy between a rich core, a poor periphery, and an intermediate semi-periphery) and Alexander Gershenkron's theory of economic development (which argues that societies somewhat less developed than the most advanced societies are innately well-positioned to quickly surpass their prototypes). My thesis in my Honours essay is that those Canadian regional literatures based in economically marginal societies and regions are often characterized by attempts to try to establish their autonomous existence from the Canadian centre. For instance, in Ringuet's Thirty Acres Euchariste Moisan tries to make a living as a farmer in a still conservative and Roman Catholic rural French Canada. I have found that in the three novels examined in my essay, however, this effort fails; the most positive result from the marginal perspective is in Surfacing, where the surfacer leaves the northern forest with a few particular insights to share with the rest of Canada.

As a graduate student, I would be interested in applying the insights gleaned from writing and researching my Honours English essay to other works of Canadian literature, particularly texts of novel and novella length. Frederick Philip Grove’s Settlers of the Marsh, Joy Kogawa’s Obasan, Antonine Maillet’s Pélagie, and Alistair MacLeod’s No Great Mischief come to mind as texts which which I think would be fascinating to study using this approach.


Sincerely,

Randy McDonald



Graduate Coordinator
Department of English
Dalhousie University
6135 University Avenue
Room 1186
Halifax, NS

To whom it may concern:

I feel it is important to address several elements of my undergraduate academic career:

* I graduated in May of 2002 from the University of Prince Edward Island with a Bachelor of Arts, with majors in English and Anthropology. However, I returned to UPEI in the 2002-2003 academic year to complete my Honours English essay, so upgrading my English major to an Honours English major, and to acquire a History minor.
* In light of my excellent understanding of the French language, acquired by my participation in the late French Immersion program on Prince Edward Island from Grades 7 through 12, I chose to opt not to take the four foreign-language courses required until recently for an Honours English major. Instead, I opted for a combined written and oral exam administered by the Department of Modern Languages. I passed this exam; confirmation can be acquired from Dr. Shannon Murray.
* Although I’ve always placed a high priority on achieving excellence in my various undergraduate courses, I have not limited my curiosity to the subjects indicated by my academic transcript. In keeping with my emphasis on interdisciplinary knowledge, I consider myself (and am considered by others) to have an excellent understanding of a wide variety of subjects unrelated to my majors, including economics, political science, and religious studies.

I hope that this may clear up any questions remaining about my undergraduate academic career.




Sincerely,

Randy McDonald





Dr. Marta Straznicky,
Graduate Chair
Department of English,
Queen’s University
Kingston, ON, Canada
K7L 3N6

Dr. Straznicky:

My name is Randy McDonald, and I am currently a student at the University of Prince Edward Island. I am interested in pursuing a master's degree in English literature, and for a variety of reasons (including the excellent reputation of Queens), I would like to be considered for graduate studies at Queen’s University for the 2003-2004 academic year.

Over the course of my academic career, I have developed a wide variety of interests. I graduated in May of 2002 from the University of Prince Edward Island with a Bachelor of Arts, with majors in English and Anthropology. I returned to UPEI in the 2002-2003 academic year to complete my Honours English essay, to upgrade my English major to an Honours English major, and to acquire a History minor. Further, my innate curiosity has inspired me to acquire an excellent understanding of a wide variety of subjects unrelated to my majors, including economics, political science, and religious studies.

This broad spectrum of knowledge has inculcated in me a strong belief that literature has a wider context which must be explored, for literary works are written by authors who (whether consciously or unconsciously) often explore a wide variety of contemporary themes in their work. If one comes to understand this broader context, one’s understanding of the literatary work (or works) in question can advance accordingly. I have chosen to concentrate on examining the numerous interactions between Canadian and world sociological realities on the one hand and Canadian literatures on the other, in an effort to demonstrate and explain the impact that cultural, geographical, and economic realities bring to bear upon individual literary works and broader literary canons.

So far, I have found that this approach has produced numerous interesting results. I have applied this theory to my Honours English essay, which is a comparative study of representative works from different Canadian regional literatures, seen through the perspectives of Immanuel Wallerstein's world-systems theory (which posits a three-fold division of the world economy between a rich core, a poor periphery, and an intermediate semi-periphery) and Alexander Gershenkron's theory of economic development (which argues that societies somewhat less developed than the most advanced societies are innately well-positioned to quickly surpass their prototypes). My thesis in my Honours essay is that those Canadian regional literatures based in economically marginal societies and regions are often characterized by attempts to try to establish their autonomous existence from the Canadian centre. For instance, in Ringuet's Thirty Acres Euchariste Moisan tries to make a living as a farmer in a still conservative and Roman Catholic rural French Canada. I have found that in the three novels examined in my essay, however, this effort fails; the most positive result from the marginal perspective is in Surfacing, where the surfacer leaves the northern forest with a few particular insights to share with the rest of Canada.

As a graduate student, I would be interested in applying the insights gleaned from writing and researching my Honours English essay to other works of Canadian literature, particularly texts of novel and novella length. Frederick Philip Grove’s Settlers of the Marsh, Joy Kogawa’s Obasan, Antonine Maillet’s Pélagie, and Alistair MacLeod’s No Great Mischief come to mind as texts which which I think would be fascinating to study using this approach.


Sincerely,

Randy McDonald

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