Literature Home | Program | Faculty | Courses | Declaring your English major
Here are some of the faculty members who teach courses for the honours English literature degree. Click on the faculty member's name to view his or her full profile. English Language and Literature degrees at the University of Waterloo integrate the study of literature, rhetoric, professional communication, and media studies, so all faculty in the department participate to some degree in the literature program.
For information on all of our faculty members, see our Faculty profiles page.
For a list of our faculty members' research interests, see our Areas of Expertise page.
Lamees Al Ethari
Fraser Easton
Fraser Easton's areas of speciality are 18th- and 19th-century literature, especially Defoe, Smart, Edgeworth, and Austen. He also has particular interests in gender, sexuality, and class, as well as in political economy and popular culture. He is currently undertaking research projects concerning the religious poetry of Christopher Smart, the economic ideas of Jane Austen, and the coverage in popular media of women who lived disguised as men. He has also worked recently on Thomas Sheridan and the eighteenth-century rhetorical movement known as the "Elocutionists." He teaches courses in eighteenth-century and Romantic literature and literary theory.
Ken Graham
Shelley Hulan
Shelley Hulan's area of specialization is nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Canadian writing. Her research interests include the literary and philosophical representations of nostalgia in Canada’s Confederation and transitional periods (1867-1914, 1880-1920), the same periods’ literary discourses of emotions and memory, and the tropes that were key to naturalizing colonial dominance in late nineteenth-century Canada. She teaches undergraduate courses on various issues in Canadian writing, on early, modern, and regional Canadian literatures, and on the representation of the emotions, health, and wealth in Canadian poetry and novels.
Victoria Lamont
John Savarese
Winfried Siemerling
Winfried Siemerling's areas of specialty are Canadian/Québécois comparative literature, cultural difference, postcoloniality, race, and the issue of recognition in North American and Hemispheric Studies. His current work explores African Canadian writing and improvisation studies. He teaches courses in Canadian literature, postcolonial literature, and literary theory.
Heather Smyth
Heather Smyth's areas include postcolonial and transnational studies (with a particular focus on Caribbean literature), gender and sexuality, nationalism, multiculturalism, and racialization. Her current work explores connections between literary collaboration, multiauthored texts, and critical race coalitions in Canadian literature. She teaches undergraduate courses in women's literature, criticism and theory, and postcolonial literature.
Sarah Tolmie
Sarah Tolmie is a medievalist whose research interests are in historiography, visionary poetry, and embodiment. She has published articles on Middle English and Scots literature, as well as on Langland’s Piers Plowman. She is also a novelist and poet and has conducted research on dance as a mode of interactive data visualization. She teaches medieval and early modern literature, general British literature, and creative writing.
Paul Ugor
Paul Ugor's research interests in general are concerned with new social processes in global politics, economy, information and communication technologies, cultural/textual representations, and everyday life, and the new social responses which these activities elicit from the public domain, especially from marginalized groups like racial minorities in the global north, youth, women, and disenfranchised subjects in postcolonial settings. Other research interests include Modern African Literature, African Cinema/Nollywood, Black Popular Culture, Cultural Theory, African Youth Studies, and Postcolonial Anglophone World Literatures.