Pathway to the PhD
See the most recent Bulletin listing for French PhD information.
Doctoral students pursuing French and Francophone studies at Washington University in St. Louis may choose to focus on a certain historical period, geographical region, and interdisciplinary approach. We encourage you to complete related coursework outside the department and to consider earning one of our graduate certificates in Early-Modern Studies, Film and Media Studies, Language Instruction, Translation Studies, or Women, Gender, and Sexuality Studies. The following outlines show typical paths toward the degree. You can also find the specifics of registration below. We understand that you may have legitimate reasons for modifying these paths. As progress toward the degree is an essential factor in our decisions to recommend students for Mentored Teaching Experiences, Mentored Professional Experiences, and fellowships, students should carefully review their progress with the DGS during the registration period each semester.
First Year
- Fall: University Fellowship; enroll for 12 credits.
- Spring: University Fellowship; enroll for 12 credits (total credits: 24).
- Summer: Prepare MA exam reading list, for October of your second year.
- If you are not a native speaker of French, you may take French 411, Advanced Writing. In addition, you will enroll in 500-level seminars each semester, for a total of four courses per semester while on fellowship.
Second Year
- Fall: ME (Mentored Experience); enroll for 9 credits. Take your M.A. exam in October.
- Spring: ME; enroll for 9 credits (total credits: 42).
- Summer: Satisfy a foreign language requirement.
Third Year
- Fall: ME; enroll for 9 credits. (Total credits: 51). You have finished your coursework.
- Spring: ME; register for GSAS 9000. Individual Examination List due week after spring break. Prepare for your PhD exams.
- Summer: Satisfy a second foreign language requirement and prepare for your PhD exams
NB: Graduate certificates consist of 15 credits, 9 in addition to doctoral coursework, for a total of 69 credits. The Joint French-CL PhD requires an additional 12 credits of coursework in CL in addition to doctoral coursework for a total of 72 credits. Neither extends overall time to degree.
Fourth Year
- Fall: ME; register for GSAS 9000. Take your Ph.D. exams and write your dissertation prospectus.
- Spring: ME; defend your dissertation prospectus, file your “Title, Scope, and Procedure” form with the Office of Graduate Studies. Dissertation research and writing.
- Summer: dissertation research and writing, in residence or abroad.
Fifth Year
- Fall: ME; register for GSAS 9000. Dissertation work. Complete at least one dissertation chapter by 1 November in order to qualify for Dissertation Fellowship in the following semester.
- Spring: ME or Dissertation Fellowship; dissertation research in residence or abroad. Register for GSAS 9000.
- Summer: dissertation research and writing, in residence or abroad.
- Students making suitable progress toward the degree may receive the first semester of their Dissertation Fellowship, enabling them to spend the period from December to August of their fifth year in France or another Francophone country, conducting their research. They will also write at least one additional thesis chapter in order to remain in good standing and receive the second semester of fellowship support.
Sixth Year
- Fall: Dissertation Fellowship. Register for GSAS 9000. At the end of the semester, with approval of the DGS, use this form to declare your application to graduate.
- Spring: ME or Dissertation Fellowship. Complete and defend dissertation. Receive your diploma in May.
The number of credits transferred from MA degrees earned outside of Washington University may not exceed 30% of overall coursework. We transfer your credits at the end of your first year of courses here, following an evaluation by the faculty (the Department Chair and Director of Graduate Studies) of your performance here.
The following plan is based on the transfer of 18 credits from your MA coursework.
First Year
- Fall: University Fellowship; enroll for 12 credits.
- Spring: University Fellowship; enroll for 12 credits (total credits: 24).
- Receive an additional 18 credits for your previous coursework (total credits: 42).
- You will enroll in 500-level seminars each semester, for a total of four courses per semester while on fellowship.
Second Year
- Fall: ME (Mentored Expirence); enroll for 9 credits.
- Spring: ME; enroll for 9 credits. (Total credits: 60. You have finished course work.) Individual Examination List due week after spring break.
- Summer: Summer: Satisfy foreign language requirement, possible Research Assistantship. Prepare for your Ph.D. exams.
NB: Graduate certificates consist of 15 credits, 9 in addition to doctoral coursework, for a total of 69 credits. The Joint French-CL PhD requires an additional 12 credits of coursework in CL in addition to doctoral coursework for a total of 72 credits. Neither extends overall time to degree.
Third Year
- Fall: ME; register for GSAS 9000. Take your Ph.D. exams and write your dissertation prospectus.
- Spring: ME; register for GSAS 9000. Defend your dissertation prospectus, file your “Title, Scope, and Procedure” form with the Office of Graduate Studies, and dissertation research and writing.
- Summer: Research in residence or abroad in advance of an outside grant proposal, possibly with the help of a WU pre-dissertation grant; work on second foreign language requirement.
Fourth Year
- Fall: ME; register for GSAS 9000. Complete at least one chapter of your thesis by 1 November, in order to qualify for the Dissertation fellowship next semester.
- Spring: Dissertation Fellowship; dissertation research in residence or abroad. Register for GSAS 9000.
- Summer: dissertation research and writing, in residence or abroad.
- Students making suitable progress toward the degree may receive the first semester of their Dissertation Fellowship, enabling them to spend the period from December to August of their fifth year in France or another Francophone country, conducting their research. They will also write at least one additional thesis chapter in order to remain in good standing and receive the second semester of fellowship support.
Fifth Year
- Fall: Dissertation Fellowship; Register for GSAS 9000. At the end of the semester, with approval of the DGS, use this form to declare your application to graduate.
- Spring: ME or Dissertation Fellowship; complete and defend your dissertation. Receive your diploma in May.
The French graduate program offers a series of Mentored Experiences in the form of Mentored Independent Teaching, Assistant in Instruction, and Mentored Professional Experiences. These opportunities, provided by the graduate and certificate programs, enable students to develop their professional skills by teaching or shadowing a class, designing syllabi and course materials, receiving feedback from observations, and training for other, related roles within or beyond the university. We provide pedagogical training to prepare and accompany these experiences. You will find our Mentored Experience Implementation Plan here.
Pre-Dissertation PhD Requirements
- PhD students entering without an MA generally are eligible for 6 years of financial support, whereas students entering with an MA from another university are generally eligible for 5 years of financial support.
- During the first year of their program, students normally take four courses each semester. Thereafter, students generally take three courses each semester and complete a Mentored Experience (ME) each term prior to their PhD exams.
- For students entering the program without an MA, 17 courses (graduate seminars), generally taken over five semesters.
- For students entering with an MA, 20 courses (graduate seminars), including a maximum of 6 transferred, for a total of 14 at WashU, generally taken over four semesters.
A comprehensive knowledge of French literature (including theory) and language, shown by superior performance in course work, the writing of papers, and the successful completion of the written and oral examinations.
Students who do not already hold an MA degree will receive one from Washington University en route to the PhD, upon successful completion of 33 course credits and the MA exam in their third semester. In preparation for the exam, students should select three of the eras on the MA reading list
Students take the Ph.D. exam in the fall semester of their third year if they entered with an MA, and in the spring semester of their third year if they entered with a BA. The PhD exam will test students’ knowledge of a teachable range of French and Francophone literature of a certain historical and geographical scope while giving them experience in two typical scholarly processes: course creation, and the preparation of a project for publication.
First, students will create syllabi for a two-semester survey introduction to French and Francophone literature and culture. These courses will cover the medieval to the contemporary periods, and the genres of prose, poetry, and theater. Students will provide written justifications for their choices of works and additional annotations about what secondary works they read to inform what they would do in the classroom. The document will not include specific lesson plans for the works involved. The full French graduate faculty will vote to pass or fail this written document, with two votes of “fail” requiring its revision.
Second, students will submit two “qualifying papers”: potentially publishable articles of 25 to 30 pages, revised from seminar papers in two different periods. The revisions would expand the original topic or the student’s earlier research in light of faculty feedback and provide a full scholarly apparatus. We encourage but do not require that students attempt to publish these in refereed journals. Faculty in the two areas evaluate these papers.
The oral exam of two hours, conducted by the full French graduate faculty, treats the survey syllabi and qualifying papers. Students will be prepared to discuss their written work and to justify their choice of works for the syllabi among those on the MA and PhD reading lists.
In preparation for the exam, students should familiarize themselves with the works on the MA and PhD reading lists, privileging those they have drawn upon for their research and syllabi.
In preparation for the exam, students should become familiar with the topics on the PhD reading list.
Option A, two secondary languages
Reading knowledge of any two foreign languages other than French or English that pertain to the student’s proposed area of dissertation research. To demonstrate competence, the student may
- take the EST examination administered through the Graduate School office, obtaining a score of 650 or better;
- take an examination prepared by a Washington University language departments with the approval of the Director of Graduate Studies in French (customarily, the student selects a text relevant to his or her field and translates with a dictionary an 800-word passage from this text); or
- complete with grades of B+ or better the two-semester course sequence on reading/translation offered to graduate students by Washington University
Option B, one secondary language
Advanced literary competence in a language other than French or English, demonstrated by taking two 500-level literature courses in that language (these courses will count toward the 72 units required for the PhD).
The Dissertation
During the semester prior to the semester in which students take the Ph.D. exam, the Director of Graduate Studies will ask students for their Individual Examination List which will consist of the following:
- selecting a Dissertation topic;
- forming a dissertation committee composed of a director and two readers, after consultation with the Director of Graduate Studies, and by March 20, if taking the exam in the fall, or October 20, if taking the exam in the spring;
- working with the director and readers to construct a bibliography of 10-15 works, including both primary and secondary materials, that relate to the Dissertation proposal.
The Office of Graduate Studies requires students to file several forms before beginning a dissertation, and when nearing completion. See their list of forms, and consult your advisor and the GS for deadlines.
The topic, to be worked out with dissertation director and committee members, requires the approval of the graduate faculty at the time of the oral portion of the PhD exam. The exam incorporates a discussion of the dissertation proposal and an analysis of relevant bibliographic material. The subject should be compelling. Minor authors on whose works little bibliography exists do not generally hold the same weight professionally as works on major authors. The French faculty therefore encourage students to select topics involving multiple works of an established author or authors, or, in the case of minor or less known authors and works, a topic of sufficient breadth to rely on a significant body of primary and secondary sources (for example, in the case of a newly discovered woman author, the body of works relating to the long tradition of women’s writing of which this author’s works form part).
Translations and creative writing do not fall within the purview of the dissertation.
Dissertation topics typically focus on one or more of several distinct literary periods (medieval, Renaissance, 17th, 18th, 19th, and 20th/21st centuries) and geographical regions (France, Francophone Europe, Africa, North America, or the Caribbean). Students need to adopt a theoretical framework, whether that of literary history, cultural studies, medical humanities, gender studies, critical race theory, translation studies, film and media studies, performance studies, etc. Dissertations may have an interdisciplinary focus (literature and art, philosophy, science, law, politics, or other fields). A dissertation is above all an argument, proposing among other things an interpretation of a body of literary-cultural works. The student attempts to persuade his or her readers (the committee, but eventually readers of the resulting publications) that they will understand something important by interpreting texts and events in the events in the way he or she explains them.
This committee, which the Office of Graduate Studies calls the “Research Advisory Committee,” consists of three members: the director, the second reader, and the third reader. The director should be a specialist in the student’s chosen field (typically a particular century or geographical region, but on occasion a theoretical or disciplinary perspective). The second and third readers may be specialists in the same field or in fields that contribute to the dissertation in other ways. A student may also select a second or third reader from another field because he or she has been an important mentor. Students should consult with the professor asked to serve as director about selecting other committee members who can provide the proper balance to the committee. The selection, however, ultimately rests with the student, who is responsible for asking faculty to serve as second and third readers. The second reader will read chapters before the third reader and should be selected with this order in mind. Co-directors and interdisciplinary committees may, at times, be possible and advisable.
Upon successful completion of their PhD exams, students will write their dissertation prospectuses for oral examination no later than the beginning of the semester following the one in which they have passed the PhD exams. For example, if they pass the PhD exams in November, they would defend their dissertation prospectus no later than the following January or early February. The candidate's thesis advisory committee will be the examiners; the candidate will submit the prospectus to them at least two weeks before the defense.
- Language: Students should write in their native language when it is either English or French; students whose native language is other than English or French should select to write in whichever of the two languages she or he is more proficient.
- Style: Department recommends MLA Style for all theses written in English. Those written in French may use either this style or any accepted French style.
- Schedule of production: Students should work closely with their dissertation directors to establish not only an outline for dissertation but also a realistic calendar for completion.
- Procedure for revisions and approvals: Dissertation writers should submit their chapters one at a time to the dissertation director, or in some previously agreed-upon division into sections. The director will suggest revisions. When the director approves these revisions, the student should submit the text in question to the second reader. The second reader will evaluate it, making recommendations for revisions. When these revisions are complete, the second reader will review them. When the second reader gives provisional approval for the chapter,* the student will submit it to the third reader. The third reader will similarly read and make editorial revisions. When the chapter is approved by the third reader, the student should return it to the director for final comments.
* In many cases readers will need to see how future chapters develop before being able to give final approval on early chapters. Provisional approval, though, signals the professor’s general acceptance of the chapter.
Additional Department Policies
Incomplete work for courses can prove a major hindrance to the advancement of graduate students, as well as a considerable burden to faculty. The French PhD program takes measures to minimize their use and duration.
Students should consider that in all phases of their careers, deadlines will tend to group in short periods of time (typically at the end of each semester), and that they must therefore plan to start work on end-of-semester assignments well in advance. Having three papers due in a single week justifies neither an extension nor a grade of “incomplete.”
Instructors have no obligation to accept late work for graded credit. No student may presume a right to receive a grade of incomplete if he or she does not finish the work for a course by the deadline set by the instructor: such students may, at the discretion of the instructor, receive no credit for the work not submitted on time.
An instructor should not agree to give a grade of incomplete without having received a statement from the student of a deadline, agreeable to the instructor, by which the work will be done. The student will communicate the deadline to the Director of Graduate Studies and to his or her advisor, if different. This deadline may be no later than the end of the following semester, for work for a fall course, or the end of the summer, before the start of the fall semester, for a spring course. Instructors who do not receive the work by the agreed-upon deadline may extend the deadline up to the limits specified here, but are not obliged to do so. Having accepted a plan for completing the missing assignments, the instructor will submit a final grade for the class within 30 days of receiving the missing work. In grading this work, instructors should keep in mind whatever extra time the student had to prepare it, from which other students did not benefit. Students who do not meet these deadlines will receive course grades based on whatever work they submitted on time; in a graduate course where a student has not submitted the final paper, this will likely result in a failing grade.
Students may have no more than two incompletes at any given time. The program may recommend for dismissal any student with three or more. Moreover, students may not have more than three incompletes over the entire period of their programs, and the department may recommend for dismissal any student who exceeds three.
Students with incomplete coursework will not take their PhD exams until they have received final grades for it. In no case may a student with an outstanding incomplete advance to “ABD” status.
All students in the French PhD. program must satisfy the academic performance requirements of the Office of Graduate Studies in Arts and Sciences, published in the school Bulletin’s “General Requirements” section.
Procedures followed in the French PhD program will also comply with the Office of Graduate Studies in Arts & Sciences Policy on Probation and Dismissal for Academic Reasons.
The French faculty follow a formal procedure for confidential and continuous evaluation of graduate students in the form of annual reviews and progress reports. In cases where the DGS finds serious concerns about a student’s ability to complete the program, the DGS consults with faculty about a plan for the student’s improvement, and then writes a letter to the student to convey the nature of the concerns, and to outline the steps that faculty expect him or her to take to remedy the problem in a probationary period, generally the following semester. At the end of that time, in cases of insufficient improvement, the DGS, in consultation with the faculty, may recommend a student for dismissal for poor academic performance. While faculty admit all graduate students expecting that they will complete the PhD, the French program uses the MA exam in the second semester of students’ second year as a moment of evaluation for continuation in the program. Students who fail the exam may take it again once, at the end of that semester. Students retaking the exam will be placed on academic probation in the interim. In all cases, faculty consult after the MA exam about whether to allow the student to continue. Students not allowed to continue, but who have met the minimum standard for passing the MA exam, leave with that degree.
Students who enter with an MA usually take their PhD exam in the first semester of their third year, and students who enter without an MA usually take their PhD exam in the first semester of their fourth year. Students who fail the PhD exam may take it again once, usually at the end of the semester in question, and will be placed on academic probation in the interim. Failure to pass the PhD exam a second time results in a recommendation for dismissal from the program.
The French program places a high value on the quality of students’ teaching, and evaluates this regularly. Students generally receive written teaching evaluations in each semester they teach by at least one faculty member. The program communicates these evaluations to the students, the course coordinator of the class taught, and the Directors of Graduate and Undergraduate Studies. The Directors conveys serious concerns to the student involved and suggests steps that faculty expect him or her to take to remedy the problem in a specified time. The program may recommend a student for dismissal for poor performance in teaching.
The program strives to maintain a professional and collegial atmosphere. Students who do not behave in ways consistent with this goal may receive verbal and written warnings, and the DGS and faculty may recommend dismissal of students who do not change their behavior. The DGS will refer to the Dean of the Office of Graduate Studies patterns of disruptive behavior, as well as offenses against the provisions of the Office of Graduate Studies Bulletin or other University policies and rules of conduct. Serious offenses may result in immediate dismissal.