Hi all,
In principle, my question is fairly simple, but it requires a bunch of explanation. Hopefully your eyes don't glaze over.
I did my undergrad at a top Ivy League U (rhymes with 'harbored'), in musicology. Over the last couple of years I've realized, however, that I want to do work at the intersection of lit and music (with a generous helping of theory), rather than straight musicology (can't stand the politics and arguments endemic to the discipline, as well as the prospect of having to teach music history when I come out of a doctoral program). By the time I realized this as an undergraduate, however, it was too late to change majors/double major. I did, however, take a bunch of high level electives in various literary fields as an undergrad, to the extent that I often took more courses than I was required to (or should have, reasonably speaking). Generally, I enjoyed these courses far more than the music courses I was doing. I did well, if not often better in them than the music courses I was taking. I'm currently doing a one year strictly research masters course in the UK with a great advisor in word and music studies (as some people call it). I've also done a masters degree in music composition at a music conservatoire, but this is not something I want to do as a career and sort of sticks out as a sore thumb on my CV, at least academia careers-wise. I have what I think are quite good references from top, top people in their fields (music, Af-Am studies, Comp Lit, etc.). I won the top essay prize at my undergrad U, and I have a couple of book chapters that are currently in preparation for publication. I'm good at writing statements of purpose and these sorts of things. In other words (and without sounding obnoxious...), I am motivated and fairly accomplished for someone my age.
Here's the rub: I want to apply to an English doctoral program. Given that my credentials are skewed somewhat more in the direction of music (though it is not that I have zero literary experience, by any means), I worry if I could get into a top program, even some of the more interdisciplinary ones or ones with faculty members who have an interest in word and music. Certainly I don't have the experience that the average Harvard-Yale-Princeton 1st year English student has of the canon (Beowulf, Chaucer, etc.). To an admissions committee, my strengths would lie elsewhere, but even given my credentials, I'm worried that's not enough. If I don't get into a top program in English, I wonder if it would be a more pragmatic decision to do musicology and try to pursue interdisciplinary alternatives from there. However, it's something I'm quite loath to do. SO: given that I've already done two masters degrees and really don't think it makes sense to do another (for financial, among other reasons), I wanted to know whether anyone else has any other suggestions for ways to shore up my literary credentials CV-wise. Obviously my writing sample would be geared towards this end, and on some level I will have to explain in my SoP the reasons for my semi-disciplinary about-face. But as it stands I'm a bit worried. Maybe I'm just being neurotic, in which case you can tell me this too! Thanks in advance for whatever help you can give.