Poetry:
* John Keats:
* "Ode on a Grecian Urn"
* "Ode to a Nightingale"
* William Blake:
* "The Tyger"
* "The Lamb"
* Alfred, Lord Tennyson:
* "The Lady of Shalott"
* "Ulysses"
* Robert Browning:
* "My Last Duchess"
* "The Pied Piper of Hamelin"
Drama:
* William Shakespeare:
* "Hamlet"
* "King Lear"
* "Macbeth"
* Oscar Wilde:
* "The Importance of Being Earnest"
* "A Woman of No Importance"
* Henrik Ibsen:
* "A Doll's House"
* "Ghosts"
* Anton Chekhov:
* "The Cherry Orchard"
* "The Three Sisters"
Fiction:
* Jane Austen:
* "Pride and Prejudice"
* "Sense and Sensibility"
* Charles Dickens:
* "David Copperfield"
* "Great Expectations"
* George Eliot:
* "Middlemarch"
* "The Mill on the Floss"
* Thomas Hardy:
* "Far from the Madding Crowd"
* "Tess of the d'Urbervilles"
Literary Criticism:
* Samuel Johnson:
* "Preface to Shakespeare"
* "The Lives of the Poets"
* William Hazlitt:
* "Characters of Shakespeare's Plays"
* "Lectures on the English Poets"
* Matthew Arnold:
* "Culture and Anarchy"
* "The Study of Poetry"
* T.S. Eliot:
* "The Sacred Wood"
* "The Waste Land"
Postcolonial Literature:
* Chinua Achebe:
* "Things Fall Apart"
* "No Longer at Ease"
* Naguib Mahfouz:
* "The Cairo Trilogy"
* "Children of Gebelawi"
* Salman Rushdie:
* "Midnight's Children"
* "The Satanic Verses"
* Arundhati Roy:
* "The God of Small Things"
* "The Ministry of Utmost Happiness"
These are just a few of the major works and authors covered in a BA English program at Punjab University. The curriculum may vary depending on the specific courses offered by the university.