The English Department houses twelve full-time faculty, concentrations in both literature and creative writing, community workshops, a nationally recognized Writers' Series, an MA in English Literature and now an MFA in Creative Writing.
Below you will find scholarly and other professional works of faculty in the English Department.
Submissions from 2006
Hulme Among the Progressives, Lee Garver
Seafarer Socialism: Pound, The New Age, and Anglo-Medieval Radicalism, Lee Garver
The Promiscuity of Print: John Clare’s ‘Don Juan’ and the Culture of Romantic Celebrity, Jason N. Goldsmith
Marooned!, Jeff Rasley
Submissions from 2005
Love and Mono, Bryan M. Furuness
Hogging the Limelight: The Queen's Wake and the Rise of Celebrity Authorship, Jason N. Goldsmith
Why are Liberal Education's Friends of so Little Help?, Marshall W. Gregory
"I Knew There Was Something Wrong with That Paper": Scientific Rhetorical Styles and Scientific Misunderstandings, Carol Reeves
The Language of Science, Carol Reeves
What’s in a Gene Name: Mapping the Language of the Human Genome, Carol Reeves
Submissions from 2004
An Introduction to Volume 19 of The New Age, Lee Garver
An Introduction to Volume 8 of The New Age, Lee Garver
Submissions from 2002
The Revolution You Won’t See On TV, Jeff Rasley
An Orthodox Heresy: Scientific Rhetoric and the Science of Prions., Carol Reeves
Irrigation: The Political Economy of Personal Experience, Carol Reeves and Alan W. France
Submissions from 2001
The Political Katherine Mansfield, Lee Garver
Curriculum, Pedagogy, and Teacherly Ethos, Marshall W. Gregory
Escaping the prison of singularity, Marshall W. Gregory
Submissions from 1998
Review of "Bernard Shaw and Gabriel Pascal." Edited by Bernard F. Dukore., Lee Garver
Living on the Border: Ethotic Conflict and the Satiric Impulse, Carol Reeves
Rhetoric and the AIDS Virus Hunt, Carol Reeves
Submissions from 1997
The Many-Headed Hydra of Theory vs. the Unifying Mission of Teaching, Marshall W. Gregory
Introductory Courses, Student Ethos, and Living the Life of the Mind, Marshall W. Gregory
Submissions from 1996
Language, Rhetoric, and AIDS: The Attitudes and Strategies of Key AIDS Medical Scientists and Physicians, Carol Reeves
Submissions from 1995
Review of Martha Fodeski Black’s Shaw and Joyce: “The Last Word in Stolentelling.”, Lee Garver
Students as Satirists: Encouraging Critique and Comic Release, Carol Reeves
Submissions from 1992
Owning a Virus: The Rhetoric of Scientific Discovery Accounts, Carol Reeves
Submissions from 1990
Establishing the Phenomenon: The Rhetoric of Early Research Reports on AIDS, Carol Reeves