In This Section Faculty Featured Faculty Faculty by Research Interests Awards Staff Graduate Students Featured Faculty Our English literature and creative writing faculty describe their recent research and publications. Meet Assistant Professor Rachel Trocchio The beauty and peculiarity of Puritan sermons led to this scholar's focus on Early American iterature. New Pages Fall 2019 Oh the places you'll go with a fresh crop of books from faculty and alums! Undercover Girls Associate Professor Kim Todd has studied "stunt reporters"—female newspaper writers in the 1880s and 1890s who went undercover to expose societal ills. This Q&A covers Todd's… Katherine Scheil on Shakespeare in Civic Life How have Shakespeare's works been a part of civic life? Faculty Books: Translating the Dakota Professor Christopher Pexa's new book, Translated Nation, reveals how Dakota values persevered through assimilation. Lois Cucullu: Exchanging Ideas, Creating Knowledge Retiring professor tapped new technology to spark lively communities of learning. Patricia Hampl: Heading Out Without a Map After bidding farewell to the U, the decorated memoirist is writing a novel. Geoffrey Sirc: Starting Where the Students Are Retired this year, a master teacher remembers the assignments that inspired the best student writing. John S. Wright: Advocating Change The award-winning teacher has held the U, his students, and himself to high standards. New Pages All the 2019 books so far from faculty and alums! Pagination First page « First Previous page ‹‹ … Page 2 Page 3 Page 4 Page 5 Current page 6 Page 7 Page 8 Page 9 Page 10 Next page ›› Last page Last »
Featured Faculty Our English literature and creative writing faculty describe their recent research and publications.
Meet Assistant Professor Rachel Trocchio The beauty and peculiarity of Puritan sermons led to this scholar's focus on Early American iterature.
Undercover Girls Associate Professor Kim Todd has studied "stunt reporters"—female newspaper writers in the 1880s and 1890s who went undercover to expose societal ills. This Q&A covers Todd's…
Katherine Scheil on Shakespeare in Civic Life How have Shakespeare's works been a part of civic life?
Faculty Books: Translating the Dakota Professor Christopher Pexa's new book, Translated Nation, reveals how Dakota values persevered through assimilation.
Lois Cucullu: Exchanging Ideas, Creating Knowledge Retiring professor tapped new technology to spark lively communities of learning.
Patricia Hampl: Heading Out Without a Map After bidding farewell to the U, the decorated memoirist is writing a novel.
Geoffrey Sirc: Starting Where the Students Are Retired this year, a master teacher remembers the assignments that inspired the best student writing.
John S. Wright: Advocating Change The award-winning teacher has held the U, his students, and himself to high standards.