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Showing posts from October, 2023

VU English Merch (now with 75th Anniversary Merch!)

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We have 75th anniversary crew-neck sweatshirts and t-shirts in stock, as well as hats, totes, hoodies, and more! Stop by the office or write to Program Coordinator Mike Malloy if you are interested!

Spring Courses Unveiled!

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 Spring 2024 Course Descriptions ENG 8460 Science & Fiction Before Sci-Fi Dr. Joseph Drury ENG 9520 Writing & Indigeneity Dr. Kimberly Takahata ENG 9730 Staging the Spanish Tragedy Dr. Alice Dailey GWS 8000 Critical Perspectives on Gender Dr. Travis Foster ENG 8460 Science & Fiction Before Sci-Fi Dr. Joseph Drury CRN 33402 Thursday 7:30-9:30 pm   An Experiment on a Bird in the Air Pump by Joseph Wright of Derby The first science fiction novel is often said to be Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein. But what did literary authors have to say about science in the century and a half between the Scientific Revolution and the creation of the world’s most famous monster, the period now known as the Enlightenment? In this course, students will read and analyze some of the key philosophical texts that helped establish the distinctive methodology and goals of the new science alongside a range of fictional texts—drama and poetry as well as novels—that explore its social and p...

Professor Jean Lutes Publishes "Feminisms"

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Jean Lutes just published "Feminisms" in  The Cambridge Companion to the Twentieth-Century American Novel and Politics .   A brief summary of the chapter: "Twentieth-century feminist activism and thought spread with an urgency and ambition unseen before, as advocates for women achieved mass recognition, unsettled long-held convictions, and upset the status quo in ways unimaginable in previous centuries. No novel   genre escaped these changes or failed to register them. Feminist politics reshaped the content, and sometimes the form, of the novel. Yet, dramatic as the expansion of US women’s opportunities w as, progress was never unchallenged or universal. Feminist political gains inspired significant backlash: Patriarchy supporters fought back. Meanwhile, feminist organizing fractured from within. Before the twentieth century even began, women of color were explaining why they couldn’t be expected to identify only as women, as if all women belonged in a single categor...

Teach In On Palestine

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On Wednesday, October 18 from 6-8 pm the Villanova Center for Arab and Islamic Studies will host a teach in on Palestine featuring English faculty members. Come with questions!

Professor Megan Quigley on University Updates Code of Conduct to Include A. I.

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A recent article in  The Villanovan  discusses new additions to Villanova's Code of Conduct. It features Professor Megan Quigley saying: “I don’t believe in just banishing it,” Quigley said. “Well, for certain assignments I do. I already have assignments in my classes where the students give a paper prompt to ChatGPT and then we analyze what it produces for its strengths and weaknesses.” Later in the article, she comments:  “I would say that, for me, writing and thinking go hand in hand,” Quigley said. “Analyzing and synthesizing information, finding out what a strong versus weak claim is, whether you need those skills for law or teaching or writing or journalism, I think you are still going to need to have them.” Check out the full article  here . 

Not the Cruelest Month

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This weekend, professors Kamran Javadizadeh and Megan Quigley put their poetry skills to work at the T. S. Eliot conference in Cambridge, MA. They co-taught a seminar on "T. S. Eliot and Close Reading” to a group of professors and graduate students at the Houghton Library at Harvard University on Friday. Megan later delivered a lecture, “Perfectly good, normal and right: Eliot, Attraction, and Intimacy,” in Emerson Hall, the same philosophy building where T. S. Eliot took his philosophy courses at Harvard a century ago. Speaking of close reading, for more close reads you can listen to Kamran’s podcast on  Apple  or  Spotify .

Celebrating 75 Years of the English Major

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Check out  this article  from  The Villanovan,  written by VU undergrad Caitlyn Foley, on celebrating 75 years of the undergrad English major at Villanova.