2018-2019 Catalog

English and World Literatures

In the English & World Literatures major, we believe that language has aesthetic value and power across genres, histories, and cultures. We provide students with opportunities to critically and thoughtfully engage world literary voices and to develop a range of essential intellectual and professional skills. We believe in the power of literature to transcend differences, to invite empathy with others, and to prepare individuals for the unique challenges of global citizenship in the 21st century. To that end, we offer three concentrations that engage the power of the written word: Creative Writing, Literature, and Literature and Media. Students should declare their concentration by the end of sophomore year.

Creative Writing Concentration

The Creative Writing Concentration builds upon the foundations of English and World Literature, providing students with an expansive awareness of the different critical traditions that shape literary history. In creative writing courses, students pursue the study and practice of poetry, fiction, and creative nonfiction in a comprehensive fashion. They develop and utilize their capacity to analyze and examine their own writing in a self-reflective manner while learning the importance of redrafting and revision. They work with and in relation to others, through the workshop model, to evaluate their classmates’ writing, to articulate that appraisal, and to collectively negotiate solutions. Students also immerse themselves in the production of an undergraduate literary magazine—from assessing, editing, and proofreading submissions to designing, distributing, and publicizing the journal itself. Ultimately, the Creative Writing Concentration will invigorate the imagination and amplify the creative process.

Literature Concentration

In their literature courses, students are invited to draw connections to other creative fields—art, dance, music, and theatre—as well as subjects that inform both writers and readers: social justice, economics, history, political science, psychology, and sociology. In other words, like the literature that they read, our students’ studies never exist in a vacuum. We stress critical reading and writing, developing skills that will serve students well in any professional capacity. Students develop critical reading, writing, research, and thinking skills that are essential for success not only in their academic work but also in their professional lives beyond the classroom. Students are encouraged to individualize their studies through independent studies, to supplement their classroom experiences with internships, and to broaden their global perspective through study abroad. By the end of their studies, our students are well prepared to continue on to graduate school or to pursue careers in advertising, communications, creative writing, journalism, law, media studies, public relations, publishing, teaching, and many other fields.

Literature and Media Concentration

The Literature and Media concentration extends students’ writing, analytical and research skills to interpret and understand various media, including cinema, television and emerging media. Students who have an interest in the narrative and cultural functions of media will analyze them through the critical lens of literary theory and our global curriculum. This program culminates with students producing a senior seminar project that bridges the essential skills of critical thinking, reading, researching, and writing that are the hallmark of the English & World Literatures major with skills that will prepare our students for a host of career options across a range of sectors in technology and the media that are the hallmark of the English & World Literatures major with skills that will prepare our students for a host of career options across a range of sectors in technology and the media.

Division: Humanities and Social Sciences
Division Office: The Faculty Center 301
Phone: 646-393-4111
Division Chair: Bradley Herling, Ph.D.
bherling@mmm.edu
Administrative Coordinator: Carly Schneider
cschneider@mmm.edu

Department Faculty:

Jennifer N. Brown

Chair, English and World Literatures

Professor of English and World Literatures

B.A. & M.A., Georgetown University

Ph.D., The Graduate School &

University Center of CUNY

The Faculty Center 300

Phone: 646-393-4120

jbrown1@mmm.edu

Michael Colvin

Professor of English and World Literatures

B.A., Stockton State College

M.A.& Ph.D., Temple University

The Faculty Center 500

Phone: 646-393-4116

mcolvin@mmm.edu

Cecilia Feilla

Associate Professor of English and World Literatures

B.A., University of Michigan

M.A., New York University

Ph.D., New York University

The Faculty Center 300

Phone: 646-393-4122

cfeilla@mmm.edu

Julie Ann Huntington

Associate Professor of English and World Literatures

B.A., Eastern Michigan University

M.A., Vanderbilt University

Ph.D., Vanderbilt University

The Faculty Center 500

Phone: 646-393-4117

jhuntington@mmm.edu

Magdalena Maczynska

Associate Professor of English and World Literatures

B.A. & M.A., Wroclaw University

Ph.D., The Catholic University of America

The Faculty Center 300

Phone: 646-393-4123

mmaczynska@mmm.edu

Peter Naccarato

Professor of English and World Literatures

B.A., Villanova University

Ph.D., SUNY, Stony Brook

The Faculty Center 500

Phone: 646-393-4110

pnaccarato@mmm.edu

Martha L. Sledge

Associate Professor of English and World Literatures

B.A., Louisiana College

M.A., Ohio State University

Ph.D., Emory University

The Faculty Center 300

Phone: 646-393-4119

msledge@mmm.edu

Jerry Williams

Associate Professor of Creative Writing

B.A., Vermont College

M.F.A., University of Arizona

Ph.D., Oklahoma State University

The Faculty Center 100

Phone: 646-393-4118

jwilliams1@mmm.edu

Joseph P. Clancy

Professor Emeritus of English and Theatre Arts

B.A., M.A., & Ph.D., Fordham University

John A. Costello

Professor Emeritus of English

B.A., Manhattan College

M.A., New York University

Priscilla Hoagland Costello

Professor Emerita of English

B.A. & M.A., New York University

Ph.D., The Union Institute

English and World Literatures Courses (EWL)

Creative Writing Courses (CRW)