Earlham College English Department
Earlham College



In the English Department at Earlham, we read and write to expand our ways of seeing and responding to the world. As we engage with works of literature, we encounter the experiences, cultures, values and truths of many kinds of people, like us and unlike us, in the present and in the past. In the process, faculty and students together ask important questions about the works we study, such as: How do we define our own identities and recognize and respond to the experience of others? How do we respond to suffering and injustices? How can we live well and pursue our ideals in difficult situations, or reconcile contradictory values? How should we understand our own feelings of love, fear, desire, anger, joy or loyalty?


Class with Kari Kalve


When we read, write and discuss literature in these ways, we seek not only to gain wisdom, but also to change our lives, societies and world in pursuit of social justice. At the same time, by studying literature we encounter and respond to beauty. We read to gain wider perspective, but also because we love literature for its own sake and because the experience of reading and writing enriches us spiritually, emotionally and intellectually.


The major in English is designed for students who wish to become sophisticated readers of literature, attentive to the ways imaginative works are made and the impact those works have on the lives of human beings. The Department hopes to serve students preparing for graduate work in English; students planning further study in fields such as philosophy, law, religion, business, or history; and students not intending to continue formal education beyond the Bachelor of Arts degree. Many Earlham English majors go into such professions as teaching, publishing, journalism, writing, business, or law, but the range of possibilities is quite wide. Earlham English majors have become workers and leaders in a wide range of positions in various places around the world. Whatever their future careers, Earlham English majors are encouraged to become confident writers and life-long readers.

Class with Scott Hess

The English major introduces students to the most influential works of the English and American literary traditions, together with voices that have been silenced throughout history. The Department strives for maximum inclusion of works by women, minorities, and writers from underprivileged classes. English majors are required to take a mixture of courses emphasizing period, genre and/or literary theory, as well as special topics courses in areas of particular student or faculty interest and introductory and capstone courses in the discipline. There is no required thesis, but senior majors write a long, integrative essay as part of the senior seminar. Although there is no single, dominant mode of teaching in the English Department, frequent use is made of discussion and other collaborative methods that ask students to speak with integrity and listen with respect.


Mary Lacey

Course work in English draws broadly on faculty and student interests in other languages, disciplines and interdisciplinary studies. Special Topics courses and Independent Studies are often designed in response to student requests. Individual students sometimes combine work in English with courses from other fields to create a self-designed or double major. Current faculty members teach outside of the Department in African American Studies, Environmental Studies, Jewish Studies and Women’s Studies, and often share their research interests with students. These faculty interests include individual authors such as Geoffrey Chaucer, Queen Elizabeth, George Eliot, Virginia Woolf, and Toni Morrison; and broad subject areas such as feminist theory; Irish poetry; South Asian autobiography; American imperialism, popular culture, and slavery around the end of the nineteenth century; and the relationship between literature and environmental issues and philosophy.

The Department also offers beginning and advanced Creative Writing courses, including a Creative Writing minor. In these classes, students develop their own creative voices and craft as writers though a variety of creative exercises, peer workshops, and explorations of the process of writing. Students also have opportunities to hear and meet with visiting writers, including in recent years the poets Saul Williams, Alex Olson, Nikki Giovanni, Sonia Sanchez, Donald Hall, Gwendolyn Brooks, and Maxine Kumin and the fiction writer Ron Hansen, as well as the yearly winners of the GLCA New Writers Awards in both Fiction and Poetry. A number of Earlham English majors have become successful writers themselves, such as recent graduates Matt Johnson (novelist), Margot Rabb (young adult novelist), and Maurice Manning (winner of the 2000 Yale Younger Poets Prize).

Halloween in the Classroom

Halloween in the Classroom

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This page last updated: May 27, 2004