Upcoming events

Wednesday, 11 Nov

Advisory Committee Meeting
09:30 AM to 11:00 AM, November 11, 2009

Location: Room 203A

Friday, 13 Nov

General Education Committee Meeting
10:00 AM to 12:00 PM, November 13, 2009

Location: 203A

Professional Writing Committee Meeting
01:00 PM to 03:00 PM, November 13, 2009

Location: Sanford 304

Tuesday, 17 Nov

English Department Meeting
09:00 AM to 11:00 AM, November 17, 2009

Location: 224 I.G. Greer

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The English Department at Appalachian State

 

Welcome to the English Department at Appalachian State University!  For Spring 2010, we’ll be teaching these classes.  You can find class schedules here.  You may contact the department here.

In the English Department at Appalachian State, our work begins with incisive analysis of British, American, and World literature, but we also offer a broad array of courses that focus on film, creative writing, English education, professional writing, rhetoric and composition, critical theory, folklore, and other aspects of English studies. Our faculty publish scholarly books and articles on subjects ranging from Renaissance drama to contemporary cinema and edit academic journals. Our strongest commitment, however, is to outstanding work in the classroom, based on enthusiastic interaction with students and dynamic engagement with cultural history.

Our talented, highly motivated English majors and master's degree candidates work hard to sharpen their ability to think critically about works of literature and to understand how those works influenced and were influenced by the cultural contexts in which they were produced. They also develop interpretive skills that will help them to thrive in any career they choose after graduation. More specifically, our students learn to analyze complicated texts, to speak about them with confidence, and to write detailed, persuasive essays that support their conclusions about the works they have studied with carefully chosen, logically arranged evidence. These skills are, of course, necessary for students who aspire to teach or to earn graduate degrees in English, but they are equally valuable for students who choose to pursue careers in business, medicine, entertainment, publishing, broadcasting, advertising, journalism, government, and the law.

A Greeting from the Interim Chair