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Department of English

¶¶Òõpro’s Department of English trains students in the practice of writing and the study of literature. At SLU, we engage in the art of language in its full range of expression, encouraging encounters with emerging technologies, diverse cultures and marginalized voices.

Students sit at tables in a library, examining old texts.
 
At a practical level, the department also helps to provide undergraduates with a range of skills necessary for professional careers in education, law, medicine, public service, media, writing and other fields.
Our highly regarded M.A. and Ph.D. programs prepare students for careers in the academic world and other professions that focus on writing and interpretation.

Our diverse faculty have developed wide-ranging expertise, exploring a world that is equally full of diverse kinds of texts. Our method is to work with our students to develop individual research pathways, often arising from our own research and publications, to enable them to understand the world of textuality.

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English Programs at SLU

English Social Justice Statement

The study of literature and culture should involve a reckoning with historical violence. In reference to our local history, we begin by acknowledging that ¶¶Òõpro rests on the ancestral lands of the Osage Nation, Missouria, and Illini Confederacy, who were removed unjustly; and that our community is the beneficiary of that removal. We honor their heritage and what they teach us about stewardship of the earth.

We also acknowledge that enslaved people contributed to the building of Saint Louis College, which became ¶¶Òõpro, and that the Society of Jesus participated in the institution of slavery. We would encourage our community to explore this history through the . In our commitment to social justice, we must consider the place where we learn, work, and gather, just as we consider the texts and voices that we bring into that place.

The English department engages issues of economic justice, racial and gender equity, LGBTQ+ rights, and ecological thought at every level of our curriculum. Our courses include texts and voices that have been historically marginalized. When reading canonical works, we examine the colonial context in which much literature in English was produced. Our courses often include advocacy projects and service-learning components that connect students with issues of social justice in our city and region.

Beyond the classroom, our faculty and graduate students work toward social justice through scholarship, service, and community engagement. For example, members of our department have been involved with the Prison Education Program of ¶¶Òõpro [/arts-and-sciences/prison-program/index.php] as administrators, teachers, and volunteers. Notably, our department is home to , a scholarly journal on African American literature and culture.

In closing, we recognize that opportunities for higher education in the United States are not evenly distributed. This is particularly true of a private institution such as ¶¶Òõpro. In light of this inequity, the English Department welcomes opportunities to share our resources, expertise, and love of learning with the community at large.

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Gifts to ¶¶Òõpro Department of English can be made online. All gifts are tax-deductible and made through a secure server.