CSU English Welcomes Four New Tenure-Track Faculty
Please join us in welcoming our newest faces in the English department: Jaquira Díaz, Naitnaphit Limlamai, Nina McConigley, and Rosa Nam.
Please join us in welcoming our newest faces in the English department: Jaquira Díaz, Naitnaphit Limlamai, Nina McConigley, and Rosa Nam.
Kelly Weber (she/they) is the author of We Are Changed to Deer at the Broken Place (forthcoming Tupelo Press, December 2022) and You Bury the Birds in My Pelvis, winner of the 2022 Omnidawn First/Second Book Prize (forthcoming October 2023).
After years of Zoom screens and hybrid events, the Creative Writing Reading Series returns Sept. 15 for the first of many face-to-face readings.
A $250,000 Teagle Foundation Cornerstone/NEH Planning Grant will fund two years of innovation in the undergraduate core curriculum.
Led by Dr. Roze Hentschell, professor of English, the Summer in Oxford education abroad program allows University Honors Program students and high achieving English majors/minors to earn six credits and take an individualized course with Oxford affiliated faculty for one-on-one tutorials in their field of interest.
Roze Hentschell, professor of English and senior associate dean in the College of Liberal Arts at Colorado State University, has been named interim chief academic officer of the CSU System for the 2022-23 academic year.
Army veterans Ryan Lanham and Ross Atkinson felt a different call to duty while they attended Colorado State University.
The Through the Student Lens Film Festival—the first and only film festival created for CSU students and alumni—got its start just as the pandemic forced festivals and events all over the world to go virtual. Thankfully the festival’s founder, Teaching Associate Professor and professional filmmaker Usama Alshaibi, chose to persevere. With the help of dedicated student volunteers and staff, Through the Student Lens (TSL) hosted its first in-person premiere on April 21, 2022 in Eddy Hall.
After more than 50 years, the most heavily utilized academic building on the Fort Collins main campus is getting a makeover.
Embracing interdisciplinary studies, graduate students in the Department of English are bridging divides between the humanities and sciences through coursework and research opportunities.