Professors Jean Lutes, Brigitte Fielder, and Denise Burgher published a new article on Alice Dunbar-Nelson, "Alice Dunbar-Nelson's Stories of Childhood" in the Public Humanities. You can read the article here. You can also learn more about author and activist Alice Dunbar Nelson at the Black digital humanities project, Taught by Literature, founded by the three authors. Click here to read more about the collaborative project recentering black women writers.
Welcome to the blog for the Villanova English department! Visit often for updates on department events, guest speakers, faculty and student accomplishments, and reviews and musings from professors and undergraduates alike.
Friday, April 24, 2026
Wednesday, April 22, 2026
Professor Kamran Javadizadeh's "Robert Frost at Midlife" for The Yale Review
We are excited to announce that Professor Kamran Javadizadeh recently published a new article, "Robert Frost at Midlife," in The Yale Review.
In his article, Dr. Javadizadeh presents Robert Frost as a midlife poet grappling with his career amidst evolving poetic trends. His astute readings of "Nothing Gold Can Stay," "To Earthward," and "I Will Sing You One-O" offer insight into Frost's preoccupation with mortality, loneliness, and the inevitable passage of time. Click here to read the full article in Dr. Javadizadeh's elegant prose.
If podcasts are more your thing, be sure to check out Professor Javadizadeh's "Close Readings," available on Spotify and Apple Podcasts.
Thursday, April 9, 2026
Catching up with Lauren Shohet
Dr. Lauren Shohet has been crisscrossing the country lately presenting on Shakespeare, Milton, AI, and more, so we thought it would be a good time to catch up with her and discuss her teaching and scholarship.
To begin with, Dr. Shohet gave a lecture at the Huntington Library on January 31st on “(In)Visibility and Mediation: Milton’s Eve,” in which she also discussed vanitas paintings (more on this later). Then, in February, she attended the Renaissance Society of America conference in San Francisco, where she gave a talk as part of the book history discussion group. In addition, while in San Francisco, Dr. Shohet also presided over Milton Society events. Finally, in early April, she attended the Shakespeare Association Conference in Denver and presented on Shakespeare and AI.
Regarding mediation and Milton’s Eve, Dr. Shohet explained that she is in the middle of a long project that examines mediation in Paradise Lost--as she put it, “What it is for angels and for the Son of God, to be mediators between God the Father and humans” Dr. Shohet explained that she is interested in communication as a form of mediation, in how any kind of communication is a kind of translation, and how to “get an idea from one mind to another mind.”
“So, my claim,” said Dr. Shohet, “is that mediation is inherent to the creaturely condition, whether you're looking before or after a fall, and that the importance of mediation makes us think differently about Eve's association throughout the epic with mediation. So we're, I think, more accustomed to seeing the ways that Adam's more direct access to God and to knowledge and to language diminishes Eve—which I think is true. But I also think that the epic shows that mediation is essential for being a creature in relationship—also of the most exalted kinds of relationship with the divine, with the world, with other people—and that Eve's expertise in mediation makes her an admirable and useful resource.”
Regarding the Renaissance vanitas paintings, Dr. Shohet explained that she is interested in a passage in Paradise Lost in which Eve examines her reflection in a pool and notes that the pool “to me seemd another Skie.” Although traditionally viewed as an instance of Eve looking for Heaven in the wrong place, Dr. Shohet is more interested in the idea that “When she says that the pool, to me, seemed another sky, she's aware of the fact that she's perceiving, and that her perception might not be the only perception, or might not be complete.”
Dr. Shohet then noticed that the image of Eve looking into the pool recalls a 17th century tradition of vanitas paintings, in which ephemeral things (like hourglasses and bubbles, but also scientific instruments and books) are contrasted with the divine and eternal (usually a skull is also present to remind us of our own mortality). “So I started thinking,” noted Dr. Shohet, “about how Eve looking in the pool reminded me of a lot of these vanitas paintings, some of which are by women artists, many of which do feature women. Because the viewer who's worried about Eve maybe being vain or narcissistic, or not understanding quite where to look for heaven, detects a little skull in that pool, detects mortality in that gaze.”
During her next trip, to the Renaissance Society of America conference in San Francisco, Dr. Shohet spoke about Paradise Lost and network theory, which she finds to be “a really intriguing way to think about medium.” As Dr. Shohet explained it, “Instead of thinking about signs and signifieds, or thing and word, I'm interested in these reciprocal, distributed ways that meanings are created by unpredictable constellations of different entities. And those entities can be matter, they can be word, they can be interpretive protocols, they can be allusion.” With regard to Paradise Lost, Dr. Shohet discussed network theory in relation to figurative language, “as something that pulls together all kinds of different frames of reference, and then, what guidance does the reader get in thinking about how to make meaning out of it?”
Finally, at the Shakespeare Association Conference in Denver, Dr. Shohet presented on Shakespeare and AI in the context of Othello. Her presentation focused on the way search algorithms and large language models depend on our input to make meaning; as Dr. Shohet put it, “What AI does is predict the statistically likeliest next word.” Meanwhile, “In the play Othello, the vice figure Iago manages to completely mess with the protagonist Othello's sense of who he is, who other people are, how he knows what's true, and what meaning is, by just repeating little bits of his speech back to him… If you ever had someone just repeat the last word of every sentence you speak back to you with a question mark, it's really unsettling… So, my paper's about ways you can ask students to use the play as a usefully unfamiliar context where they can evaluate how search algorithms and social media feeds draw on what they think should come next to manipulate them. And then, on the other hand, how they can use their own experience of, say, social media feeds, to get deeper inside the operations of the play.”
At the end of our interview, I asked Dr. Shohet for her general thoughts about AI.
“I am worried about AI,” she said, “…AND I think it's a really great opportunity to denaturalize our fantasies that we had non-iterative ways of knowing things before. You know, knowledge is always constructed, and it's constructed iteratively through feedback you get on performing a hypothesis, and then you perform it again. Just watching AI do that lets us say, ‘oh, that's how gender's constructed.’ That's how, right? You experiment with something, you reiterate it, you try it again. And that, conversely, becoming critical consumers of how that works in one arena can carry over to the other, and we can just ask more questions, both with and without AI.”
| Vanitas by Antonio de Pereda |
Monday, March 30, 2026
Book Club and Bookstore Expedition
Join the Reading and Community Class for a Book Club and Bookstore Expedition!
Friday, March 27, 2026
Professor Mary Mullen published co-edited volume: Race, Violence, and Form: Reframing Nineteenth-Century Ireland
Although people often think humanities research is conducted by individuals, it is always collaborative. For Professor Mary Mullen, there is no greater pleasure than thinking with other people and refining research and writing with them. Professor Mullen's recently published co-edited volume, with Professor Renee Fox, titled Race, Violence, and Form: Reframing Nineteenth-Century Ireland, is the product of several collaborative conversations at the University of Notre Dame, Villanova University, and the University of California, Santa Cruz. The volume is dedicated to Sara Maurer, Mary's undergraduate professor, mentor, and friend, who dreamed up ideas behind the book.
For more about this important volume, see this recent blog post from Liverpool University Press.
Thursday, March 19, 2026
Tonight: VU Poetry Club
The first meeting of the newly-revived Villanova Poetry Club will be held tonight at 7 pm in Bartley 036. There will be pizza. Bring something you wrote--or don't! All are welcome.
Wednesday, February 25, 2026
Alumni Spotlight: Superintendent Dr. MaryJo Yannacone
When Dr. MaryJo Yannacone, Villanova BS ‘90, MA ‘94, and Superintendent of Springfield Township School District, entered my Zoom call midday on a quiet Friday afternoon, she had already dealt with a litany of complicated problems and situations, including but not limited to handling a weather-induced facilities breakdown, attending a regional superintendents meeting, running a business meeting, addressing a student matter, and, the cherry on top, being notified of an active water main break affecting one of the district’s buildings mere minutes before our conversation began. Dr. Yannacone, however, radiated such a present, attentive calmness that I had no idea any of this was going on until I asked her what a typical day in her life as a superintendent looks like.
Tuesday, February 24, 2026
Tsering Wangmo at the Brooklyn Museum
Dr. Tsering Wangmo braved the weather this past weekend in order to facilitate a packed poetry workshop at the Brooklyn Museum in New York City. Professor Wangmo's workshop was part of a series, titled "I See You Face to Face," named in honor of Walt Whitman's "Crossing Brooklyn Ferry," referencing that Whitman once worked at the Brooklyn Apprentices' Library, which ultimately became the Brooklyn Museum. The series of workshops takes place in art galleries within the museum, allowing poets to draw from the art they see around them in crafting their verse.
Dr. Wangmo's workshop took place in the Rubin Museum Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room. According to the Brooklyn Museum's website, "The Rubin Museum Tibetan Buddhist Shrine Room presents more than 100 artworks and ritual objects as they would be displayed in an elaborate Tibetan Buddhist household shrine—a space used for devotional prayer, offerings, and rituals. Scroll paintings (thangkas), sculptures, ritual implements, and musical instruments dating from the 12th to 21st century are arranged on traditional Tibetan furniture according to their use in Tibetan Buddhist practices... The design incorporates elements of Tibetan architecture and the color schemes of traditional Tibetan homes, offering visitors the opportunity to experience Tibetan religious art in its cultural context." The workshop began with an overview of the space and its art, before transitioning into an opportunity to write poetry inspired by the surroundings.
Dr. Wangmo's most recent book is The Politics of Sorrow, and her books of poetry include Revolute and My Rice Tastes Like the Lake.
Sunday, February 15, 2026
Ellipsis Magazine Wants Your Art!
Ellipsis Magazine
By Margaux Barrett
Ellipsis Magazine has a long relationship with the English department: Tia Parisi, former president of Ellipsis, minored in Creative Writing. Margaux Barrett, current president, is an English and Cognitive and Behavioral Neuroscience double-major.
Now in its seventh year, the magazine has been receiving more submissions than ever before. When asked what could be driving this increase, the current president, Margaux Barrett ‘26, explained, “It’s a combination of factors. I think there’s been a resurgence of physical and visual media with young people—especially in the face of AI. Plus, we have a wonderful community. Lots of great and talented people. We’ve been really lucky.”
To submit your work, please email ellipsis@villanova.edu and include your name, graduation year, and title of work. You can also follow Ellipsis Magazine on Instagram at @vuellipsis to stay updated on the organization’s events and publications.
Thursday, February 12, 2026
Sneak Peek! Fall 2026 Upper-Level English Courses
We hope to see you in some of these exciting courses in the fall:
Fall 2026 UPPER-LEVEL ENGLISH COURSES
2003 Intro to Creative Writing TR 8:30-9:45, Tsering WangmoDesigned for students who wish to experiment with composing several kinds of creative writing: short fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry.
2005 Writing the Short Story MW 3:20-4:35, Alan Drew
In this writing workshop course, we will explore setting, point of view, characterization, plot and other craft elements that make short stories run. We will read influential authors and give feedback to one another to foster our growth as writers.
2006 Writing of Poetry TR 4:00-5:15
Instruction in poetry writing, including how to craft imagery, figurative language, sound, line, and rhythm, as well as traditional and contemporary forms. Students read widely and write lyric, narrative and experimental poems that are shared in a supportive workshop setting.
2017 Writing Detective Fiction MW 1:55-3:10, Alan Drew
Do you love detective fiction? Have you always wanted to write your own "whodunit?" In this course, you'll read and analyze classic and contemporary detective fiction while working to produce, workshop, and polish your own creative work.
2018 Nature Writing Workshop TR 11:30-12:45, Cathy Staples
The natural world will be a source for the creative non-fiction, poetry, and fiction pieces students will write in this class. Through readings, field trips, writing exercises, and workshops students will learn to sharpen their language and see more deeply.
2020 Digital Journalism MWF 10:40-11:30, Lara Rutherford-Morrison
Introduces students to the fundamentals of journalism, with an emphasis on digital media. Class will focus on the ins and outs of digital journalism as a practice, with students gaining hands-on experience within a variety of media platforms.
2061 Editing & Publishing MWF 12:50-1:40, Adrienne Perry
Literary publishing in a diverse, compelling field involving both art and commerce. This hands- on class explores the economic, social, and artistic forces that shape contemporary literature. Grapple with what it means to "make culture" while honing editorial skills.
2250, Ways of Reading TR 10:00-11:15, Michael Dowdy
An exploration of how we engage, understand, explicate, and enjoy texts of all sorts.
2306 Harry Potter: Quests/Questions MWF 10:40-11:30, Evan Radcliffe
In this course we will use the tools of literary analysis to discuss all seven Harry Potter novels. Central topics will include how the series evolves; Rowling’s use of novelistic form, character and characterization, and literary models; and the books’ representations of gender, class, and other social issues.
2790 Rewriting Genres of White Supremacy TR 2:30-3:45, Mary Mullen
"Rewriting Genres of White Supremacy" centers literature by Indigenous, Black, and white American writers to consider some of the most pressing concerns of our contemporary moment. Alongside visual images, historically grounded modules on the construction of race, and a critical dialogic component, the course supports all students in their exploration of racial and social hierarchies through the powerful expressions of key nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first century writers, including Leslie Marman Silko, James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, and Herman Melville.
2991 English Majors in the Workplace M 3:20-4:35 for first 10 weeks of the semester, Michelle Filling-Brown
This course supports students in thinking critically about their identities and goals within the field of English while deepening their understanding of the diverse career and post-baccalaureate options available to English majors. Students will develop practical skills such as résumé writing, cover letter preparation, and interviewing strategies.
Note: this is a one-credit course.
3001 Foundational Literature in English 1 TR 11:30-12:45, Lauren Shohet
Influential British literature from beginnings to 1750, tracing key ideas, power relations, and genres that still impact literature in English, and Anglophone culture, today. Relationships between writing and political change, media history, gender, spirituality, the environment, oppression and liberation.
3150 Chaucer TR 1:00-2:15, Brooke Hunter
This course introduces the work of Geoffrey Chaucer through a reading of his lively collection of stories and storytellers, The Canterbury Tales. Through its devout stories, explicit comedies, and probing romances, we will explore medieval society, Chaucer's insights on subjectivity, and influential medieval genres.
3650 African Drama MW 4:45-6:00, Chiji Akoma
Examination of the aesthetics, politics, and practices of the theatre and drama in Africa. Focused on written plays, course explores drama performances on stage, television, and movies. Introduces students to role-playing and small-scale adaptation of texts to American contexts.
4500 Black Atlantic MW 3:20-4:35, Travis Foster
Explore how the transatlantic slave trade reshaped Europe, Africa, and the Americas. This course analyzes Black diasporic culture and resistance—from 17th-century institutionalized culture and resistance—from 17th-century slavery and the Haitian Revolution to modern mass incarceration - using literature to revisit the silenced past.
4590 U.S. Independence at 250 TR 4:00-5:15, Kimberly Takahata
This class—held during a big birthday year for the United States—will examine US founding documents alongside historical contemporaries and recent rewritings of early American literature. We will ask: how does the United States and US writers define independence, and how have those definitions changed over time?
4642 Fictions of Motherhood TR 8:30-9:45, Jean Lutes
What power do mothers have? Who has the power to define motherhood? You will examine U.S. narratives of motherhood from the nineteenth century to the present, with special attention to definitions of reproductive justice.
4654 25 Poems TR 11:30-12:45, Kamran Javadizadeh
To be alive today is to feel distracted. This course offers us the chance to slow down. We read just one short poem per class meeting and learn how to give it our full attention, in writing and in conversation.
4651 Undocumented Americans TR 10:00-11:15, Tsering Wangmo
What does it mean to be "undocumented?" In this course, we will learn about belonging and citizenship from critical essays and memoirs written by "undocumented Americans."
5000 Climate Fiction TR 2:30-3:45, Heather Hicks
This course will examine critically acclaimed works of climate fiction, considering the major environmental challenges they identify, the literary forms they deploy, and the positive change they might bring about.
Tuesday, February 10, 2026
Villanova English Flyers
Our students and faculty regularly present the department to prospective majors throughout the year. Here are some of the materials they use.

Fall 2026 UPPER-LEVEL ENGLISH COURSES
2003 Intro to Creative Writing TR 8:30-9:45, Tsering Wangmo
Designed for students who wish to experiment with composing several kinds of creative writing: short fiction, creative nonfiction, and poetry.
2005 Writing the Short Story MW 3:20-4:35, Alan Drew
In this writing workshop course, we will explore setting, point of view, characterization, plot and other craft elements that make short stories run. We will read influential authors and give feedback to one another to foster our growth as writers.
2006 Writing of Poetry TR 4:00-5:15
Instruction in poetry writing, including how to craft imagery, figurative language, sound, line, and rhythm, as well as traditional and contemporary forms. Students read widely and write lyric, narrative and experimental poems that are shared in a supportive workshop setting.
2017 Writing Detective Fiction MW 1:55-3:10, Alan Drew
Do you love detective fiction? Have you always wanted to write your own "whodunit?" In this course, you'll read and analyze classic and contemporary detective fiction while working to produce, workshop, and polish your own creative work.
2018 Nature Writing Workshop TR 11:30-12:45, Cathy Staples
The natural world will be a source for the creative non-fiction, poetry, and fiction pieces students will write in this class. Through readings, field trips, writing exercises, and workshops students will learn to sharpen their language and see more deeply.
2020 Digital Journalism MWF 10:40-11:30, Lara Rutherford-Morrison
Introduces students to the fundamentals of journalism, with an emphasis on digital media. Class will focus on the ins and outs of digital journalism as a practice, with students gaining hands-on experience within a variety of media platforms.
2061 Editing & Publishing MWF 12:50-1:40, Adrienne Perry
Literary publishing in a diverse, compelling field involving both art and commerce. This hands- on class explores the economic, social, and artistic forces that shape contemporary literature. Grapple with what it means to "make culture" while honing editorial skills.
2250, Ways of Reading TR 10:00-11:15, Michael Dowdy
An exploration of how we engage, understand, explicate, and enjoy texts of all sorts.
2306 Harry Potter: Quests/Questions MWF 10:40-11:30, Evan Radcliffe
In this course we will use the tools of literary analysis to discuss all seven Harry Potter novels. Central topics will include how the series evolves; Rowling’s use of novelistic form, character and characterization, and literary models; and the books’ representations of gender, class, and other social issues.
2790 Rewriting Genres of White Supremacy TR 2:30-3:45, Mary Mullen
"Rewriting Genres of White Supremacy" centers literature by Indigenous, Black, and white American writers to consider some of the most pressing concerns of our contemporary moment. Alongside visual images, historically grounded modules on the construction of race, and a critical dialogic component, the course supports all students in their exploration of racial and social hierarchies through the powerful expressions of key nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first century writers, including Leslie Marman Silko, James Baldwin, Toni Morrison, and Herman Melville.
2991 English Majors in the Workplace M 3:20-4:35 for first 10 weeks of the semester, Michelle Filling-Brown
This course supports students in thinking critically about their identities and goals within the field of English while deepening their understanding of the diverse career and post-baccalaureate options available to English majors. Students will develop practical skills such as résumé writing, cover letter preparation, and interviewing strategies.
Note: this is a one-credit course.
3001 Foundational Literature in English 1 TR 11:30-12:45, Lauren Shohet
Influential British literature from beginnings to 1750, tracing key ideas, power relations, and genres that still impact literature in English, and Anglophone culture, today. Relationships between writing and political change, media history, gender, spirituality, the environment, oppression and liberation.
3150 Chaucer TR 1:00-2:15, Brooke Hunter
This course introduces the work of Geoffrey Chaucer through a reading of his lively collection of stories and storytellers, The Canterbury Tales. Through its devout stories, explicit comedies, and probing romances, we will explore medieval society, Chaucer's insights on subjectivity, and influential medieval genres.
3650 African Drama MW 4:45-6:00, Chiji Akoma
Examination of the aesthetics, politics, and practices of the theatre and drama in Africa. Focused on written plays, course explores drama performances on stage, television, and movies. Introduces students to role-playing and small-scale adaptation of texts to American contexts.
4500 Black Atlantic MW 3:20-4:35, Travis Foster
Explore how the transatlantic slave trade reshaped Europe, Africa, and the Americas. This course analyzes Black diasporic culture and resistance—from 17th-century institutionalized culture and resistance—from 17th-century slavery and the Haitian Revolution to modern mass incarceration - using literature to revisit the silenced past.
4590 U.S. Independence at 250 TR 4:00-5:15, Kimberly Takahata
This class—held during a big birthday year for the United States—will examine US founding documents alongside historical contemporaries and recent rewritings of early American literature. We will ask: how does the United States and US writers define independence, and how have those definitions changed over time?
4642 Fictions of Motherhood TR 8:30-9:45, Jean Lutes
What power do mothers have? Who has the power to define motherhood? You will examine U.S. narratives of motherhood from the nineteenth century to the present, with special attention to definitions of reproductive justice.
4654 25 Poems TR 11:30-12:45, Kamran Javadizadeh
To be alive today is to feel distracted. This course offers us the chance to slow down. We read just one short poem per class meeting and learn how to give it our full attention, in writing and in conversation.
4651 Undocumented Americans TR 10:00-11:15, Tsering Wangmo
What does it mean to be "undocumented?" In this course, we will learn about belonging and citizenship from critical essays and memoirs written by "undocumented Americans."
5000 Climate Fiction TR 2:30-3:45, Heather Hicks
This course will examine critically acclaimed works of climate fiction, considering the major environmental challenges they identify, the literary forms they deploy, and the positive change they might bring about.
Wednesday, January 28, 2026
VU Faculty at the MLA in Toronto
While everyone else was being festive, English professors were busy at the Modern Languages Association Conference in Toronto in January. Professor Kamran Javadizadeh, the chair of the executive committee for the MLA’s Poetry and Poetics Forum, chaired two panels on poetry. Professor Megan Quigley delivered a paper entitled “Modernist Impersonality in the Age of AI,” and was an official mentor for other faculty at the conference! Per Dr. Quigley, "It was cold but wonderful."
Thursday, January 15, 2026
Coming Up: Augustine and AI, a Panel Conversation
Monday, January 12, 2026
Listen Back to the Natural Lands Reading!
As has become a tradition, students in Professor Cathy Staples's Nature Writing course once again presented this past December as part of the Natural Lands’ Outdoors Online: Prose and Poetry with Villanova Student Writers event. Many of the students' works are inspired by the nearby Stoneleigh Natural Gardens, which we encourage Villanova students to visit. You can view a recording of this event here.

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