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English Graduate Student Involvement

ÀÏ˾»ú¸£ÀûÍø’s graduate program in English provides multiple ways for students to get involved on SLU's campus.

English Graduate Organization

Contact: Sydney Lindsey

The English Graduate Organization (EGO) advocates for and supports all graduate students in the English Department at SLU.

Each year, English graduate students elect a board of officers to represent the English graduate student community within the department and in the University. EGO promotes the advancement of English graduate students as scholars, professionals, and educators by organizing workshops, events and lectures on pedagogy, conferencing, publication, and research. In addition to holding monthly board meetings open to all English graduate students throughout the academic year, EGO officers advocate for the welfare of graduate students and represent the graduate perspective on the graduate committee, undergraduate committee, research committee, Department of English faculty meetings, and Saint Louis University's Graduate Student Association (GSA).

EGO contributes to the department's research colloquium series, Textual Revolutions, by offering an honorarium to each semester's graduate student sessions. The organization supports Athenaeum, Quire, Rhetorica, Disability Studies, Old/Middle English, Contemporary American, and Postcolonial Literature reading groups; and assists with promoting the graduate department and recruiting prospective students. Likewise, EGO coordinates and sponsors social events, including the welcome picnic each fall and "Kudos" celebrations of graduate student achievements at each semester's close — all to strengthen ties between graduate students, faculty and staff in the Department of English and between English graduate students and their peers in the College of Arts and Sciences.

Graduate English Reading Groups

Athenaeum: 19th-Century British Literature Research Group

Contact: Ari Hutchinson

Athenaeum is an association of graduate students, postdoctorates, and faculty members interested in British and transatlantic literary and nonfiction works of the period, including central theorists and the critical conversation surrounding these various works. In addition, Athenaeum functions as a writing and review collective, facilitating critical peer feedback on members’ work for conferences, publications and research-in-progress. These literati hold monthly meetings that accommodate the members' schedules; Athenaeum meetings can be found with their topic listings on the official SLU English department calendar.

Postcolonial Reading Group

Contact: Ahlam Jaber

The Postcolonial Reading Group is open to all genres, time periods and geographic regions within South Asian or postcolonial literature. The group examines issues relevant to race, ethnicity, class, gender and sexual orientation within this cultural matrix. It typically meets two or three times a semester and welcomes students and scholars from all disciplines.

Rhetorica

Contact: Lauren Terbrock 

The Rhetorica reading group is a biweekly gathering of students and faculty interested in reading and discussing significant theoretical and historical texts and contemporary rhetorical artifacts in politics and culture. A group member leads the reading discussion, with this responsibility rotating throughout the semester. In addition to reading conversations, we discuss professionalization and developments in the field, including upcoming conferences, publishing opportunities and current debates. Rhetorica also hosts monthly writing group meetings and occasional social events.

Quire: Medieval and Early Modern Reading Group

Contact: Sarah Burt

Quire comprises graduate students interested in medieval and early modern literature and critical and theoretical approaches to these texts and to premodern studies more broadly. This group reads a variety of both literary and historical texts in addition to current critical theory. Quire will refer to the doctoral reading lists when selecting literary readings to help English graduate students prepare for the M.A. and Ph.D. exams. The group will also choose to read and discuss texts that feature in individual members' research in progress, allowing them to talk through their research and offering insights. The group meets monthly and is open to any interested graduate students. The group also hosts mock exams for any graduate students prepping that year.

Contemporary Transatlantic Reading Group

Contact: Sydney Lindsey or Ryan Prewitt

The Contemporary Transatlantic Reading Group meets once monthly, with the date dependent on members’ availability. This group selects readings based on student members’ interests and faculty input, giving special attention to works receiving widespread critical attention at the moment. Works on exam lists will also get priority, depending on group membership. The goal is to include works from diverse authors and styles, including emerging genres and forms. The reading group will also inform each other of opportunities in the field, including conference and publication opportunities. The ultimate goal for the reading group is to keep group members informed on trends in the field and provide consistent support for their research interests and development.

Disability Studies Reading Group

Contact: Katie Eck

The Interdisciplinary Disability Studies Reading Group is dedicated to integrating disability studies and pedagogy in both postsecondary education and academic research. In examining how disability intersects with gender and sexual identity, class structures, and racial inequalities, IDS rethinks social and medical concepts of disability from a disability justice perspective. All graduate students and faculty in the humanities are welcome to participate in reading group sessions, which occur two to three times per semester.

Old/Middle English Reading Group

Contact: Sarah Burt

The Old and Middle English reading group builds reading and interpretive proficiency in these languages for grad students interested in studying the premodern and the history of the English language. This is a no-prep reading group, meaning that students show up and work through texts together at the meeting. Often, there will be assistance in the form of textbooks and language and/or English faculty presence. The group meets weekly, focusing on the language and mechanics of Old English.