Faculty
Faculty Listing and Profiles
The English faculty at WCU is the largest of any department in the entire PASSHE system. Our size and diversity are among our greatest assets, as we blend innovative, student-centered teaching with nationally recognized scholarly expertise in a remarkably varied range of specialties. Our strengths include Rhetoric & Writing; British, American, Multiethnic, & World Literatures; Creative Writing; Theory (Literary, Rhetorical, and Critical); Cultural Studies; and English Education. Many of our professors also teach courses in related programs such as Women's & Gender Studies and Youth Empowerment & Urban Studies.
Faculty Bookshelf
The Faculty Bookshelf showcases the diverse array of books and journals published and edited by English Department faculty in recent years. As teachers, scholars, and writers, we author and edit works of fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction; critical and theoretical studies of literature, culture, and rhetoric; textbooks, anthologies, scholarly journals, reference works, and edited collections; and books on the theory and practice of teaching English.
Faculty Research @ Digital Commons
The English Department archive on WCU's Digital Commons showcases selected research and publications by English faculty. The Commons is an online repository of WCU's intellectual and creative work and is maintained by the WCU library. For information on how to submit your own research, please consult the library's Digital Commons Introductory Guide.
Affiliations
The organizations and programs listed below all bear strong ties to the English Department. Many are directed—or were founded—by English Department faculty; others operate under the aegis of English or benefit from especially strong participation by English faculty and students. In all cases, these affiliations promote values central to English Studies, enrich the learning experiences of our students, and contribute to the cultural life of the university and the larger community.
WCU Poetry Center
The WCU Poetry Center promotes the study and appreciation of poetry, particularly
traditional poetic forms. Founded in 2000, the Center offers a diverse slate of activities
and programs—including a prestigious annual Poetry Conference—that helps to expand
its mission of bringing poetry to an ever-widening audience.
College Literature: A Journal of Critical Literary Studies
College Literature has long been one of the premier literary-studies journals in North America, publishing
original and innovative scholarly research. Founded in 1974, the journal has its editorial
offices at WCU.
University Writing Center
The University Writing Center offers writing free writing consultation services to
all members of the WCU community. The Center is directed by English faculty and regularly
employs English majors and graduate students as writing tutors.
iCAMP Academy
iCAMP is a free summer media academy offering Philadelphia high school juniors and
seniors the opportunity to work as media developers-in-residence for one week each
summer at WCU. Students produce films, games, podcasts, and websites that effect meaningful
social change. The program's founder and director is Dr. Laquana Cooke, a professor
of Digital Rhetoric in the English Department at WCU.
West Chester Writing Project
The West Chester Writing Project (formerly the Pennsylvania Writing & Literature Project)
is one of the oldest and largest sites of the National Writing Project. Founded in
1980, WCWP works in multi-dimensional ways to improve the teaching of writing and
literature in schools and communities.
Poetry by the Sea: A Global Conference
Founded in 2014 by our late colleague Professor Kim Bridgford, Poetry by the Sea takes
place each May in Madison, Connecticut, right on the beach on Long Island Sound. The
conference's aim is to embrace the poetic excellence in a range of constituency groups
and voices.
Frederick Douglass Institute
WCU's Frederick Douglass Institute seeks to advance multicultural studies across the
university curriculum and sponsors research, programs, awards, and teaching that honor
the legacy of Frederick Douglass. The Institute was founded in 1995 by Emeritus Professor
of English C. James Trotman.
Women's & Gender Studies Program
WCU's Women's & Gender Studies Program shares with the English Department a commitment
to empowering students to challenge preconceptions about race, class, gender, and
sexual orientation. English professors have served as past WGS program directors,
and many teach for the program as affiliated faculty.
Rustin Urban Community Change Axis (RUCCAS)
Created by English professor Hannah Ashley, RUCCAS comprises both the Urban Community
Change (RUX) major and the interdisciplinary Youth Empowerment & Urban Studies (YES)
minor. Both programs offer students across campus the opportunity to work with youth
in urban settings in hands-on, community-engaged ways that can help to bring about
real social change.
Aralia Press
Aralia Press teaches students at WCU the art of fine printing, including the use of
hand-set type and letterpress. Founded in 1983 by Emeritus Professor of English Mike
Peich, the press is housed on the fifth floor of the FHG Library.
West Chester Center for Book History
The West Chester Center for Book History, founded by English professor Eleanor Shevlin,
sponsors courses, workshops, talks, seminars, book-making, and a graduate certificate
in publishing, all as part of an effort to provide a multidimensional, interdisciplinary
forum for the history and study of the written word.
Resources for English Faculty
The English Department's SharePoint site is a login-only resource for faculty that includes the in-house department calendar, committee meeting minutes, faculty handbook, department contact list, and more. English faculty can also access archived documents relevant to department business by logging in to the department's D2L site.
Find Funding
The Find Funding page on the Office of Research & Sponsored Programs' website offers English faculty a wealth of resources for locating funds to support research projects. Faculty can connect to a comprehensive subscription database of state, federal, international, and private-sector funding opportunities.
Emeritus Faculty
Emerita/Emeritus status at WCU is an honor conferred on retiring or recently retired faculty whose contributions to the university are considered to be exemplary. The English Department is proud to have such a high number of colleagues honored with this prestigious designation.
APSCUF
The Association of Pennsylvania State College and University Faculties (APSCUF) is the union that represents some 6,000 faculty and coaches across the PASSHE system. English Department faculty are active participants and leaders in APSCUF at both the local and state levels. The WCU chapter of APSCUF works on behalf of both faculty and students to ensure that WCU continues to provide a high-quality, reasonably-priced education and that its courses and programs are taught by first-class professors.