
SHU Reads! Committee Selects Just Mercy for Second Year
For the second year in a row, the University SHU Reads! Planning Committee is proud to announce the 2022 text selection-- Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan Stevenson.
For the second year in a row, the University SHU Reads! Planning Committee is proud to announce the 2022 text selection-- Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption by Bryan Stevenson.
Labor historian Annelise Orleck will lecture on the New Labor Movement's Uprising Against Low Wages.
On Thursday, April 21, Professor Maxim Matusevich, Ph.D. and author Angela Ajayi will offer a literary reading of their work.
The Scholars' Forum in the Catholic Intellectual Tradition looks forward to a talk next week by Dr. Elizabeth Redwine, Coordinator of Core I and Lecturer in the English Department.
The Syria Emergency Task Force will speak at Seton Hall University. Speakers include Mouaz Moustafa, Ambassador Stephen Rapp, Omar Alshogre, and Qutaiba Idlibi. Deborah Amos will moderate.
Students enrolled in the ESLP 0120 Intermediate English class this semester were given a speaking presentation assignment: After COVID, what is your best recommendation for global travelers?
English professors speak as part of virtual Poetry Palooza series at Morven Museum and Garden.
The Gift of Music and Song: Writer and Visual Artist Jacqueline Bishop (NYU) to Present Her Work at Seton Hall University
"Student Art in the Time of COVID-19" combines artwork, visual and written, by students in several Core English classes.
Alexandra Wells and George Rodriguez selected for Undergraduate Workshop at the McNeil Center for Early American Studies.
Professor Russell Sbriglia has published a new book of critical essays with internationally renowned academic Slavoj Zizek.
Creative Writing Professor Mark Svenvold won first place for the Editor’s Prize from Spoon River Poetry Review... and More.
Study travel writing in Italy - Rome, Florence, and Siena - in May and June of 2020.
Adding digital skills to traditional humanities coursework broadens student options.
Kiersten Lynch '17 uses the "soft skills" she learned as an English literature major to advance her career as a copywriter.
Sam Dagher, journalist and author, will speak at SHU on Tuesday, Oct. 8, 5:00 - 6:30, in Jubilee Hall Auditorium.
English and Classics major Brian Pulverenti was named a 'Great Mind.'