Wichita State’s Department of English incorporates four specialty areas: Literature, Creative Writing, Linguistics, and Writing. We write poetry, novels, literary criticism, articles on composition and pedagogy, cultural studies, data-driven linguistic analyses. We study the content and materiality of books to recover voices from the past, and engage in digital projects to preserve these voices for the future. We investigate the essence of language. In all, our research and creative activity is a crucial part of WSU’s mission: we are the cultural ambassadors to everyone invested in The Written Word.
One of the oldest Creative Programs in the United States, and since 1958 home to our
student-run literary journal Microcosmos, our faculty continues to make substantial contributions to American letters, publishing
several books and dozens of poems and short stories over the past decade. Creative Writing Director Sam Taylor has, in recent years, published two books and
more than 50 poems in over 25 journals; he is a prize-winning, Pushcart-nominated
nationally recognized poet who has held the Amy Lowell Poetry Traveling Scholarship.
Recent publications include: The Book of Fools, Negative Capability Press, 2021. “Postcards from Babel,” The Massachusetts Recent fiction publications include: Fiction Professor Margaret Dawe published the first chapter of her in-progress novel
Miss America in the journal Vautrin, 2019. Kerry Jones, “Love, American Style,” Front Range Review, 2022. (Kerry also won the 2022 Nilsen Prize for fiction, and her first book, The Last Innocent Year, is forthcoming) Darren DeFrain, “Juneau,” Variant Literature, 2021 (nominated for a Pushcart Prize). Creative Writing
Review (winner of the Anne Haley Prize).
Over the past ten years our faculty specializing in English and American history have
published over 100 articles, chapters, reviews, editions, and books, and have presented
their work at 40 scholarly conferences. Recent publication highlights include: Rebeccah Bechtold, “‘Opera of the Street’: City Noise and the Street Musician in the
Northeastern United States,” Nineteenth Century Studies, 2019 T.J. Boynton, Against The Despotism Of Fact, SUNY Press, 2021 Francis X. Connor, "Francis Kirkman, Theatrical Historian," Huntington Library Quarterly, 2022. Jean Griffith, “Welty’s Not Quite White Orphans and ‘The Other Way To Live’” in New Essays on Welty, Class, and Race, U. Press of Mississippi, 2019. Katie Lanning, “Scanner Darkly: Unpopularization in the Burney Newspaper Collection,” Archives and Records, 2021. Our faculty also contributes to ongoing Digital Humanities projects: The New Oxford Shakespeare, The Oxford Complete Works of Christopher Marlowe (Connor), and The Poetess Archive (Mary Waters). Jean Griffith was awarded a $3.9 million grant from the National Science Foundation.Literature
The faculty of our innovative Linguistics program–which houses our new Applied Linguistics
Major–has published over 20 articles and books and offered over 60 presentations in
the past decade. Recent highlights include: Andrew Hippisley, “Network Morphology, ” in The Oxford Encyclopedia of Morphology, 2021; and Morphological Perspectives, Edinburgh University Press, 2019, 2021. Mythili Menon and Roumyana Pancheva. "Degree Achievements of Color." Exploring Interfaces, 2019. In addition, Mythili Menon has aplied for sixteen grants, yielding over $600,000 in
awards.Linguistics