• “Revisiting ‘Neighbors’”

    1 April 2024 | 4:30 p.m. | Higgins LoungeDana Commons “Revisiting ‘Neighbors’” Speaker: Jan T. Gross (Norman B. Tomlinson ’16 and ’48 Professor of War and Society, emeritus; Professor of […]

  • Undergraduate Shakespeare Conference and Lecture

    Please join us for the 18th Undergraduate Shakespeare Conference, to be held on the campus of Clark University on April 27! The one-day conference features new and exciting work on […]

  • Postponed Modernist Poetics and Queer Fruit

    A Clark Faculty Series Event Presented by Elizabeth Blake, PhD Assistant Professor of English Clark University Forbidden fruit has long been a convenient metaphor for illicit knowledge and sexuality, a […]

  • Chowder Fest

    English House

    The English Department cordially invites you to Chowder Fest!

  • Bring Your Own Lunch English Conversation Table

    ALCI Lounge, Jonas Clark 208

    Come by the ALCI Lounge (Jonas Clark 208) between 12 and 1 o’clock to have lunch with fellow students and staff, and practice speaking English. Though you have to bring […]

  • A/An: Book Launch and Poetry Reading

    Dana Commons, Higgins Lounge

    In this book launch, Professor Mandy Gutmann-Gonzalez reads from their poetry chapbook. A/An, which uses 17th-century court records of the Salem Witch Trials to uncover the power and violence residing within the language of the legal system.

  • Bring Your Own Lunch English Conversation Table

    ALCI Lounge, Jonas Clark 208

    Come by the ALCI Lounge (Jonas Clark 208) between 12 and 1 o’clock to have lunch with fellow students and staff, and practice speaking English. Though you have to bring […]

  • ALCI Orientation Spring 2025

    ALCI Lounge, Jonas Clark 208

    Incoming ALCI students are welcome to join us for our Spring 2025 Orientation.

  • The Power of Mapmaking in 17th-Century New England

    Clark University, Higgins Lounge, Dana Commons – 2nd Floor 36 Maywood Street, Worcester, MA, United States

    Nathan Braccio, Assistant Professor of History at Clark University, explores how both Algonquian-speaking communities and English colonists made maps as tools in a struggle for cultural and physical control of the Northeast.