Stockmal Reading with Poet and Memoirist Mary Bonina
Clark University is pleased to host the Worcester County Poetry Association’s annual Stockmal Reading, featuring Worcester native Mary Bonina.
Clark University is pleased to host the Worcester County Poetry Association’s annual Stockmal Reading, featuring Worcester native Mary Bonina.
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 […]
This lecture and Q&A will feature Demita Frazier, a Black feminist, writer, teacher, and social justice activist, who will offer reflections on the history and future of Black Feminisms.
The English Department cordially invites you to Chowder Fest!
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 […]
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.
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 […]
Finish your semester with a sweet, cozy event celebration of winter.
Incoming ALCI students are welcome to join us for our Spring 2025 Orientation.
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.
In this talk, Clark University professor Elizabeth Blake (English) focuses on T. S. Eliot’s “The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock” and H. D.’s “Priapus” to discuss the way modernist poets disrupt lyric traditions by setting intertextuality and phenomenological referentiality in tension in order to explore queer experience.
Ben Jamieson Stanley from the University of Delaware will discuss their recent book, “Precarious Eating: Narrating Environmental Harm” focused on fisheries and foraging as a point of entry to South Africa’s Western Cape, where bustling culinary and environmental tourism coincide with hunger and stratification.
Come study at a small research university with a strong liberal arts core.
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