Featured

 
Featured 

Latest News

By Sophia Lazo

A common stereotype of English majors is that they only want careers as teachers, writers, or in the publishing industry.

That’s not the reality.

Still, the categorizing is so common that people may not be aware of the actual possibilities available, and people tend to place English graduates inside a box that limits what they can accomplish in the future.

By Rachel Zak

Florida State’s first annual Festival of the Creative Arts begins Oct. 6 and continues through Oct. 9. This campus-wide collaboration highlights the talents and creativity of Florida State’s faculty and students, and FSU’s English Department is well represented across three of the scheduled panels.

In the fall of 2020, Destany Lewis committed to FSU, moving 2,000 miles from Grand Terrace, California. Photos by Christa Salerno/FSU Media Relations


By Abby Bruner

By Rachel Zak

Florida State University Department of English alumnae Mia Hernandez and Sabine Joseph were two of the 37 Summer 2022 graduates who completed their college career with a University Honors Program medallion. The Honors Program awards this medallion to those students who have the aptitude, strength, and passion to accomplish the goals they set for themselves, according to the program’s website.

When Jenifer Elmore was growing up, her family did not emphasize higher education opportunities: she was the first among them to seek an advanced degree.

Once she enrolled at Florida State University to pursue her master’s in English, though, she had already developed a multifaceted appreciation for academia.

“I was pretty sure by the time I was leaving Sewanee that I wanted to be an English professor,” says Elmore, referring to University of the South-Sewanee in Tennessee, where she earned her bachelor’s degree in 1988.

Florida State University English-Creative Writing alumna Lisa Nikolidakis returns to Tallahassee on Wednesday, Sept. 7, for an event at Midtown Reader that spotlights her new memoir, No One Crosses the Wolf. She visits the local bookstore for a reading and conversation with English Professor Diane Roberts.