One Theme, Endless Possibilities for English Majors

Few degrees provide the breadth of options available to English graduates, who find success in fields that include law, publishing, business and education.

The English major and minor alike offer a multi-disciplinary approach to literary study that forges connections between texts and contexts, as well as between the literary arts and studies in the humanities.

Our English degree programs enjoin students to explore the literary arts as a contact zone where history, critical analysis, theory and creative writing converge.

Programs of Study

The English major and minor is designed to help our students develop their critical thinking, cultural awareness, creativity and analytical writing.

The Creative Writing minor is designed to develop writing skills from the beginner to the advanced levels, providing for both casual writers from across the disciplines and more serious writers considering an MFA or a writing career.

Students in the Digital Humanities minor apply computational models for analyzing and visualizing data to the inquiry and study of traditional humanities disciplines, such as literature and languages, philosophy, history, religious studies, and the arts, as well as the social sciences and business.

Explore Literature in All its Forms

Our interdisciplinary approach to the literary arts encourages students to make complex connections, craft persuasive arguments and discover innovative ways of approaching real-world problems.

Through courses in poetry, fiction, drama, non-fiction, graphic novels, cinema and new media, students examine the world through multiple lenses, navigate a variety of literatures and cultures in English and pursue new ways of seeing received truths.

With two journals of culture and letters, and with the Creative Writing minor offering courses in poetry, fiction, creative non-fiction and playwriting, the English Department also offers many chances for students to produce literature of their own and share their unique perspectives.

Recent Accolades

Organizations involved in assessing U.S. colleges and universities continually cite Stonehill as being among the best in the nation when it comes to value, outcomes and a commitment to making the world a better place. See full list of accolades.

Featured English Courses

British Literature to 1700

Required Course
This course is an introduction to English literary history through poetry, drama and narrative from Anglo- Saxon roots to the development of British literary genres in the medieval and early modern periods.

Madness and Insight: Modernist Psychopathology

What do we learn about ourselves from looking through the lens of madness? This course will explore how narratives of insanity from the 18th century to the present have shaped our understanding of human cognition, perception, emotion, desire and the unconscious. Authors to be considered Descartes, Poe, Dostoevsky, Gilman, Schnitzler, Woolf, Kafka, Breton, Didion, Pynchon and DeLillo.

Competitive Advantages

Stonehill Undergraduate Research Experience

The Stonehill Undergraduate Research Experience (SURE) is an opportunity for students who have completed their first year at Stonehill to perform significant, publishable, full-time research under the guidance of and in collaboration with an experienced faculty researcher.

Internship Opportunities

We offer direct work training in internships at a wide variety of workplaces that value an English major’s many skills – from newspapers and magazines to television stations and theater companies to law firms and marketing agencies.

English Society

The English Society is a student-led club that gives students the opportunity to engage with and enjoy literature and culture outside of the classroom. The English Society also organizes the annual Undergraduate Literature Conference in conjunction with Bridgewater State University and UMass Boston.

Honor Society: Lambda Epsilon Sigma

Stonehill’s campus-wide honor society, Lambda Epsilon Sigma, recognizes students from all areas of study. Students who have demonstrated a well-rounded thirst for knowledge are invited to apply.

English Majors Will Develop Proficiency in the Following Five Areas

  • Understand how to identify textual patterns, perform close analysis, synthesize ideas and formulate compelling questions suitable for intellectual inquiry.
  • Integrate authoritative sources into their own work and question authoritative truth claims effectively and productively.
  • Distinguish between critical argumentation and opinion/summary. Be able to define key terms, identify potential counterarguments and structure evidence logically.
  • Develop the ability to articulate, both orally and in writing, interpretations of literature that draw on the skills of critical thinking. In particular, formulate a substantive central claim (thesis), organize analysis supporting this claim, and locate and effectively integrate textual evidence. Written expression may also include creative work, such as fiction, poetry or creative nonfiction.
  • Locate textual evidence and create an argument using that evidence for support.
  • Be able to analyze language simultaneously on multiple levels: starting with the smallest unit (close reading of individual words, phrases and images), connecting those details to mid-level units (themes, scenes, sections, stanzas), and taking into account the larger structure, movement and context of a literary work.
  • Understand the mutually shaping relationship between texts and their various contexts.
  • Learn to recognize both continuities and disjunctures in themes, forms and styles of literary expression across genre and historical periods; if appropriate to the design of the course, students will also learn to make connections and observe differences between distinct geographical regions and cultural traditions.
  • Become conversant in the analytical practices (including research methods, theoretical frameworks, historically-relevant debates and formal modes of critical address) that constitute literary interpretation as a scholarly discipline.
  • Develop basic familiarity with the three main genres of literature: fiction, poetry and drama. Acquire knowledge of rhetorical conventions and literary devices that are central to these genres.
  • Effectively transfer the analytical skills learned in the literature classroom to other disciplines and to the critical understanding of the culture at large.
  • Understand the value of studying literature, the arts and culture, even if the student’s intended field of study is not in the humanities.  
  • Learn to appreciate literature as an aesthetic experience both distinct from and in resonance with other forms of expression.
  • Develop appropriate research practices to locate and assess the value of printed and electronic resources.
  • Learn to use the inter-library loan system and electronic databases of scholarly publications.
  • Master proper citation format and eliminate plagiarism.

Declaring an English major at Stonehill has empowered me to apply myself— to apply my pen to paper, my knowledge to texts, and my curiosity to relevant and timely questions.

Where Our English Graduates Work

Stonehill English graduates go on to work at a range of notable organizations. Continue exploring where Stonehill graduates work. 

Outside Partnerships & Special Programs

Stonehill College has developed academic affiliations with colleges and universities that enable our students to augment the degree they earn at Stonehill with graduate and undergraduate degrees that further enhance their opportunities.

Earn Two Degrees in 5 Years

The Skyhawk Accelerated Dual Degree allows Stonehill students to earn a bachelor's degree and master's degree from Stonehill College in five years. Eligible students receive early and expedited admission to their graduate program of interest and can begin working toward a master's degree in education, data analytics or marketing during their senior year.

Contact Information

Jared F. Green

Jared F. Green

Professor of English, English Department Chair, Digital Humanities Program Director
Cushing Martin 119
English