Schedule of Events
English Capstone Presentations and Department Writing Awards
Overton Hall
English majors deliver papers and presentations as part of their senior Capstone experience, a process combining independent and mentored research and creative writing. Students’ work reflects a high level of academic achievement and has often been presented, in part or in full, at regional and national undergraduate conferences such as the Southern California Conference on Undergraduate Research (SCCUR), the National Conference on Undergraduate Research (NCUR), and Sigma Tau Delta, the International English Honors Society.
Each year, the English Department awards a number of prizes for student writing, including the Mark van Doren prize for Poetry, the Jack Ledbetter Prize for Excellence in Writing, and the Koa-Plumeria Prizes for Best English 111 Prose Composition and Best Morning Glory Submission. These sessions will include student readings from the prize-winning essays and creative works.
Student Abstracts
Looking at The Scarlet Letter Through a Feminist Lens
Student(s):
Megan Acosta
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Bryan Rasmussen
Blended Worship: A Lutheran Response to the Worship Styles of the Charismatic Movement
Student(s):
Sydney Carlson
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Joan Wines
Steinbeck’s Grapes: A Defense of The Grapes of Wrath and Its Place in Higher Education
Student(s):
Lauren Goss
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Bryan Rasmussen
Expanding Foreign Language Instruction in the U.S.: Sooner, Later, or Never?
Student(s):
Julie Griffin
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Joan Wines
Transforming Journalism One Blog at a Time
Student(s):
Lindsey Kuramoto
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Joan Wines
Rewriting Homer: Tennyson’s and Joyce’s Lotus Eaters
Student(s):
Danae Laviolette
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Joan Wines
Mental Illness in One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest
Student(s):
Cameron Lewis
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Bryan Rasmussen
A Many-Sided Truth: Interdisciplinary Scholarship and Virginia Woolf's The Waves
Student(s):
Sarah Peterson
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Bryan Rasmussen
Steinbeck's Stereotypes
In an attempt to find a definitive answer to many cultural literary critics’ arguments on Steinbeck’s work, I looked at a multitude of sources (including movie representations, literary reviews, and criticisms) and have an interactive presentation that determines the fairness of Steinbeck’s Tortilla Flat in terms of accurate cultural representation.
Student(s):
Cooper Smith
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Bryan Rasmussen
Self-Inrospection in Sidney's "Astrophil and Stella"
Student(s):
Elizabeth Whetstone
Faculty Mentor:
Dr. Bryan Rasmussen