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Enhance your abilities in reading, writing, and analytical reasoning. Apply these skills to adapt to a rapidly evolving world and carve out your unique path. Suffolk's English program equips you with comprehensive language proficiency to steer your personal and professional journey while becoming an influential voice across industries.
By exploring narrative techniques, rhetoric, analytical writing, poetry, and lyrical prose, you'll examine socially relevant themes from community-level to worldwide perspectives. You'll craft original works, sharpen your rhetorical insight, skillfully incorporate historical and theoretical frameworks, harness creative expression, and acquire techniques to connect with varied audiences.
Graduates frequently enter fields such as publishing, government, education, library sciences, healthcare, arts management, journalism, and marketing. Many also pursue graduate studies in disciplines like literature, linguistics, creative writing, rhetoric and composition, or law.
English program students will:
Conduct detailed textual analysis to formulate unique interpretations, Produce imaginative works in fiction, poetry, and creative nonfiction, Master productive writing techniques and craftsmanship, Examine and evaluate textual structures, styles, and formal elements, Construct research-based arguments supported by contextual evidence, Acquire extensive knowledge of literary traditions and historical developments.
As an English major, you'll examine and produce texts across diverse genres, forms, and literary, cultural, and historical settings. Foundational courses immerse you in global literature while teaching textual analysis theories and methods. You'll also select from numerous upper-level elective offerings.
Literary study cultivates universally applicable and life-changing competencies including attentive reading, critical analysis, and rhetorical sensitivity. This concentration offers an expansive course selection, from introductory surveys of seminal works to advanced electives examining varied authors, genres, experiences, literary trends, and cultural-historical contexts. Under faculty mentorship, you'll engage in vibrant classroom dialogues and exchange perspectives with fellow students.