Department of English
What can you do with English?
But we do language. That may be the measure of our lives.- Toni Morrison, Sophie Kerr Visiting Writer and Nobel Prize Winner
At Washington College, you can do everything and anything with words: critical and creative writing; journalism, editing & publishing; analysis of literature and media, both old and new; how to read a book and how to make one. You will learn from celebrated visiting writers and scholars who join your classes or read at the Rose O'Neill Literary House. (Toni Morrison visited in 1987 and read from an unpublished novel titled Beloved). You will engage in a variety of experiential learning opportunities, from class trips to study abroad programs to internships in communications, editing, journalism, publishing and other fields. You will be guided by a faculty mentor and develop independent research for your Senior Capstone Experience. As a critic, editor, essayist, journalist, poet, and storyteller you will become knowledgeable and skilled in analysis, creativity, inquiry, and persuasion. You will do language.
Washington College is also home to the largest undergraduate literary award in the country: the Sophie Kerr Prize. The prize is awarded each year to a graduating senior chosen for their "promise for future fulfillment in the field of literary endeavor." In a world of expanding communication, we need intelligent readers and artful writers to make meaningful connections. Graduates in English, Creative Writing, and Journalism, Editing & Publishing make meaning of the world in words.
Student Opportunities
Experiential Learning in Editing, Journalism, Printing, Publishing, Scholarship, Writing
Internships
We support numerous Internships in career fields where English majors, creative writers, and journalists and editors are in very high demand. You can receive up to four academic credits for an academic internship. If you are interested in doing an internship for credit, contact Dr. Elizabeth O’Connor, the department’s internship coordinator, to discuss your plans and options.
Apply for the Sophie Kerr Promise Grants, a program that gives students funding to support experiemental learning and professional opportunities. Learn more by visiting the Sophie Kerr Promise Grants page.
Learn More about InternshipsPublications
While studying on campus, you can submit your work to several entirely student-led and award-winning publicationsincluding The Collegian (literary magazine), The Elm(newspaper), The Pegasus (yearbook), and The Washington College Review (journal of the liberal arts and sciences). You might also become an editor of one of these publications with a paid internship.
The Literary House
A pretty unique place in the world. For students interested in any and all forms of writing, literature, editing & publishing, and creative endeavor, the Rose O'Neill Literary House is the metaphorical candy store.
Visit the Literary House
Prizes
In addition to the big one, the $78,280 Sophie Kerr Prize, there are other opportunities for Washington College writers to make their mark, and make a few bucks. The English department each year awards the Lamond Senior Capstone Award, a $500 cash-prize, for the best SCE in English.
The Rose O'Neill Literary House awards prizes forpoetry, genre fiction, and environmental writing.
Study Abroad
English majors and minors fluent in a language taught at Washington College, such as French, German, Spanish, Italian, or Japanese, may be applicable for certain non-English-language exchange programs that may offer courses on English-language literature.
For students not fluent in another language, the Washington College exchange programs listed below have been known to offer English-language courses suited to English majors and minors (course availability may vary from semester to semester). Please check with Washington College’s Office of International Programs for availability.
Some of the most popular destinations for English Majors are Royal Holloway, University of London; University College Cork, Ireland; University of St Andrews, Scotland; Bond University, Australia; and Yonsei University, South Korea.
Honors Societies
Sigma Tau Delta is an international English Honor Society for students who excel in the study of English language and literature.
This honor society offers students opportunities to enrich their education and careers. The Alpha Mu Nu chapter at Washington College is headed by Prof. Liz O'Connor and Prof. Katie Charles.
The Sophie Kerr Legacy
Who was Sophie Kerr?
Sophie Kerr, a successful writer in the early 20th century from Denton on the Eastern Shore, created an endowment for the English department. This endowment stands as the nation's largest undergraduate literary prize. Each year, Kerr's gift is awarded to a graduating senior who submits a portfolio of their work that is then reviewed by a committee.
Sophie Kerr
Impact of the Endowment on Washington College Experience
This endowment enables us to bring to Chestertown and to your classroom well-known writers, editors, and scholars and host literary events and readings throughout the year. Take a look at upcoming literary events sponsored by Sophie Kerr and the Rose O'Neill Literary House. The Sophie Kerr endowment also supports the nation’s largest undergraduate literary prize (large as in $78,820, larger than the Pulitzer Prize).
Learn More about the Sophie Kerr Legacy
Sophie Kerr Promise Grants
WC students who are declared English majors may apply for financial support for eligible projects and expenses, up to a total of $3,000 over the course of their time at the College. Individual grants typically range from $500 to $1,500. Students may apply for multiple grants while enrolled, and can use the funds for multiple purposes.
Learn More
What's Different Here? Let Us Count the Ways
$78,820
The amount English major Eylie Sasajima received in 2023 for winning the Sophie Kerr Prize, the largest undergraduate literary prize in the country.
That's more than the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize, combined. In more than 50 years of the prize, over $1.5 million has been awarded. Watch 2020 Prize winner Mary Sprague, who also took home more than 63k, interviewd by CBS News. And that's only part of the story. Each year the other half of the endowment supports scholarships, books, events with writers and scholars, and experiential learning opportunities for all majors and minors.
100+
The number of internships English majors have completed since 2018.
Recent internship experiences: Apollo Theater (NYC), Capital Gazette (Annapolis), Copper Canyon Press (Port Townsend, WA), C-SPAN (DC), Delaware Today Magazine (Wilmington), Law Offices (various locations), Library of Congress (DC), Maryland House of Delegates (Annapolis), National Portrait Gallery (DC), Today Media Custom Communications (Baltimore) Triada Literary Agency (PA). On campus: Cherry Tree, The Elm, O'Neill Literary House, Pegasus, Washington College Review.
100%
The number of English majors completing a Senior Capstone Experience or thesis, independent research and writing guided by a faculty mentor.
Recent thesis topics: Dantes’ Divine Comedy in Horror Films, Mythical Aesthetics in One Thousand and One Nights and Soul Eater, Music Connection in Paradise Loss, Mary Bennett in Pride and Prejudice, Deviation from Proper Womanhood in Northanger Abbey, Gender, Race, and Class in Jane Eyre and Wide Sargasso Sea, Oratory Art in the Narrative of Frederick Douglass, Gender Confinement and Hysteria in “The Yellow Wallpaper”, War World War I trauma in The Hobbit, Asylum Poetics in Anne Sexton, T.S. Elliot, and Christopher Smart, Creation of a modern witch in Stephen King’s Carrie, Gender Trauma in The Handmaid's Tale, Classic Fairy Tales in The Witcher Series, Gender Disparities in Harry Potter, Queer Relationship in Butler's BloodChild and The Fifth Season, Gender Depictions of AI in A Closed and Common Orbit.