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According to Associate Professor Anna-Lisa Halling, playwriting gave nuns unprecedented freedom—which may explain why it became so popular.
How do you know when a novel is well translated? The key lies in keeping the author’s voice.
Good writing packs an emotional punch—award-winning author Martine Leavitt teaches how to throw one at full force.
Memory, film, and community—Professor Marc Yamada demonstrates how Kore-eda Hirokazu uses film techniques to create worlds that encourage community in the 2024 P. A. Christensen Lecture.
Two English faculty members become finalists in BYU Studies poetry contests.
Professors Erik Larson and Brian Price find their groove with the Black Student Union and the Rhythm ’N’ Soul Collective.
English Symposium keynote speaker Michael Whittle inspires students by providing a peek into his own creative process.
Faculty from Comparative Arts & Letters share findings from a two-year project to elevate teaching in their department.
Everyone has a story. Mary-Alice Daniel’s has taken her halfway across the world.
Doug Weatherford releases a new English translation of Mexico’s most well-known novel.
College of Humanities professors dive deep into Church history.
What do you really need to tell a story? For Steve Tuttle, it’s just a single page.