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Department of Literature

Undergraduate Study

The literature BA program offers students the chance to choose one of four exciting tracks, or focuses of study. In the Literary Studies track, students come to understand why literature matters: how it defines culture, the human, and our values, and how it facilitates empathy. The Cinema Studies track allows students to study literature alongside cinema and to discern the ways that cinema as a language and art shapes our society. In our new Transcultural Studies track, students focus on various cultural texts (such as literature, theater, film, television, and social media) in a global and multicultural context. Lastly, the Creative Writing track gives students the opportunity to hone their craft and improve their poetry or prose in close-knit workshops. In each of the tracks, students work with dedicated, award-winning faculty who pay close attention to the needs of each individual.

The department also offers minors in Cinema Studies, Creative Writing, Literature, and Transcultural Studies.

A combined BA/MA is also available.

Graduate Study

MFA alum publications.

See more MFA alum publications in the program Wall of Fame.

Sarai Johnson and her book Grown Women. Headshot courtesy of Laura Metzler Photography

Literature ·

Sarai Johnson’s Novel “Grown Women” Published to Literary Acclaim 

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Events

A Poetry Reading and Conversation on Craft with Regie Cabico,
April 7, 5:00–6:30, Battelle-Tompkins Atrium:
Students are invited to bring poems to share for possible inclusion in Mid-Atlantic Review.

Why Study in the Department of Literature?

Literature majors garner excellent writing and communication skills. They know how to learn, to analyze and comprehend other viewpoints, and to argue for ideas. Literature majors have a range of employment and internship opportunities. Ninety percent of our majors hold internships. In terms of careers, they work in publishing, public radio, law, education, advocacy, and politics.

Employers in all sectors are increasingly saying that they need employees who can write well and communicate. Lit majors find themselves well prepared for the competitive job market. They also take advantage of a wide array of study abroad opportunities. See our full list of literature course offerings in the Course Catalog.

Discover CAS: The Humanities

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Explore our campus community and local outreach efforts.

Folio

Folio is a nationally recognized literary journal sponsored by the College of Arts and Sciences at American University in Washington, DC. Since 1984, we have published original creative work by both new and established authors. Past issues have included work by Michael Reid Busk, Billy Collins, William Stafford, and Bruce Weigl, and interviews with Michael Cunningham, Charles Baxter, Amy Bloom, Ann Beattie, and Walter Kirn. We look for well-crafted poetry and prose that is bold and memorable.

Spotlight

Ralvell Rogers

Ralvell RogersMFA, Creative Writing

MFA Creative Writing candidate Ralvell Rogers is making his mark on the literary world. He is the author of The Kansas City Boys Choir: Providing Hope for Tomorrow, which has been endorsed by luminaries Kevin Powell, G.S. Griffin, and Congressman Emanual Cleaver II. Ralvell has also established his own publishing company, Ambitious Stories, LLC, out of Kansas City, MO. He founded it earlier this year to focus on "often unheard, yet riveting and inspiring stories from the heart."

My time at AU has been brilliant in the fact that I've already learned much about what it means to be a Writer with a capital "W" and more importantly, a literary scholar. Though there is an obvious focus on our course work, it's been made clear to me that our work isn't exactly all that matters in the classroom. We are continuously connecting our work in class to the lives that we live on a daily basis and the world that we all live in, and I think that is very important for writers and entrepreneurs in the publishing sector because we are essentially the historians of our respective generations.

Bulletins

Richard C. Sha won the 2026 Keats Shelley Distinguished Scholar Award and co-edited The Rise of Rhythm Studies: Mediating Dimension, Discipline, and Scale (Bloomsbury, 2026). 

MFA alum Nicholas Bogg published Baldwin: A Love Story to rave reviews in publications including the Washington PostNew York Times, the New Yorker, and Literary Hub. He is also a finalist for the 2025 Kirkus Prize. 

MFA alum Emily Holland was awarded the 2025 Jean Feldman Poetry Prize from the Washington Writers’ Publishing House and her debut collection of poetry, Notifications On, will be published in January 2027.

Rachel Louise Snyder published "The Real Epstein Cover-Up" in the New York Times.  

Richard C. Sha will receive a 2026 Keats Shelley Association of America Distinguished Scholar Award in Toronto in January 2026. He was also awarded a Distinguished Scholar in the Humanities Fellowship by the Centre L’Innovation et Création at the University of Grenoble in France. He published “An Early but Revealing Emotion Model: James Papez and His Emotion Circuit” in Circulating Now.

David Keplinger received the 2025 Joseph Brodsky Rome Prize in Literature and will spend five months in Rome.  

MFA Alumna Patricia Coral’s thesis collection Women Surrounded by Water was longlisted for the 2024 National Book Critics Circle Award.

Deborah Payne's The Business of English Restoration Theatre, 1660-1700 was awarded the 2025 David Bevington prize for Best New Book from the Medieval & Renaissance Drama Society (MRDS).

Myra Sklarew.We mourn the passing of MFA program cofounder and former Yaddo president Myra Sklarew, teacher and mentor to over 10,000 students during her years at American University.

Andrew Bertaina’s The Body is a Temporary Gathering Place was named a “Best Book We Read in 2024” by the Independent Book Review and received a “starred review” from Kirkus Reviews

Rachel Louise Snyder (Literature) won the Independent Publishing Book Awards 2024 Gold Medal in the category of Autobiography/Memoir for 2023's Women We Buried, Women We Burned 

David Pike published After the End (Manchester University Press, 2024), a book about prepping and post apocalyptic fictions since the Cold War.
 

 

Kyle Dargan served as editor for The Memory Librarian: And Other Stories of Dirty Computer with Janelle Monáe.

Dolen Perkins-Valdez won the 2023 NAACP Image Award for fiction for her most recent novel, Take My Hand

Ames Jewart won the Undergraduate Humanities Workshop at the 32nd annual American University Mathias Student Research Conference.