Degrees & Programs English
Stretch your faith and your reason by journeying into the challenging worlds and words of others.
Go beyond required composition and literature courses into a department rich in writing and globally conscious literary study. Join a Westmont professor and 24 classmates for a semester in England, where literature comes alive in context. Be transformed by close encounters with novels, poems, short stories, plays, and essays from around the world. Explore creative writing, film studies, journalism, gender studies, teacher preparation, and internships. Easily add a second major to broaden your education.
Sample Schedule
Fall
- ENG 6H, 60 or 90
Spring
- ENG 44, 47, 60 or 90
Fall
- ENG 46 or another elective to fulfill requirements 2, 3, or 5
Spring
- ENG 134, 160, 165 or 185
- (requirement 6)
Fall
- Single Author/Pair of Authors (requirement 4)
- Upper-division elective to fulfill 2, 3 or 5
Spring
- Upper-division elective to fulfill 2, 3 or 5
- Upper-division literature or writing elective
Fall
- Upper-Div Lit or Writing Elective Internship
Spring
- ENG 192 or 199
Program Requirements:
Click on each link for course and program descriptions from the 2023-24 catalogue.
Course Descriptions
English Major
English Minor
Writing Minor
Read more about our writing minor
See college catalogue for our most recent minor requirements.
Faculty Highlights
Writes poems, studies religion in Latina/o/e literature, and tackles meaningful questions with students
Essayist and short story writer who loves guiding students through new creative practices
Fascinated by the nature of God’s eye, she examines photography and slave narratives
Studies the history of emotions and has taught medieval literature on three continents
Directs Writers’ Corner and coaches student writers
Administrative Assistant
Email: erhardin@551827.com
Tel: (805) 565-6079
Office: Reynolds Hall
Career Pathways
Westmont English majors and minors take their enhanced abilities in reading, writing, and unpacking complex subjects into a variety of career pathways:
- Law
Teaching - ESL/EFL Education
- Creative Writing
- Publishing & Editing
- Journalism
- Screenwriting
- Corporate Communications
- Ministry
- Marriage & Family Therapy
- Technology & Innovation
- Human Resources
- Medicine
- Health Services Administration
- Grant-Writing
- Marketing
- Digital Content Creation
- Non-Profit Administration
- Social Entrepreneurship
- And More!
See career paths for graduates who majored or minored in English at Westmont.
See recent internship placements for Westmont English majors
Please join the English Department in welcoming Assistant Professor Jonathan Diaz to our faculty! Prof. Diaz, holds an MFA in poetry and is a PhD candidate at Baylor University. This fall, he will be teaching ENG-002 Composition, ENG-006 Studies in Literature: God and Neighbor in U.S. Literature, and ENG-044 Studies in World Literature: Latin American Literature in English Translation.
Please join us in welcoming back Professor Emeritus Randy VanderMey, who taught at Westmont from 1990 to 2022. He is returning to teach ENG-104 Modern Grammar and Advanced Composition with a focus on Artificial Intelligence tools.
Assistant Professor of English Rebecca McNamara is currently co-leading England Semester with Dr. John Blondell (Theatre Arts). Additionally, in July 2024, Dr. McNamara gave a lecture on "Teaching with (Un)certainty" in which she explored trauma-informed pedagogy for Chaucerian literature.
Facing the Falls, a short documentary co-produced by Westmont's Wendy Eley Jackson, was selected for the Academy Award-qualifying Indy Shorts International Film Festival in summer 2024. From IMDB: "The film tells the story of international disability rights advocate and entrepreneur Cara Elizabeth Yar Khan. Deep in the throes of an aggressive, fatal muscle-wasting disease[...], Cara ventures out on a daring, 12-day expedition through the Grand Canyon."
Professor Emeritus of English Marilyn McEntyre has co-edited New Thoughts on Old Books: Why Read, Homer, Milton, or a Medieval Nun at a Time like This?, published by Cambridge Scholars in April 2023. This anthology contains chapters written by Paul Willis, Cheri Larsen Hoeckley, Randall VanderMey, and Candace Taylor.
The English Department recently acquired Race and Vision in the Nineteenth-Century United States, an anthology of essays edited by Shirley Samuels and published by Lexington Books in 2019. Assistant Professor Kya Mangrum published an essay within entitled "Beheld by the Eye of God: Photography and the Promise of Democracy in Frederick Douglass's The Hero Slave."
Caylie Cox spent four years learning from Westmont's stellar English faculty. She adventured through the British Isles on England Semester 2018, worked in the Writing Center, and completed a Major Honors Project with the department. With the strength of this writing sample, she was accepted - with only her B.A. - into the Rhetoric and Composition Ph.D. program at TCU in Fort Worth, Texas. She also received a fellowship and an extra grant for academic achievement. She now researches writing as storytelling while she teaches first-year composition at TCU. Her career goal is to follow in her professors' footsteps and teach writing at the college level. Her Westmont education prepared her well not only for the academic rigor of graduate school, but for keeping her faith strong in an unfamiliar context. She couldn't have asked for a better foundation for her dream of earning a Ph.D. and demonstrating Christ's love through teaching others.
Kristin George Bagdanov is a poet and PhD candidate in English Literature at UC Davis. She graduated from Westmont in 2009 and earned her MFA in poetry from Colorado State University in 2015. At CSU she taught creative writing and composition and became invested in the field of ecopoetics. She also began working for Ruminate Magazine, a literary journal founded by Westmont alumna Brianna Van Dyke that publishes contemplative literature and art. She has served as the poetry editor there for the past 5 years. At U.C. Davis, she studies ecocriticism and poetry and teaches environmental and American literature courses. She is currently working on a dissertation titled “Nuclear Forms: Poetry, Politics, and Ecology,” which explores how American poetry addresses and manifests America’s “nuclear unconscious” during the Cold War period. Articles relating to her project are forthcoming from Oxford Literary Review and Symploke. Her poems have been published widely in journals such as Boston Review, Colorado Review, and Denver Quarterly and first full-length collection of poetry, Fossils in the Making, was published in spring 2019 by Black Ocean. Her chapbook Diurne, which won the 2019 Sunken Garden Poetry Prize, will be published by Tupelo Press in summer 2019. She has recently received fellowships from Phi Kappa Phi, the Lilly Foundation, and Vermont Studio Center. More information at kristingeorgebagdanov.com or on twitter at @KristinGeorgeB.
Tamara Lang is an author of creative nonfiction. After graduating Summa Cum Laude from Westmont College as a 2013 recipient of the Oxford English Dictionary award, Tamara moved to Jeju Island, South Korea, where she taught English while maintaining a travel blog at tamaralang.com and writing on a freelance basis for The Jeju Weekly. After leaving Korea, Tamara blogged her way through Western Europe, living for a short period at the Shakespeare and Company Bookshop in Paris as a resident writer.
Tamara is a lifelong lover of marine science and environmental education. Recently, this passion led her to found the LA River Trek, a watershed education campaign which entails biking and hiking along the Los Angeles River and tributaries while writing along the way in order to engage the public concept of an urban watershed. Tamara has been published in Ruminate Magazine and The Jeju Weekly, and her memoir The Year of the Squid Boats is currently awaiting publication.
A momentary resident of Long Beach, California, Tamara Lang works part-time on a whale watch boat between running the LA River Trek. She plans to move to South or Central America to pursue a position in marine education while working on her next memoir.
Ryan McDermott is an Associate Professor of English at the University of Pittsburgh. He graduated from Westmont in 2000 with the long-term goals of writing novels and teaching religion and literature. He was rejected by MFA programs three years in a row. In the meantime, with the web design skills he learned launching the Phoenix website, he landed a job as Webmaster for a furniture store. He then followed his wife to West Virginia to teach junior high in a classical school, and then to China to teach English literature and journalism at a private university. Letting go of the MFA dream, Ryan pursued a Masters in Theological Studies at Duke University Divinity School (2003-2005), where he was drawn to medieval philosophy and theology. He proceeded to the Ph.D. program in English at the University of Virginia (where he was accepted off the waitlist). At the University of Pittsburgh, where he has taught since 2010, he teaches primarily medieval and early modern literature and culture. In his research, he works at the intersection of religious history, modern theology, and literary studies. He has published articles in Modern Theology as well as leading journals of medieval literary studies. His first book is Tropologies: Ethics and Invention in England, c. 1350-1600 (University of Notre Dame Press, 2016). He is working on a second book about medieval and Reformation-era vernacular theology that challenges several prominent stories told by modern theologians and secularization theorists about how we became modern. He is also writing a theology of incorruptibility. Ryan and his wife, Darrah, have six kids. He still hopes to write a novel someday.
Kathryn Patrick Wimmer ’18 is a Senior Quality Assurance Specialist at a company that produces eLearning content for healthcare organizations. In this role, she copy edits courses for proofreading errors and alignment with internal standards. While at Westmont, Kathryn was on the Horizon newspaper staff, interned at Santa Barbara Magazine, and participated in England Semester. After graduating summa cum laude as the 2018 recipient of the Oxford English Dictionary award, she completed a master’s degree in Modern and Contemporary Literature and Culture at the University of St Andrews in Scotland. She now lives in North Carolina with her husband and their dog.
Cleo (Koh) Polman is a lawyer specializing in capital markets work at the law firm of Simpson, Thacher & Bartlett LLP in London. Originally from Singapore, Cleo moved to the United States to attend Westmont College, where she graduated magna cum laude in 2009. She then moved to upstate New York, where she obtained her J.D. at Cornell Law School. There, she discovered her passion for ballroom and latin dancing and spent her free time training and traveling for competitions. After graduating, she began her career as an attorney at Latham & Watkins LLP in New York. She and her husband, Christian, moved to London in 2014, where she continues to dance and where together they enjoy theatre, museum-hopping and traveling.
Olivia Stowell is a Ph.D. student in Communication & Media at the University of Michigan, where she researches discursive and representational formations of race and racism on reality television and in popular culture. After graduating from Westmont, she received her M.A. in English from Villanova University, where she also worked as a writing tutor and served as an editor for Villanova’s graduate student research journal. Her time as an English major provided her with a strong foundation of skills in writing and analysis, which has equipped her to not only publish peer-reviewed academic articles, but also to pursue public-facing cultural criticism, with her work appearing in venues like The Los Angeles Review of Books, Post45 Contemporaries, ASAP/J, Avidly, and elsewhere. In particular, her experiences on England Semester with Dr. Delaney (where she attended over 50 plays), her coursework with Dr. Mangrum, and her senior research thesis supervised by Dr. Larsen Hoeckley enabled her to pursue a future in public writing and scholarly research.
Ben Taylor is a content strategist at Dropbox. The San Francisco-based tech company lets you store, share and secure all your files, from photos to documents to videos. Ben and his team serve as the voice of Dropbox, defining the brand’s written style and explaining its features in simple, human language.
Since he graduated from Westmont in 2009, Ben has made a career out of bringing an editorial mindset to the world of technology. Before joining Dropbox, he worked at a Santa Barbara startup called Graphiq (formerly, FindTheBest). The company provides insights and visualizations across dozens of topics, from sports to health to politics. While working there, Ben pitched senior management on an in-house editorial team, which he eventually grew to 12 people. He and his team of writers went on to publish hundreds of data-driven, journalistic stories across major online publications, including TIME, AOL, MSN, Yahoo, Fox News, The Huffington Post and Sports Illustrated.
Ben is fascinated by how editorial content and technology can come together to create powerful stories. He looks forward to collaborating with writers and software developers in the decades to come.
Ben’s fondest memories from Westmont include London Theatre Mayterm and England Semester, where he studied with Professors Paul Delaney and Elizabeth Hess. His exposure to British and Irish theatre inspired a film and television blog — TheCroakingFrog.com — where he writes to this day.
Taylor Tejada '19 is an elementary school teacher and screenwriter. Taylor teaches English and Creative Writing and loves explaining the meaning behind poems and, when he's feeling daring, the use of semicolons. As a teacher, he hopes to embody everything that the English Department at Westmont taught him -- namely, that stories are the best thing in the world and that everyone has one to share.
After Westmont, Taylor received his MFA in screenwriting from the University of Southern California's prestigious School of Cinematic Arts. Taylor's master's thesis was a feature-length script exploring the world of death metal from the perspective of a runaway teen. Currently, Taylor writes scripts inspired by his Peruvian and Quechuan heritage, where Latine and indigenous characters are forced to confront their pasts after making the biggest mistake of their lives.
Susan Emily VanZanten (formerly Gallagher) is a Professor of English at Seattle Pacific University, where she teaches American literature, African literature, writing, and narrative theory. After graduating from Westmont College in 1978, she attended Emory University—following in the footsteps of Westmont mentor Paul Delaney—where she earned her Ph.D. in American literature in 1982.
Following graduate school, Susan discovered a new teaching and research interest in African literature, writing one of the first American academic studies of the South African novelist J.M. Coetzee, A Story of South African: J.M. Coetzee’s Fiction in Context (Harvard UP, 1989). She also began her career-long work in thinking and writing about the relationship of Christian faith, literary studies, and the scholarly life. After teaching at Covenant College and Calvin College, she joined the SPU faculty in 1993. The founding director of the SPU Center for Scholarship and Faculty Development, which she led for eight years, she returned to full-time teaching in 2010. Joining the Mission: A Guide for (Mainly) New College Faculty (Eerdmans 2011) draws on her years of faculty development work to provide a practical guide for new Christian college faculty.
Some of Susan’s other publications include Literature Through the Eyes of Faith (Harper, 1991); Postcolonial Literature and the Biblical Call to Justice (U of Missouri P, 1994); Mending a Tattered Faith: Devotions with Emily Dickinson (Cascade, 2010), twenty-three peer-reviewed academic essays, numerous articles and book reviews for a general audience, and, most recently, an academic memoir, Reading a Different Story: A Christian Scholar’s Journey from America to Africa (Baker 2013), which includes an account of the influence of Westmont on her academic life.
Susan has one son, two cats, and a lovely little Seattle garden that produces raspberries, flowers, herbs, and vegetables. She enjoys hiking, theatre, travelling, and the opera.