Michael Davros
Michael
Davros
Instructor
English
College of Arts and Sciences
(773) 442-5831
Expertise
American literature, including African American and ethnic American
Courses Taught
ENGL 101 Writing I
ENGL 102 Writing II
ENGL 109 FYE: Chicago's Literary Diversity: Reading Chicago's Neighborhoods
ENGL 201 World of Poetry
ENGL 202 World of Drama
ENGL 203 World of Fiction
ZHON 192 Introduction to the Humanities: Race and Ethnicity
ZHON 192 Introduction to the Humanities: Combat Literature
Honors Colloquium: Classical Culture, Study Tour in Greece
Honors Colloquium: Greek American Literature (Byzantium v the Caliphate), Study Tour in Greece
Research Interests
Greek American literature, African American literature, Combat literature
Education

Ph.D. University of Illinois at Chicago
M.A.H. Louisiana State University
B.A. Tulane University

Selected Publications

Greeks in Chicago.  Chicago: Arcadia Publishing, 2009.

“The Maze: A Historical Novel.” Review of The Maze.  By Panos Karnezis.  The National Herald.  15 February 2009. 

“A Greek Stylist: History Contests with Progress and Loses.” Review of Little Infamies. By Panos Karnezis.  The National Herald. 15 February 2009.

 “A Sense of Sacred Space.”&Բ; Review of  Ecclesia: Greek Orthodox Churches of the Chicago Metropolis.  By Panos Fiorentinos.  The National Herald.  15 February 2009. 

“Loss and Transformation on the Road in Jeffrey Eugenides’s Middlesex and Don DeLillo’s   Underworld.”&Բ; The Image of the Road in Literature, Media and Society.  Ed. Will Wright and Steven Kaplan.      Pueblo, Co:  The Society for the Interdisciplinary Study of Social Imagery.  August 2005.  148-153.

Room LWH 2009
91Porn
5500 North St. Louis Avenue
Chicago, IL 60625
United States

(773) 442-5831
Office Hours
Spring 2024 student hours
2:15-3:15 p.m. Monday and Wednesday, in person
10:40 a.m.-12:00 p.m. Tuesday and Thursday, in person
Zoom meetings available by appointment

Email the day before to schedule Zoom meetings at m-davros@neiu.edu
Main Campus
Curriculum Vitae
Evan Cantor
Evan
Cantor
Instructor
English
College of Arts and Sciences
(773) 442-5813
Expertise
English, Composition, Literature, Cinema Studies
Courses Taught
ENGL 101 Writing I
ENGL 102 Writing II
ENGL 202 World of Drama
ENGL 203 World of Fiction
SCED 305 Student Teaching Supervisor
Research Interests
Cinema
Education

M.Ed. Secondary English Education, Loyola Chicago, 1998
B.A. Cinema Studies, University of Illinois, Champaign/Urbana, 1996
Post-Master's, Education Leadership and Research, University of Illinois, Chicago
 

 

 

Room LWH 2022
91Porn
5500 North St. Louis Avenue
Chicago, IL 60625
United States

(773) 442-5813
Office Hours
Spring 2024 Student Hours

Monday and Wednesday: 3:35-4:05 p.m.
Contact in advance via email/online at e-cantor@neiu.edu to set up appointments.
Main Campus
Tim Libretti
Timothy
R
Libretti
Acting Associate Dean
English
College of Arts and Sciences
(773) 442-5823
Courses Taught
ENGL 101 Writing I
ENGL 203 World of Fiction
ENGL 218 American Literature: Beginnings -1865
ENGL 219 American Literature: 1865-Present
ENGL 345 Practical Criticism
ENGL 357 Land, Labor, and Literature
ENGL 369 American Realism
ENGL 371 Studies in Women's Literature
ENGL 381 African-American Literature
ENGL 382 Chicana/o Literature
ENGL 410 Literary Method and Practice
ENGL 430 Studies in Literary Criticism
ENGL 448D Hawthorne and Melville
ENGL 449M Studies in the American Novel
ENGL 449N Ethnic Literatures
ENGL 468 US Literary Modernism and Its Other
WGS 301E The Radical Feminist Imagination
Research Interests
US Literature, Working-Class Literature, Multi-Ethnic Literature, Marxism
Education

PhD  English, University of Michigan, 1995
MA   English, University of Michigan, 1991
BA    English summa cum laude, Cornell University, 1989

 

Selected Publications

Books
The Making of U.S. Warking-Class Literature and Consciousness: The Nations, Genders, and Sexualities of U.S. Proletarian Literature from the 1930s to the Present (forthcoming from University of Mississippi Press).

Articles and Chapters
"A Proletarian Book of Laughter and Remembering: The Cry and the Dedication and the Inter/National Class Struggle" in Writer in Exile/Writer in Revolt Critical Perspectives on Carlos Bulosan, ed. Jeffrey Arellano Cabusao, University Press of America, 2016.

"Dis-Alienating the Neighborhood: The Representation of Work and Community in Mister Rogers' Neighborhood," in Revisiting Mister Rogers' Neighborhood, eds. Kathy Merlock Jackson, Steven M. Emmanuel. North Carolina: McFarland Press, 2016.

"Beyond the Innocence of Globalization: The Abiding Necessity of Carlos Bulosan's Anti-Imperialist Imagination."  Kritika Kultura, no. 23 (Summer 2014). On-line.

"'Verticality is such a risky enterprise': Class Epistemologies and the Critique of Upward Movility in Colson Whitehead's The Intiutisionist," in Class and Culture in Contemporary Crime Fiction, ed. Julie H. Kim. North Carolina: McFarland & Company, 2014, pp. 201-224.

"'A Broader and Wiser Revolution': Refiguring Chicago Nationalist Politics in Latin Amercan Consciousness in Post-Movement Chicana/o Literature" in Imagined Transnationalism: Latina/o Literature, Culture and Identity, eds. Francisco Lomelí, Marc Priewe, and  Kevin Concannon. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2009, pp. 137-155.

"Modernism and Politics" in Encyclopedia of Literature and Politics, ed M. Keith Booker. Westport, CT: Greenwood Press, 2005, pp. 176-180.
 

LWH 2012
5500 North St. Louis Avenue
Chicago, IL 60625
United States

(773) 442-5823
Office Hours
Summer 2016
Main Campus
Curriculum Vitae
Welcome to the English Department at NEIU — a community actively participating in a variety of courses, programs, student organizations and regular events that together help students develop a set of crucial skills and dispositions necessary for professional and personal success: critical thinking, creativity, empathy, clear and persuasive written and oral presentation.

Inside and outside the classroom

The English department offers a range of courses from traditional surveys of British and American literature and canonical authors to specialized electives in Creative Writing, diverse literatures (Latinx, Caribbean, Post-Colonial African, African-American, Chicano), rhetoric and composition, women's and LGBTQ+ literatures and cultures, film and graphic novel. 

Beyond these classroom experiences, however, students will find support and opportunity to bring their skills and creativity to broader communities within and outside the Department:

  • Research for papers to deliver at regional and national conferences built around our courses and our chapter of Sigma Tau Delta English Honors Society;
  • presentations of their work at Northeastern’s annual student Research and Creative Activities Symposium;
  • readings by professional poets and novelists in our 82 Writers Series; or
  • participation in or leadership of a variety of literary and cultural events run or sponsored by the Department.

Declaring your major (and why it matters!)

While taking our English courses is a great start, don't miss out by not becoming an English major until later on. 

To declare, fill out the Undergraduate Major Declaration form, sign and email it to our Office Administrator Hilary Jirka at h-jirka2@neiu.edu

Only when you declare will you become part of The Turtle Shell (ask professors about the name), a shared "course" on D2L with content constantly being updated with key information on internships, job opportunities, events and scholarships available to English majors. (And if for any reason you want to change majors, it's no big deal.)

Additional opportunities for support and professional development

To assist you in your academic, professional and personal endeavors, we offer the following financial assistance and professional preparation and opportunities:

  • Merit Tuition scholarships each term for continuing undergraduate majors (usually the equivalent of one course)
  • The opportunity for undergraduate and graduate students to join an International Honors Society that offers scholarships, opportunities to publish and present research, and other professional opportunities
  • Graduate Assistantships for M.A. students to provide financial support as well as opportunities for professionalization and teaching experience
  • Merit Tuition Awards for M.A. students
  • Research opportunities at the undergraduate and graduate level
  • Professional internships at the undergraduate and graduate level
  • A vibrant and supportive student culture and literary journal
  • An engaged and growing alumni network that will support you while you are here through our department foundation and a resource for you after you graduate
  • Our monthly Alumni Talkback series of Zoom webinars, giving you networking possibilities and a view into how you'll use your English skills on the job!
Lisa Rzany
Elisa
Rzany
English
College of Arts and Sciences
(773) 442-5819
Courses Taught
ENGL 101 Writing I
ENGL 102 Writing II
Research Interests
Composition especially as it applies to ESL students and to first year writing students
Education

MA Rhetoric, 91Porn
BA English/Secondary Education from 91Porn

Leach Walesa Hall 2050
5500 North St. Louis Avenue
Chicago, IL 60625-4699
United States

(773) 442-5819
Office Hours
Summer 2017 No Office Hours
Main Campus