Two-Semester First-Year Writing Courses
ENWR 1506 - Writing and Critical Inquiry: The Stretch Sequence
Offers a two-semester approach to the First Writing Requirement. This sequence allows students to take more time, in smaller sections and with support from the Writing Center, practicing and reinforcing the activities that are central to the first-year writing course. Like ENWR 1510, ENWR 1505-06 approaches writing as a way of generating, representing, and reflecting on critical inquiry. Students contribute to an academic conversation about a specific subject of inquiry and learn to position their ideas and research in relation to the ideas and research of others. Instructors place student writing at the center of course, encourage students to think on the page, and prepare them to reflect on contemporary forms of expression. Students read and respond to each other’s writing in class regularly, and they engage in thoughtful reflection on their own rhetorical choices as well as those of peers and published writers. Additionally, the course requires students to give an oral presentation on their research and to assemble a digital portfolio of their writing.
001 - Writing about Culture/Society - The Good Life
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (BRN 332)
John Modica
002 - Writing about Culture/Society
MW 02:00PM-03:15PM (CAB 036)
Claire Chantell
003 - Writing about Culture/Society
MW 03:30PM-04:45PM (KER 317)
Claire Chantell
004 - Writing about Culture/Society - Language and Culture: Brain Rot or Demure
TR 02:00PM-03:15PM (CAB 056)
Patricia Sullivan
005 - Writing about Culture/Society
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (BRN 330)
Ethan King
006 - Writing about Culture/Society - The Good Life
TR 03:30PM-04:45PM (BRN 330)
John Modica
007 - Writing about Culture/Society
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (BRN 330)
Ethan King
008 - Writing about Culture/Society - Language and Culture: Brain Rot or Demure
TR 03:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 044)
Patricia Sullivan
Single-Semester First-Year Writing Courses
ENWR 1510 - Writing and Critical Inquiry (70+ sections)
Approaches writing as a way of generating, representing, and reflecting on critical inquiry. Students contribute to an academic conversation about a specific subject of inquiry and learn to position their ideas and research in relation to the ideas and research of others. Instructors place student writing at the center of course, encourage students to think on the page, and prepare them to reflect on contemporary forms of expression. Students read and respond to each other’s writing in class regularly, and they engage in thoughtful reflection on their own rhetorical choices as well as those of peers and published writers. Additionally, the course requires students to give an oral presentation on their research and to assemble a digital portfolio of their writing.
001 - Writing about Digital Media - Writing about Attention
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (CAB 064)
Tyler Carter
002 - Writing about Digital Media - Writing about Attention
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (CAB 287)
Tyler Carter
003 - Writing about Culture/Society
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 068)
Alison Cotti-Lowell
004 - TBA
MWF 12:00PM-12:50PM (CAB 415)
Caroline Erickson
005 - TBA
MW 02:00PM-03:15PM (CAB 064)
Jeddie Sophronius
006 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (BRN 330)
TBA
007 - TBA
MWF 09:00AM-09:50AM (CAB 044)
TBA
008 - Writing about Culture/Society
MWF 10:00AM-10:50AM (KER 317)
TBA
009 - TBA
MWF 12:00PM-12:50PM (KER 317)
TBA
010 - Writing about Culture/Society
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 036)
Keith Driver
012 - Multilingual Writers
MWF 01:00PM-01:50PM (CAB 068)
Davy Tran
(Multilingual or international students ONLY)
013 - TBA
MWF 09:00AM-09:50AM (CAB 056)
TBA
014 - Writing about Culture/Society - Assessing Performance, Risk, and Reward
MWF 10:00AM-10:50AM (CAB 107)
Jon D'Errico
015 - TBA
MW 08:30AM-09:45AM (CAB 064)
TBA
016 - TBA
MW 03:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 064)
Jeddie Sophronius
017 - TBA
MWF 10:00AM-10:50AM (CAB 068)
TBA
018 - TBA
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 044)
TBA
019 - TBA
MW 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 036)
TBA
020 - Writing about Identities
MW 02:00PM-03:15PM (CAB 056)
devin donovan
021 - Writing about Culture/Society
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (CAB 287)
Kate Natishan
022 - TBA
MWF 12:00PM-12:50PM (CAB 036)
TBA
023 - Writing about Digital Media - The Art of the Post: Performance in Social Media Spaces
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (CAB 211)
Dana Little
In the digital era, social media platforms have become integral spaces for self-expression, communication, and cultural production. This course investigates how individuals and communities perform identities, narratives, and micro-cultures through various forms of digital expression. Beyond merely observing, we will critically examine how social media platforms serve as stages for creative expression, social interaction, and civil discourse, using theoretical frameworks drawn from media studies, cultural theory, performance studies, and digital humanities.
024 - TBA
MW 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 044)
TBA
025 - Writing about Culture/Society - Writing about Writing and Literacy
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (CAB 036)
Kate Kostelnik
Writing is a tool that allows us to discover new ideas and communicate our ideas to others. In this class, we will inquire into writing itself and education—specifically what academic literacy means in the twenty-first century. We will investigate what writing means for us as individuals and what factors influence how we write. Throughout the course we will be considering different genres (personal essays, academic arguments, and fiction) and trying different writing strategies (invention, reflection, critical analysis, drafting, revision, and final editing). Particular attention will be paid to developing a working knowledge of rhetorical concepts such as audience, purpose, and context for writing. In the final month of the course, we’ll consider arguments about academic discourse and how college writers progress; our final projects will allow us to enter these ongoing academic conversations and articulate our own ideas and experiences in the context of scholarship.
026 - Writing about Culture/Society - Assessing Performance, Risk, and Reward
MWF 11:00AM-11:50AM (CAB 107)
Jon D'Errico
027 - Writing about Culture/Society
MW 03:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 036)
Kaitlyn Airy
028 - Writing about Science & Tech
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (KER 317)
Cory Shaman
029 - TBA
MW 03:30PM-04:45PM (WIL 244)
TBA
030 - Writing about Digital Media - Did the Camera Ever Tell the Truth?
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (CAB 283)
Jodie Childers
In this class, we will build upon this provocative question posed by documentary filmmakers Maximilien Van Aertryck and Axel Danielson to explore what it means to be a discerning content consumer in the age of digital media. As we become active readers, viewers, and listeners, we will analyze the ways in which content creators attempt to shape our perception, from the Kuleshov effect in a video to the pathos of the sound design in a podcast. We will also apply the tricks of the trade as we make our own digital projects. With the rise of AI-generated media, it’s more important now than ever to grapple with the ethics of digital content creation and consumption.
031 - Writing about the Arts
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (WIL 244)
Hodges Adams
032 - Writing about Science & Tech
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (KER 317)
Cory Shaman
033 - Multilingual Writers
MWF 12:00PM-12:50PM (Cab 068)
Davy Tran
(Multilingual or international students ONLY)
034 - Writing & Community Engagement - Walking Charlottesville
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (CAB 115)
Kate Stephenson
035 - TBA
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 411)
TBA
036 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 411)
TBA
037 - Writing about Culture/Society - Writing about Writing and Literacy
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (CAB 036)
Kate Kostelnik
Writing is a tool that allows us to discover new ideas and communicate our ideas to others. In this class, we will inquire into writing itself and education—specifically what academic literacy means in the twenty-first century. We will investigate what writing means for us as individuals and what factors influence how we write. Throughout the course we will be considering different genres (personal essays, academic arguments, and fiction) and trying different writing strategies (invention, reflection, critical analysis, drafting, revision, and final editing). Particular attention will be paid to developing a working knowledge of rhetorical concepts such as audience, purpose, and context for writing. In the final month of the course, we’ll consider arguments about academic discourse and how college writers progress; our final projects will allow us to enter these ongoing academic conversations and articulate our own ideas and experiences in the context of scholarship.
038 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 415)
TBA
039 - TBA
MW 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 068)
TBA
040 - TBA
MWF 11:00AM-11:50AM (CAB 068)
TBA
041 - Writing about the Arts
TR 03:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 056)
Hodges Adams
042 - Writing about Culture/Society
MW 02:00PM-03:15PM (BRN 332)
Kaitlyn Airy
043 - Writing about Digital Media - Did the Camera Ever Tell the Truth?
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (CAB 283)
Jodie Childers
In this class, we will build upon this provocative question posed by documentary filmmakers Maximilien Van Aertryck and Axel Danielson to explore what it means to be a discerning content consumer in the age of digital media. As we become active readers, viewers, and listeners, we will analyze the ways in which content creators attempt to shape our perception, from the Kuleshov effect in a video to the pathos of the sound design in a podcast. We will also apply the tricks of the trade as we make our own digital projects. With the rise of AI-generated media, it’s more important now than ever to grapple with the ethics of digital content creation and consumption.
044 - TBA
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 064)
TBA
045 - Writing about the Arts - Writing about Television
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (CAB 036)
Cristina Griffin
046 - Writing about Science & Tech - Writing about Medicine
MW 05:00PM-06:15PM (KER 317)
Rhiannon Goad
047 - TBA
MW 02:00PM-03:15PM (TBA)
TBA
048 - TBA
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (CAB 287)
Kate Natishan
049 - TBA
MWF 10:00AM-10:50AM (CAB 064)
TBA
050 - TBA
MWF 12:00PM-12:50PM (BRN 330)
TBA
051 - Writing about Idenities
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (BRN 334)
Charity Fowler
052 - Writing & Community Engagement
TR 02:00PM-03:15PM (CAB 283)
Kevin Smith
053 - Writing about Culture/Society
MWF 11:00AM-11:50AM (KER 317)
Kevin Smith
054 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 211)
TBA
055 - Writing about Culture/Society
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 211)
TBA
056 - TBA
MW 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 068)
TBA
057 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 283)
TBA
058 - Writing about Digital Media - The Art of the Post: Performance in Social Media Spaces
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (CAB 068)
Dana Little
In the digital era, social media platforms have become integral spaces for self-expression, communication, and cultural production. This course investigates how individuals and communities perform identities, narratives, and micro-cultures through various forms of digital expression. Beyond merely observing, we will critically examine how social media platforms serve as stages for creative expression, social interaction, and civil discourse, using theoretical frameworks drawn from media studies, cultural theory, performance studies, and digital humanities.
059 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 064)
TBA
060 - Writing about Culture/Society
MW 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 056)
TBA
061 - Writing about Culture/Society
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 056)
TBA
062 - Writing about the Arts - Writing about Visual Narratives
MWF 10:00AM-10:50AM (CAB 056)
Rory Sullivan
In this course, we will examine what it means to read, experience, write about, and create visual narratives. By looking at a variety of media objects, including comics, graphic novels, archival materials, and video games, we will explore what makes these narratives unique as a genre.
063 - TBA
MWF 11:00AM-11:50AM (CAB 287)
TBA
064 - TBA
MW 05:00PM-06:15PM (CAB 064)
TBA
065 - TBA
MWF 01:00PM-01:50PM (BRN 330)
TBA
066 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 044)
TBA
067 - Writing about Culture/Society - Writing about Sports
MWF 11:00AM-11:50AM (CAB 283)
Rory Sullivan
In this course, we will discover the various ways that sports reflect and shape culture. Writing projects will include game summaries, audio and visual podcasts, and research projects.
068 - Writing about Culture/Society - Writing about Writing and Literacy
TR 03:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 036)
Kate Kostelnik
Writing is a tool that allows us to discover new ideas and communicate our ideas to others. In this class, we will inquire into writing itself and education—specifically what academic literacy means in the twenty-first century. We will investigate what writing means for us as individuals and what factors influence how we write. Throughout the course we will be considering different genres (personal essays, academic arguments, and fiction) and trying different writing strategies (invention, reflection, critical analysis, drafting, revision, and final editing). Particular attention will be paid to developing a working knowledge of rhetorical concepts such as audience, purpose, and context for writing. In the final month of the course, we’ll consider arguments about academic discourse and how college writers progress; our final projects will allow us to enter these ongoing academic conversations and articulate our own ideas and experiences in the context of scholarship.
069 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (KER 317)
TBA
070 - TBA
MWF 01:00PM-01:50PM (CAB 415)
TBA
071 - Writing about Culture/Society
MWF 01:00PM-01:50PM (KER 317)
TBA
072 - Writing about Identities
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (BRN 334)
Charity Fowler
073 - TBA
TR 05:00PM-05:15PM (KER 317)
TBA
074 - TBA
TR 08:00AM-09:15AM (CAB 036)
TBA
075 - TBA
MWF 09:00AM-09:50AM (CAB 036)
TBA
ENWR 1520 - Writing and Community Engagement (5 sections)
ENWR 1520 shares the same writing goals and approaches as ENWR 1510, but focuses on community engagement in pursuit of those goals. In ENWR 1520, students contribute to a conversation and learn to position their ideas, research, and experiential learning in community engaged projects. Students should expect to spend time outside the classroom interacting with community partners, either in person or virtually.
002 - Writing and Community Engagement - You and A.I.
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (BRN 332)
Piers Gelly
In this course, we will practice the skills associated with college-level writing by asking a provocative question of one another: in the age of ChatGPT, do we still need writing courses like this one?
003 - Writing and Community Engagement - Writing about Native American Rhetoric
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (RTN 150)
Sarah Richardson
This course will focus on how Native American histories are written and how to combat dominant narratives surrounding these histories and portrayals. Students will learn concepts such as: colonization, rhetoric, dominant and counter narratives, and current and past representations in memory. Students will also learn how to research, compose, and revise ethical and effective arguments to address specific audiences.
004 - Writing and Community Engagement - Writing about Native American Rhetoric
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (RTN 150)
Sarah Richardson
This course will focus on how Native American histories are written and how to combat dominant narratives surrounding these histories and portrayals. Students will learn concepts such as: colonization, rhetoric, dominant and counter narratives, and current and past representations in memory. Students will also learn how to research, compose, and revise ethical and effective arguments to address specific audiences.
011 - Writing and Community Engagement - Writing Place
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (KER 317)
John T. Casteen IV
This course offers students focused instruction on academic writing, research, and argument. It's organized around Place-- how we experience and understand our physical surroundings-- and the way we write it. The course includes a free, mandatory field experience on Virginia's Eastern Shore from February 27 through March 3 at UVa's Coastal Research Center, along with engagement in advance with its history, ecology, and culture.
ENWR 2510 - Advanced Writing Seminar (4 sections)
The course in highest demand for students on the FWR+ track is ENWR 2510, an Advanced Writing Seminar. Like ENWR 1510, ENWR 2510 approaches writing as a way of generating, representing, and reflecting on critical inquiry. Students contribute to an academic conversation about a specific subject of inquiry and learn to position their ideas and research in relation to the ideas and research of others. Instructors place student writing at the center of course, encourage students to think on the page, and prepare them to reflect on contemporary forms of expression. Students read and respond to each other’s writing in class regularly, and they engage in thoughtful reflection on their own rhetorical choices as well as those of peers and published writers. Additionally, the course requires students to give an oral presentation on their research and to assemble a digital portfolio of their writing. While ENWR 2510 and ENWR 1510 share the same goals and practices, ENWR 2510 offers added rigor, often in the form of denser course texts and longer, more self-directed writing assignments.
001 - TBA
TR 3:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 183)
Ethan King
002 - Writing about Identities - The Cultural Work of Life Writing
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (COC 101)
Tamika Carey
From posting on social media to writing memoirs, people are constantly documenting their lives for the public. This class will explore these acts of disclosure reveal about how members from different cultural groups use writing to form, reform, and share their identities. Students will read theoretical works, popular critiques, and primary texts by a variety of memoirists, scholars, and journalists, collect, analyze, and compose brief life writings, and complete a final critical or creative project.
003 - TBA
MWF 11:00AM-11:50AM (BRN 310)
Heidi Nobles
004 - Writing about Culture/Society - Exploratory Writing
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (BRN 312)
James Seitz
Beyond First-Year Writing Courses
ENWR 2520 - Special Topics in Writing (8 sections)
001 - Queer Writing: Theory and Practice
TR 05:00PM-06:15PM (BRN 330)
John Modica
This course is designed to transform your relationship to writing by introducing you to queer theories and practices of writing. We will consider what it means to enact a ‘queer’ approach to writing today, and put our theories to the test in our own writing and classroom activities.
002 - Listening to Horror
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (CAB 207)
Kate Natishan
ECHOLS STUDENTS ONLY
Are there aspects of fear and horror that are cross-cultural? How do creators use larger sociological anxieties to scare or unnerve their audiences? This class explores the genre of cosmic horror: we begin with an overview of the history of cosmic horror and its place in society, then take deep dives into two horror podcasts. Throughout the semester, we will examine how sound design enhances written scripts.
004 - Audible Writing
MWF 01:00PM-01:50PM (BRN 310)
Jon D'Errico
Text meets audio. As a class, we'll explore, analyze, and produce audible writing about UVa and Charlottesville in a range of genres, from podcast-style scripts to hybrid multi-modal documents. Appropriate for students who combine strong writing with a lively and engaged intellectual curiosity.
005 - Writing Within the Archive
MW 02:00PM-03:15PM (BRN 334)
Rory Sullivan
This course explores how to research and write about archival material. Working closely with UVA Special Collections, we will identify materials to study, conduct research, develop arguments, and practice different modes of sharing our findings, including born-digital compositions. We will also consider theoretical understandings of archival practices.
006 - Writing about Virginia's Native Community
TR 02:00PM-03:15PM (CAB 036)
Sarah Richardson
In this course, students will employ research skills, focus on critical engagement, reflect on how information is presented and written to craft effective arguments to address a public facing audience. In particular, students will work with Virginia’s Tribal Nations to create a document that discusses the similarities and differences between the Tribal Nations socially, historically, and culturally.
007 - Writing about Medicine
MW 03:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 044)
Rhiannon Goad
ECHOLS STUDENTS ONLY
This course dives into the art and ethics of communicating about health. You'll dissect everything from dense medical studies to viral news, learning to translate complex science into clear, compelling language. With short essays, you will develop skills to evaluate diverse sources, including medical literature, health journalism, and patient narratives, and apply responsible communication principles in contexts such as reporting research findings without hype and explaining public health issues effectively. You'll practice these communication skills throughout the semester, culminating in a final project: the creation of a zine about medicine.
008 - You and A.I.
TR 11:00AM-12:15PM (BRN 332)
Piers Gelly
ECHOLS STUDENTS ONLY
In this course, we will practice the skills associated with college-level writing by asking a provocative question of one another: in the age of ChatGPT, do we still need writing courses like this one?
100 - Writing (and creating) Democratic Spaces
T 06:00PM-08:30PM (BRN 312)
Steve Parks
ECHOLS STUDENTS ONLY
Students will study theories of democracy and work with global democratic advocates, as well as students located in international contexts. This course will involve all-day workshops on February 15th, 16th, 22nd, and 23rd. This course will also end on March 9th.
ENWR 2700 - News Writing
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (SHN 109)
Kate Sweeney
No fake news here, but rather progressive exercises in developing the news-writing style of writing from straight hard news to "soft" features. Satisfies Second Writing Requirement.
ENWR 2800 - Public Speaking
MW 03:30PM-04:45PM (CAB 056)
devin donovan
An inquiry-based approach to the development of a confident, engaging, and ethical public speaking style. Beyond practical skills, this course emphasizes rhetorical thinking: what are the conventions of public speaking? Where are there opportunities to deviate from convention in ways that might serve a speech’s purpose? How might we construct an audience through the ways we craft language and plan the delivery of our speech?
ENWR 3500 - Topics in Advanced Writing & Rhetoric
001 - Environmental Justice Writing
TR 02:00PM-03:15PM (PV8 102)
Cory Shaman
Designed to offer students practice in engaged environmental writing, this course will focus on environmental justice (EJ) discourse in US and international contexts. While the class will be grounded in a study of established forms of EJ theory, special attention will be given to advancing an understanding of the entangled claims and interests of humans and non-humans together as a method to enable students to develop more expansive conceptions of justice and produce just forms of writing.
Course materials will draw heavily on texts associated with historical and contemporary environmental justice efforts at the grassroots level, but also in academic, governmental, and commercial contexts. Case studies in local EJ campaigns in Virginia may form a significant portion of the class. Students will gain experience as readers of these texts and apply insights to a variety of writing tasks shaped by their specific interests within the framework of environmental justice.
002 - Rhetoric of Crime
MW 02:00PM-03:15PM (BRK 103)
Rhiannon Goad
Sensational news headlines, tough-on-crime political campaigns, and gripping true crime narratives: how we talk about crime profoundly shapes our understanding of criminals, victims, justice, and social order. This course explores the rhetorical dimension of crime, examining the persuasive strategies used to define crime, influence public perception, and shape policy in contemporary culture. Together, we will critically analyze how language constructs our reality of crime and punishment. Through a series of analytic papers and a podcast, students will use rhetorical analysis to identify significant trends in crime discourse, identify agents shaping these narratives, and develop a critical perspective on the power of language in matters of law, order, and justice.
ENWR 3550 - Advanced Topics in Digital Writing & Rhetoric
001 - Digital Public Writing
TR 12:30PM-01:45PM (CAB 283)
Kevin Smith
ENWR 3550: Digital Public Writing examines the rhetorical, technological, and cultural dimensions of writing for public audiences with an emphasis on digital communities. Students will analyze and produce multimodal compositions meant to circulate beyond the classroom, developing rhetorical frameworks for understanding how (digital) texts address audiences and perform work in the world.
002 - Digital Maker Studio
TR 02:00PM-03:15PM (CLM 320)
Jodie Childers
In this hands-on maker workshop, students will explore the craft of digital making. Students will engage in independent and collaborative projects, creating audio narratives, videos, and digital stories. Experimentation, invention, and design will be emphasized as students learn how to use digital tools; compose with still and moving images, sound, and text; and consider the ethics and aesthetics of citation.
ENWR 3559 - New Course in Writing & Rhetoric
001 - Rebuilding (and Expanding) Democracy
M 06:00PM-08:30PM (CAB 211)
Steve Parks
This course will enable students to gain fluency in linking their academic writing to public debates. In particular, the course will investigate the status of democracy as both a concept and set of participatory practices, asking students to consider how their education might support a robust democratic sphere. Students will engage with global democratic advocates (via Zoom) as well as a democratic organizing skills workshop.
ENWR 3640 - Writing with Sound
TR 03:30PM-04:45PM (FHL 215)
Piers Gelly
Trains students to become attuned, thoughtful listeners and sonic composers. In addition to discussing key works on sound from fields such as rhetoric and composition, sound studies, and journalism, we will experiment with the possibilities of sound as a valuable form of writing and storytelling. Students will learn how to use digital audio editing tools, platforms, and techniques for designing and producing sonic projects. (Meets second writing requirement.)
ENWR 3660 - Travel Writing
TR 09:30AM-10:45AM (CAB 056)
Kate Stephenson
Why is everyone suddenly going to Portugal? Why do we travel? What is the difference between a traveler and a tourist? Using different types of writing, including journal entries, forum posts, peer reviews, and formal papers, we will explore the world of travel writing. Since we all write best about ideas we are passionate about, we will work together to generate interesting questions about the role of travel in our culture, as well as about specific books and essays. We will also investigate the world of tourism and consider the many ethical issues that arise in the exploration of our modern world. Throughout the course, we will ponder questions like:
- What is the relationship between travel writer, reader, and inhabitant?
- How can we use writing to navigate the relationship between writer, reader, inhabitant, and place?
- What is the role of “outsider” in travel writing?
- How does travel writing encourage us to see ourselves differently?
- How can we use the very best of travel writing—the sense of discovery, voice, narrative suspense—in other forms of writing, including academic essays?
- Can travel writing evoke political and social change?
As the semester unfolds, I hope we will revise and refine our views, paying close attention to how we put words together to write powerfully and engagingly about travel.
ENWR 3720 - Argumentation Across Disciplines
TR 03:30PM-4:45PM (CAB 411)
Tyler Carter
Argumentation Across Disciplines examines how the linguistic and rhetorical features of argument vary from discipline to discipline. The course will make two primary movements: The first is an examination of what argument is through the lens of classical and new rhetorical theory. Second, students will do comparative research on the linguistic and rhetorical features of texts in two different disciplines.
ENWR 3760 - Studies in Cultural Rhetoric
TR 02:00PM-03:15PM (FHL 215)
Tamika Carey
This course will explore how cultural groups develop, use, and remix stories to build and reshape their worlds. With special attention to the social concepts and communication techniques involved in this work – concepts that include master narratives, rhetorical listening, identification, testimony, and counterstory – we will deepen our understanding of how rhetoric influences the worlds in which we live. Projects will include a story collection project, an analysis presentation, and a final creative or critical project.
ENWR 3900 - The Forbes Seminar in Career-based Writing and Rhetoric
001 - Strategic Communication in the Age of AI and Social Media
TR 03:00PM-04:45PM (CAB 111)
Dana Little
Career-Based Writing & Rhetoric is a hands-on, workshop-style course designed to equip you with the advanced communication skills essential for thriving in the modern workplace. In this course, you’ll combine persuasive writing with practical strategies in social media marketing and Generative AI tools. Through self-designed projects, you’ll practice proposing, drafting, and editing content while exploring recent research, learning GenAI best practices, and integrating these materials into your writing process. Along the way, you’ll learn the foundations of effective communication, analyze real-world case studies, and discover how social media platforms—from TikTok to LinkedIn—shape modern branding, promotion, and engagement. As you master adapting your writing to various audiences and formats, you'll stay ahead of emerging trends, such as influencer marketing and short-form video, setting yourself up for success in today’s dynamic communication landscape and preparing you to write effectively for any career-focused goal.