CSU English Professor Camille Dungy wins Guggenheim Fellowship
Camille Dungy, a professor in CSU’s Department of English, has won another major honor: a Guggenheim Fellowship.
Camille Dungy, a professor in CSU’s Department of English, has won another major honor: a Guggenheim Fellowship.
ACT Human Rights Film Festival comes to a close Saturday, April 13, at Lory Student Center Theatre with the Colorado premiere of Words from a Bear at 7:30 p.m.
Zach Hutchins, an assistant professor in the Department of English, studies early American literature. His fascination with all things early American stemmed from growing up in Massachusetts and visiting colonial sites with his mother.
The National Endowment for the Arts has granted the Center for Literary Publishing a $10,000 Art Works grant for 2019.
Nixon will give an open workshop on one of his books, as well as a public talk titled "Environmental Martyrs and the Fate of the Forests."
As part of Women’s History Month, Ben-Zvi will be at Bas Bleu Theater in Fort Collins on March 9 and 10 to discuss Glaspell and the themes that appear in two of her politically pivotal works.
Sue Doe fell in love with CSU in the late 1980s and after completing her Ph.D., she returned to make it her home.
Legendary CSU swimming coach John Mattos has been elected to the American Swimming Coaches Association Hall of Fame.
A new semester-long education abroad program, Liberal Arts and Community Engagement, will give students the opportunity to immerse themselves in a new culture, lifestyle, and community at the CSU Todos Santos Center in Baja California Sur.
In his latest book of poetry, Walks Along the Ditch, Bill Tremblay (CSU Professor of English, 1973 to 2006) introduces us to the flow that has long provided a cadence to his life: poetry, water, t’ai chi. The poems walk us along the ditch with the poet: the water, the familiar Mountain West geography, the “smell of money” from Greeley, the morning song of meadowlarks.