The Department of English collaborates with a wide range of University of Minnesota departments and programs on course offerings, events, graduate student committees, and research. Our professors serve as core or associated graduate faculty, directors of graduate studies, or chairs in departments such as African American and African Studies , American Studies, Asian American Studies, Chicano Studies, Classical and Near Eastern Studies, Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature, Gender, Women and Sexuality Studies , and Writing Studies. In addition, faculty, staff, and students work regularly with the following interdisciplinary University centers and institutes, which sponsor extra-departmental focus groups and symposia.
The Center for Austrian Studies serves as a focal point in the United States for the study of Austria and Central European lands with a common Habsburg heritage across disciplines in the humanities, the social sciences, the applied sciences, and the fine arts. It analyzes Austrian perspectives as a powerful tool for understanding the new Europe in the age of the European Union and it connects scholars, students, and an international community to resources in Austria, Central Europe, the EU, and Minnesota. Finally the Center for Austrian Studies reaches out to a local, national, and international community of educated nonacademics, bringing an awareness of Austria and the new Europe and its relevance to American life.
The Center for Jewish Studies is dedicated to fostering a deeper understanding of Jewish culture and history. It provides: a vibrant resource of interdisciplinary studies for leading scholars on language, literature, culture, history, and social experience involving Jewish people across centuries and around the world; education that engages students in a rich interdisciplinary curriculum, spanning Jewish history, literature, languages, and culture; and a bridge that extends into the larger metropolitan Twin Cities community through events and cultural activities.
The Center for Medieval Studies was established by the College of Liberal Arts in 1983. Its mission is to encourage collegial interaction and scholarly collaboration among faculty and graduate students in all areas of Medieval Studies through biennial conferences, colloquia, informal workshops, and courses at the graduate and undergraduate level. Participating programs include English, History, Paleography, Music, Classics, German, Archaeology, and Anthropology.
The Center for Writing works to enhance student learning, to improve writing instruction, and to deepen our understanding of literacy and the writing process. Through individual consultations, workshops, and research grants, the Center for Writing supports the work of all University of Minnesota students, faculty, and staff engaged in the practice, teaching, and study of writing. The Center for Writing was formed in July 2003 as the merger of two separate units within the College of Liberal Arts: the Student Writing Center and the Center for Interdisciplinary Studies of Writing. The Center for Writing supports the University's mission to improve writing across the curriculum in a more comprehensive way: it works directly with students learning to write, supports instructors integrating writing into their courses, and sponsors research into the theories and practices of writing, rhetoric and literacy.
The Institute for Advanced Study seeks to ignite creative, innovative, and profound research and discovery in the sciences, humanities, and arts. It provides a physical space at the Nolte Center where artists, scientists, and scholars can engage in and share their work. It convenes an annual symposium that catalyzes conversations across the University of Minnesota and that highlights the most innovative research initiatives that exist in the United States and the world. And it supports faculty fellowships and research collaborative programs that bring together artists, scientists, and scholars from across and beyond the University. English professors have been involved in such collaborative programs as Art As Knowing, which engaged in conversation about artistic practice and ways of knowing, and Global Sexualities: Transgressing National and Disciplinary Boundaries, which broke ground in the understanding of sexualities in a comparative and historical perspective. The ten research and creative collaboration groups chosen for 2007-08 support include three convened in part by English faculty:
The Institute of Global Studies supports research and scholarship, putting great minds to work on issues of global significance. IGS is the home of a range of interdisciplinary centers that support research and programmatic development. These include National Resource Centers in international studies, Western European Studies, and the study of the Asias. Working groups, intellectual collectives, and research collaboratives allow faculty to explore cutting-edge scholarship and to share research in progress. Speaker series and colloquia bring leading scholars to campus to interact with Minnesota faculty and students. The Institute for Global Studies (IGS) houses a graduate minor in Human Rights. Among the IGS centers and intellectual collectives with which English faculty are/have been involved are:

Paper presentation at the Nineteenth-Century British Subfield's graduate student symposium