Faculty Research and Publishing

Highlights from the Lit Studies Alumni Panel

On February 18th, 2022, Professor Jennifer Firestone welcomed back five Lit Studies alums—Jaye Elizabeth Elijah, Hilina Da Costa Gomez, Shulokhana Khan, Colin Marston, and...   Read More

Watch the 2021 Literary Studies Book Party!

Missed the Literary Studies Book Party? It’s not too late to see what it was all about! Watch the reading below! On October 21st,...   Read More

Interview with Albert Mobilio for The Brooklyn Rail

Albert Mobilio, poet, critic, Associate Professor and Co-Chair of Literary Studies at Eugene Lang, is in conversation with Tony Leuzzi of The Brooklyn Rail,...   Read More

Watch the 2021 Literature Faculty Salon Reading

Thanks to everyone who was able to attend our 2021 Literature Faculty Salon! Those who were unable to attend the live event can now...   Read More

2021 Literature Faculty Salon

Please join us for our virtual Literature Faculty Salon on March 11th, 2021. Time: 5-6 PM (EST) RSVP: HTTPS://BIT.LY/2PHCNPV

Dr. Julie Beth Napolin, winner of J.H. Stape Prize for best essay

 Congratulations to Dr. Julie Beth Napolin, recipient of the annual J.H. Stape Prize for best essay with “Music’s Unseen Body: Cowell, Conrad, Du Bois, and the Beginnings of...   Read More

Published on NYT: Elizabeth Kendall’s “New York City’s Gift of Motion: A 1970s Tale”

Lang’s very own Elizabeth Kendall, Associate Professor of Liberal Studies and Literary Studies, has been published on The New York Times! Her piece, titled...   Read More

Inessa Medzhibovskaya Launches “Tolstoy’s ON LIFE”

In this first book-length study of Tolstoy’s meditation on death, life, love, and happiness, Inessa Medzhibovskaya focuses on unknown documents and stories that illuminate...   Read More

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On February 18th, 2022, Professor Jennifer Firestone welcomed back five Lit Studies alums—Jaye Elizabeth Elijah, Hilina Da Costa Gomez, Shulokhana Khan, Colin Marston, and Jasveen Kaur S.—to share their thoughts on life after college and the creative ways that their Literary Studies degrees propelled them onto their current personal and professional paths. 

You can watch the entire video here or read the transcript here

Their paths have all differed greatly, ranging from publishing to journalism school, from an MFA in Poetry and to work in Film Production. They all agree that the breadth and interdisciplinary focus of classes offered by Lang’s Literary Studies department were incredibly formative. 

  • “There were all these opportunities I had to enhance my facilitation skills, my teaching skills, and think about how I would want to be more equitable when it comes to teaching.” —Jasveen Kaur S.

  • “No experience is ever wasted. Within all the classes that you take there is really always something to be mined… Anything that you’re doing is going to help you move on to the next thing.”—Shulokhana Khan

The panelists gave concrete, practical advice on what to look for when applying to jobs and internships, without sugar-coating the reality of the creative job market.

  • When applying to internships, “be clear-sighted about your objectives and also hold them accountable. They should pay interns. The system is exploitative and if it’s not for academic credit, get paid.”—Colin Marston

  • “Don’t be afraid to leave, as well, if you feel like you’re being mistreated… The right people will understand why you left.”—Hilina Da Costa Gomez

Overall, the panelists helped set clear, honest expectations of life after college: it’s hard and competitive. But the tools they acquired from their many experiences in Lit Studies and The New School at large have helped them remain flexible and creative in their pursuits.

  • “There’s a lot of possibility and I think there’s a real emphasis on having a book, or having the most beautiful idyllic publishing job, or going straight into a program right after graduation, and none of that is required… don’t get caught up in the myth of ‘prodigy’ and needing to have it all figured out. So I would say let yourself fail and fail hard and it’ll come together eventually.”  —Jaye Elizabeth Elijah

  • “The jobs that I got look pretty neat on paper, but there are a lot of rejections in between, a lot of ‘I don’t know what I’m doing!’ ‘I don’t know if I’m ever going to get anything!’”—Shulokhana Khan