Kathleen Oliver
English Department Chair
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2114
Office: 
Email: koliver [at] langara.ca (koliver[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Prior to coming to Langara in the summer of 2012, Kathleen taught English and Creative Writing at Emily Carr University. She is also a playwright and theatre critic for The Georgia Straight, where she has been writing about theatre since 1997. She enjoys sneaking opportunities to introduce students to Vancouver’s vibrant performing arts scene into as many courses as possible.

Kathleen’s first play, Swollen Tongues, is a comedy of love and manners written entirely in rhyming couplets. First produced in 1998 at the Women in View Festival, it has had productions throughout Canada; in London, England, where it earned a Critics’ Choice from Time Out; and a three-month run in Paris  (in a French translation by Marie Paule Ramo). Kathleen’s other full-length plays are Carol’s Christmas and The Family Way, which both premiered in Vancouver. She has also written or co-written several shorter plays in English (Beautiful on a Budget) and in French (Snow Queen, Rendez-Vous).

A recurring theme in Kathleen’s plays is that a unique and beautiful power comes from finding one’s voice. In her teaching, she tries to help students find this power within themselves through their writing, whether it takes the form of a job application, a journal, or a research essay. Kathleen believes that any form of writing is an opportunity for playful and meaningful expression.  


Stephanie Hummel (she/her)
Assistant English Department Chair
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2510
Office: 
Email: shummel [at] langara.ca (shummel[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio
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I’ve been an instructor at Langara College snəw̓eyəɬ leləm̓ since 2016 and bring more than 25 years of teaching experience in colleges. I hold a BA from UBC, a Master’s in TESOL from Greensboro College in North Carolina, and a TESOL Diploma from Vancouver Community College. At Langara, I teach Professional Communications (CMNS 1114, 1115, 1118) and preparatory English classes (ENGL 1107). Since 2023, I’ve also served as Assistant Department Chair and have advised students since 2020.

Before joining Langara, I taught at Vancouver Community College and spent many years teaching abroad in Ecuador, Argentina, and Uruguay, and the United States. I also spent a year in rural Japan as the only English speaker in a small village – an experience that reminded me how humbling and vulnerable it can feel to learn something new. I keep this perspective in mind in the classroom. I learn so much from my students, and I feel fortunate to be part of such a dedicated and diverse community.

Outside of work, I enjoy singing in a small band, playing pickleball, hiking, traveling, and reading.


Marc Acherman
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2514
Office: A301
Email: macherman [at] langara.ca (macherman[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

I most enjoy teaching popular culture, media, literary/cultural theory, prose fiction (especially dystopian fiction) and composition. Before coming to Langara, I taught literature and composition courses at SFU. My courses have included topics such as the centrality of terrorism to twentieth-century American literature, and literature that examines how definitions of the “human” have been transformed by technology. Otherwise, I’ve assisted in literature courses on utopias, violence, the gothic and numerous other topics. 

At UBC, I initially drifted between courses in fine art, classical studies and American history, but eventually majored in English, a subject which best combines my interests. I went on to earn my M.A. and PhD in English literature from SFU, where I pursued my enthusiasm for books, films, theory and pop-culture, and developed as a writer and teacher in the process. (I do still draw and remain a pretty good person to tour Roman ruins with though.)

Inspired by the current events of the time, I specialized in contemporary American literature and culture related to terrorism, surveillance and national security. My dissertation examined the relatively recent genre of 9/11 fiction, which consists of stories that explore the historical precedents for and socio-political consequences of the terrorist attacks on September 11, 2001. During my career, I have presented my work at a wide range of academic conferences including the Modern Language Association, American Comparative Literary Association and Marxist Literary Group.  I’m currently preparing articles on topics such as surveillance and racial profiling in Martin Amis’s “The Last Days of Muhammad Atta,” subversion of pre-emptive doctrine in the film Minority Report, and the significance of the pre- and post-9/11 work of David Foster Wallace to how scholars of 9/11 literature define literary periods.

I’m probably equally as comfortable with high and low culture. Lately, I’ve been reading Ta-Nehisi Coates, Junot Diaz and William Gibson, as well as almost anything intelligent about American politics, but also have been watching lots of Netflix and Marvel movies. Outside of the classroom (for now), my interests include Japan, hipster music, Beatles lore, Lego engineering, drawing, comic books, archaeology, bad movies and satirical news.


Claire Anderson
Phone: 
Office: A201e
Email: canderson [at] langara.ca (canderson[at]langara[dot]ca)


Peter Babiak
Phone: 604.323.5761
Office: A303h
Email: pbabiak [at] langara.ca (pbabiak[at]langara[dot]ca)

 
Bio

I quit high school and took a job in a factory because I didn’t like school. After a couple of years I decided to go back as a mature student. I studied Economics at the University of Waterloo but after second year jumped into English. After graduating UW I went on to McMaster University and York University. While completing my degrees I had some intriguing jobs. I taught history and literature at a jail for young offenders and I taught contract law, critical thinking and economics at colleges in Toronto. During and between these jobs I worked as a house framer, landscaper, and an auto assembly-line worker, not only to earn a living but to gain experience of the world outside school.

About twenty years ago I came to Vancouver to work in the English Department at UBC, where I taught essay writing, Canadian literature and Eighteenth-Century literature from 1996 until 2003. I also taught courses on the poet/engraver William Blake and on the landscape paintings of the Group of Seven for UBC Continuing Studies. From 2002 to 2006 I was Academic Director of UBC’s Humanities 101 Community Programmes, a pioneering outreach programme—the first of its kind in Canada—in the liberal arts and social sciences for students in Vancouver’s Downtown Eastside who encounter economic and social barriers to education. For a year I was also Coordinator at the Humanities Storefront, an educational facility in the DES, at Cordova and Abbott, which brought free lectures and classes to the neighborhood before it was gentrified.

I’ve published essays and articles—on subjects ranging from Post-Colonial Literature to the use of metaphor in advertising and international finance—in Alphabet CityCanadian Dimension, Canadian Literature, English Studies in Canada, Jouvert, Left History, Vancouver Review and West Coast Line—and I regularly write creative nonfiction and commentary essays for subTerrain Magazine, where I’m also Features Editor. A few of my essays have been nominated for national and provincial magazine-writing awards, but none have won. In 2016 I published a book of these essays called Garage Criticism: Cultural Missives in an Age of Distraction, which was a Montaigne Medal Finalist. One of my essays, ‘’No Reading Aloud’’, was selected for publication in Best Canadian Essays 2017; another of my essays, "The Future is the Period a the End of the Sentence," was selected for publication in the Best Canadian Essays 2018.

I’ve been teaching at Langara since 2002. It’s a great place; I like it here. Besides standard first-year courses like English 1100, 1127 and 1130, which I love to teach, I’ve taught second-year courses on Banned Books, Graphic Lit, and Children’s/YA Literature, and more recently I’ve taught English 1125, Contemporary Linguistics, and 2100, Traditional Grammar. I’m here to teach students how to be stronger readers and more persuasive writers by showing them that “Literature” is not an irrelevant or mysteriously subjective field where anything goes but is a discipline built on the application of certain properties of language. When you think about it, so much of your life happens in language—whether on paper, out loud, or on screen—and an English class is an opportunity to figure out how it all works. 


Ruth Bornau
Phone: 604.323.5230
Office: A303a
Email: rbornau [at] langara.ca (rbornau[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Ruth has a BA (English Language major and German minor) from UBC, Vancouver BC, 1993, and an MA (Applied Linguistics & Cross- Cultural Communication) from Concordia University, Montreal PQ,1999.

Before coming to Langara, Ruth taught advanced English as a Second Language and College Preparatory Courses (including reading, writing, listening and speaking) at the Vancouver Community College. She has been teaching English as a Second Language at all levels from beginner to advanced, as well as all age groups from children to adults since 1993. She has taught English or the teaching of English in Japan, Germany, Montreal, Vancouver, and Africa.

Ruth has developed a special interest in cross-cultural communication, through her travels (for at least one or more years) in Asia, Australia, Europe, North America, and Africa. Teaching English 1107 and 1108 at Langara College involves not only teaching advanced grammar and writing skills, but also requires an understanding of the rhetorical differences across cultures. She feels privileged to receive perspectives from around the globe in her classroom and hopes to reciprocate by sharing a sense of Canadian academic culture for, as Katheryn Freston states, “Magic takes place when we really absorb the knowledge that we are all in this [world] together.”


Mono Brown
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2455
Office: A204
Email: mmbrown [at] langara.ca (mmbrown[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio
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Mono (they/them) joined the English department at Langara in 2015 and, since then, they have taught in all subject areas, including academic writing, communications, film studies, and literary studies. They have a background in rhetoric of health and medicine and hold degrees in English from the University of Waterloo (BA) and UBC (MA, PhD). Since 2020, in addition to teaching, Mono has supported program review at Langara and in 2024, as part of this work, they helped launch Langara’s new Diploma in Digital Media and Design. They also conduct scholarly and applied research at Langara and serve as a peer reviewer for Rhetoric of Health and Medicine and the Journal of Medical Humanities. An avid cyclist, they regularly commute by bike into campus from Hastings Sunrise.


Aaron Bushkowsky
Phone: 604.323.5308
Office: A167L
Email: abushkow [at] langara.bc.ca (abushkow[at]langara[dot]bc[dot]ca)

Bio

A prolific writer, Aaron Bushkowsky is a Vancouver-based playwright, film-writer, poet, novelist, and educator. His plays have been produced across Canada, the US, and Europe, and have received 9 Jessie Richardson Theatre nominations, more than any other Canadian playwright, winning two for Outstanding Original Play. Aaron has written over 20 plays and received almost as many professional productions across Canada, the US, and Europe including Farewell, My Lovely produced by Vancouver’s Arts Club Theatre. Aaron is a graduate of the prestigious Canadian Film Centre in film-writing. His film-scripts have received many options.  Aaron’s short film The Alley was nominated for five Leo awards and won the National Screen Institute’s Drama Prize.

Aaron teaches writing at Vancouver’s highly regarded theatre school Studio 58, and at Kwantlen University, Langara College, and Vancouver Film School. He has several published works, including two books of poetry Mars is for Poems (Oolichan Books) and ed and mabel go to the moon (Oolichan Books) which was nominated for a BC Book Award for Poetry.  His published drama includes Strangers Among Us, The Waterhead and other playsand My Chernobyl all published by Playwrights Canada Press.  His first book of fiction was a collection of short stories The Vanishing Man published by Cormorant in 2005. Curtains for Roy, his first novel, was published in August 2014. It's a dark comedy about the Vancouver theatre world which garnered rave reviews from critics and made two Top Ten Book (2014) lists for Vancouver novels and subsequently nominated for the Stephen Leacock Award – Canada’s oldest literary award and only award for humour writing. Aaron is a grad of UBC (Masters, Creative Writing) and U of A (BA, English; B. Ed.)

Aaron also heads Solo Collective Theatre, a professional Vancouver theatre company and has been an influential dramaturge, mentor, and teacher to hundreds of new West Coast writers and students. Aaron is represented in theatre by Marquis Entertainment, Toronto. For more information: www.aaronbushkowsky.com


Kina Cavicchioli
Phone: 604.323.5385
Office: A202c
Email: kcavicchioli [at] langara.ca (kcavicchioli[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Kina Cavicchioli came to Canada as a graduate student from the UK looking for adventure, fell in love with BC, and stayed. She has taught at Langara since 2007 and is passionate about showing students how empowering and pleasurable literature and language awareness can be.

She has a BA in English and French Literature from the University of Oxford, an MA in American Studies from the University of East Anglia, and a hauntingly unfinished PhD on Victorian Women's Ghost Stories from UBC.

 Kina teaches first-year courses like Communications 1118, English 1127,1129 and 1130, as well as the two-part History of Theatre course (English 1181-1191). She has also taught second-year courses on Pandemic Narratives and the Literature of Madness.

Kina is currently the coordinator of the English Forum, a free monthly gathering hosted by Langara English instructors and guests in which to explore and discuss fiction, film, television, and culture of all kinds. Past Forum topics have included Game of Thrones, the Literature of Happiness, Jane Austen's novels, and Bioshock.

When she isn't teaching, Kina writes poetry, fantasizes about becoming a stand-up comedian, and runs away to Tofino as often as possible.


Simon Casey
Phone: 604.323.5507
Office: A201e
Email: scasey [at] langara.ca (scasey[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Simon Casey started his post-secondary education at Langara and then went on to receive a BA, BEd and MA from UBC and a PhD from the University of Toronto. He has been teaching at Langara since 1999. His publications include the book Naked Liberty and the World of Desire (Routledge, 2003), which is an analysis of the political ideas of D.H. Lawrence. He is currently working on a study of how Northrop Frye’s background in music informed his ideas about literature and the teaching of literature.

Other areas of academic interest: Romanticism, Modernism, British culture and history (1789-1930), with a special focus on the First World War and its aftermath.

Courses taught: English 1123, 1129, 2224 and Communications 1115.


Livia Chan
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2223
Office: A204
Email: lchan [at] langara.ca (lchan[at]langara[dot]ca)


Toby Chernoff
Phone: 604.323.5372
Office: A303c
Email: tchernoff [at] langara.ca (tchernoff[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Toby is the Fall/Spring co-ordinator of the Langara Writing Centre, which provides free tutoring in the library, using a combination of faculty tutors and peer tutors hand-picked for their writing and communication skills.  

He teaches business communications and introductory composition courses, and is interested in rhetoric (the study of how people persuade each other of things) advertising, comic books and film. His taste in comics tends towards alternative and independent, and his taste in films runs from science fiction to foreign to documentary to historical to trashy rom-coms, with nearly everything in between, though he generally dislikes horror films. These interests often – but not always – make prominent appearances in his course materials.  


Joanna Clarke
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2560
Office: A201e
Email: joannaclarke [at] langara.ca (joannaclarke[at]langara[dot]ca)


Noel Currie
Phone: 604.323.5470
Office: A202b
Email: ncurrie [at] langara.ca (ncurrie[at]langara[dot]ca)
Bio

I have been teaching in the English department at Langara College since 2002. Before that, I taught at UBC and SFU (mostly in the English department, but also in Women's Studies and Educational Studies), and in the first cohort of a Canadian Studies program at the University of Silesia in Katowice, Poland. Before that, I earned degrees from UBC (a BA (Hons) and PhD in English, an M.Ed. in Higher Education) and Carleton University (an MA in Canadian Studies). I teach a wide range of courses at Langara, and encourage students to grapple with the real issues of writing: what do I want to say? who is my audience and what is my purpose in saying it? how can I express my ideas as clearly and effectively as possible for that context? When I'm not working, I enjoy baking, knitting, walking, and -- of course -- reading.

 


Glenn Deefholts
Phone: 
Office: A324a
Email: gdeefholts [at] langara.ca (gdeefholts[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio
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Glenn Deefholts (he/they) did all his degrees at SFU: a Bachelors with an English major and Humanities minor (1994), a Masters in English (1998), and a Masters in Humanities (2015). His graduate work explored connections between philosophy and literature in twentieth century England, France, and Germany. His first thesis looked at ways that language is experienced as a ritual and as a technology. His second thesis was about Virginia Woolf and memoir, examining Woolf's assertion that in Europe in 1910, human character changed.

Glenn has a TESOL certificate and—before coming to Langara—taught English for fifteen years to students from over thirty countries.

In 2005, Glenn co-edited and contributed to The Way We Were: Anglo-Indian Chronicles, a collection of memoirs written by Anglo-Indians, describing their unique culture in India. He’s also written and published two collections of poems—Only So Many Breaths (2020) and Seduced by the World (2021)—as well as a book on gender: Genderfluid: A Way of Being (2020).

At Langara, Glenn has taught a variety of courses, including English 1107, 1108, 1120, 1121, 1123, and 1129. He likes the cultural diversity and small class sizes at the college. In his free time, he enjoys books, movies, and music.


Heather DeLong
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: hdelong [at] langara.ca (hdelong[at]langara[dot]ca)


Lara Estlin
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: lestlin [at] langara.ca (lestlin[at]langara[dot]ca)


Sandra Finlayson
Phone: 604.323.5471
Office: A303g
Email: sfinlayson [at] langara.ca (sfinlayson[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

As an undergraduate in England, Sandra Finlayson studied Law before switching to English Literature, Language and French. She came to Vancouver via Los Angeles where she acquired Masters’ degrees in both Art History and English Literature.  In Vancouver, she learned how to teach English as an additional language, and since 2001, has been teaching a range of developmental and first year courses.

Her scholarly interests include material culture and Latinix fiction.  Off campus, she enjoys choral singing, fibre arts and vegetarian cuisine. 


Susan Font
Phone: 604.323.5191
Office: A303j
Email: sfont [at] langara.ca (sfont[at]langara[dot]ca)

 
Bio

Susan Font has been an English instructor at Langara College since 2010 and relishes working and learning with her students. Previously, she was an instructor at UBC’s English Language Institute for two years.

She has a BA (Hons) in English Studies (Manchester Metropolitan University); a Post-Graduate Diploma in Journalism (Concordia University); an MA in Literature and Medicine (King’s College London); a Post-Graduate Diploma in TESOL (University College London); and a CELTA EAL/ESL certificate.

Susan was a reporter and research fellow in Southeast Asia, and a financial reporter on Fleet Street, London. Also in London, Susan instructed international students at a private English school, teaching general English, Cambridge Certificate courses, Business English, and IELTS/TOEIC preparation courses. She taught English language in various professional sectors in Montreal, and she is a published poet.

English has always been Susan’s passion and she relishes teaching and exploring the transmutable qualities of this language and its usage through varying intersecting spheres, whether the English of literature (ENGL 1127, 1129, 1100); business and technical communications (CMNS 1118, 2228); or grammar precision and linguistics (ENGL 1107/8, 1121).

Her research and writing instincts are multifarious: poetics; literature and the body/mind; socio/psycholinguistics; emerging identities in second and further language acquisition; global development; the history of medicine; and cobbling together her rudimentary French.


Sandra Friesen
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2559
Office: A201c
Email: sfriesen [at] langara.ca (sfriesen[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Sandra Friesen travelled from small town Ontario to coastal BC in 2008, and now couldn’t imagine living anywhere else.  After finishing a PhD and spending several stimulating years as a private tutor and entrepreneur, she was delighted to join Langara’s English department in 2017.  Sandra’s Mennonite background, years of international travel, and eclectic work history have shaped her passion for teaching English in a variety of forms, including language acquisition, professional communication, and literary analysis.

Sandra obtained her BA in English and French and MA in English from the University of Western Ontario, and earned her PhD at the University of Victoria.  Her dissertation on late 17th century political humour and satire was (mostly) a delight to write - ask her how!

While at UVic, Sandra taught a range of first, second, and third year literature and composition courses, and especially enjoyed teaching poetry and historical literature.  Given the chance, she enjoys showing students that poetry and historical literature aren’t nearly as stuffy, dull, and incomprehensible as they might think.  Another of her goals – by far the most important – is to help students articulate their thoughts more clearly, purposefully, and effectively.  So far at Langara, Sandra has taught a wide variety of courses, including CMNS 1115, 1118, and 2228, ENGL 1107, 1121, 1127, and 1098/99, KINS 1101, and WMDD 4860.  She looks forward to teaching many more.

Outside of the classroom, Sandra can usually be found enjoying a coffee along the seawall, watching Netflix or a favourite sports team, or cooking up a delicious feast. 


Jill Goldberg
Phone: 
Office: A302b
Email: jgoldberg [at] langara.ca (jgoldberg[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

I teach creative writing (fiction, screenwriting, nonfiction), English 1191 (Theatre History), 1123, 1129, occasionally 1130, as well as Writing Lives – a two-semester class in which students interview Elders who survived the residential school system and then collaborate with them on writing their memoirs.

My favourite thing about English class is when students find something in a story or even in a single sentence that breaks them out of the ordinariness of sitting in a hard desk, in a square classroom, and sparks a connection that permits them to realize the power of literature to make their world at once bigger and more shared. Not social media shared, but soul-shared.

In creative writing class, I find joy in working with students to find their unique voices and join the chorus of writers and artists whose experiences both reflect and shape our understanding of the complexities of what it means to be alive.

I try to create a class environment that is warm, curious, inclusive, and hopefully fun.

I’m a writer myself and have a novel out with Anvil Press. After We Drowned is a coming-of-age/environmental cataclysm story about a teenage boy in Louisiana (I guess someone forgot to teach me to write what you know.)

Also, as a result of the 2019-2020 round of Writing Lives, I had the opportunity to work with Squamish Elder Sam George and three former students (Tanis Wilson, Dylan MacPhee and Liam Belson) on the memoir The Fire Still Burns: Life in and After Residential School, which was published by Purich Books/UBC Press in 2023.

I’m a writer because I love writing, but also because it is through writing and the arts that we reveal truths, share our suffering, our courage, and make our souls grow. Kurt Vonnegut said that last part about making our soul grow, and he knew a thing or two about being soulful. I think of writers as being the secretaries of humankind, the eyes and ears of the world, telling us who we are and what we could be.

English or creative writing class won’t teach you how to invest your money or how to get more likes, but it’ll make you more deeply human and that is pure magic.

I have a BA in Honours English from McGill University, an MA in Drama, Theatre, and Performance Studies from the University of Toronto, and an MFA in Creative Writing from UBC.

My website can be found here

 

 


Alexander Grammatikos
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2561
Office: A308b
Email: agrammatikos [at] langara.ca (agrammatikos[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio
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Alexander Grammatikos completed his BA Honours in English at Simon Fraser University (2008); MA with Distinction in Romantic and Sentimental Literatures at The University of York, U.K. (2010); and PhD in English Language and Related Literature at Carleton University (2017).

As a scholar of the Romantic period (1770-1837), Alex works on the intersections between culture, language, colonialism, nationalism, gender, and cosmopolitanism in the early- and mid-nineteenth century. In his first book, British Romantic Literature and the Emerging Modern Greek Nation (Palgrave Macmillan, 2018), Alex examines the ways in which late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century British writers portrayed contemporary Greece and its people through a variety of genres (novels, poetry, drama). He argues that these literary engagements with Ottoman Greece and Greeks helped to produce a ‘modern’ Greek nation aligned culturally and politically with Europe.

His most recent publication, Byron and Translation (Liverpool University Press, 2024), which he co-edited with Dr. Maria Schoina (Aristotle University), explores the motives behind Lord Byron’s choice to translate (in French, Latin, Ancient Greek, Modern Greek, Armenian, and Turkish), as well as reconstructs his attitude toward foreign cultures, behaviours, modes of living, customs, and habits.

Alex is passionate about teaching a variety of classes, including ENGL 1123 (Introduction to Academic Writing), ENGL 1129 (Modern Novel, Poetry, Drama), and ENGL 2222 (Classical Literature in Translation). He likes that the small class sizes at Langara allow for many opportunities for class participation and dialogue. Alex enjoys motivating students to become better writers and is a firm believer in the idea that students thrive in nurturing settings where they are encouraged to pursue their personal interests.

Alex has received numerous accolades, including an Applied Research Centre Fund Grant (Langara College), Liverpool University Press Award for Outstanding Journal Reviewer (for The Byron Journal), and the Victor Papacosma Essay Prize (from the Modern Greek Studies Association)


Sean Gray
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: sgray [at] langara.ca (sgray[at]langara[dot]ca)


Stefan Haag
Phone: 604.323.5040
Office: A302e
Email: shaag [at] langara.ca (shaag[at]langara[dot]ca)

 
Bio

Edel sei der Mensch, hilfreich und gut. (Johann Wolfgang Goethe) 

["Humans should strive to be refined, helpful and good."]

 

Ph.D. (UBC) M.A. (UBC) TESL-certificate (UBC) Zwischenprüfung (Albertus Magnus Universität, Köln, Germany)

Publications – on the music of the north, Margaret Atwood, Malcolm Lowry, and James Joyce etc.

Interests – in literature: high modernism; some postmodernism; Japanese literature; European literature

Courses Taught – fiction, poetry, drama; academic writing; survey courses, the novella, cyberpunk; ESL


Caroline Harvey
Phone: 604.323.5678
Office: A302c
Email: charvey [at] langara.ca (charvey[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio
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Education: B.A. English (SFU), M.A. English (SFU): Modernism: Joyce, Lawrence, Pound

Main Courses: English 1123, 1129, 1100

Creative Writing Courses: Poetry, Short Fiction, Creative Non-fiction

Caroline Harvey's days revolve around reading and analyzing literature with students, saluting the powers of writers, and repeating the word “connect” with conviction. She favours satirical works that are full of brutal irony and spilled blood, but she also relishes writing that flows with poetic rhythms and visionary mantras. During her thirty-plus years as an instructor, she has not once lost her passion for exploring the way that students’ lives–and worlds–can be transformed through reading and writing.

Since she still actually believes that writers are the unacknowledged legislators of the world–and that they can only thrive with support and recognition–she encourages all students to develop their writing skills, helps to judge Langara's magazine of student writing, W49, and runs Langara's Postcard Story Contest.

Publications: Caroline was a book reviewer, namely for The Vancouver Sun, The Georgia Straight, and Vancouver Review, for over a decade. She was also the poetry editor for the Vancouver Review for many years, and her own creative writing (personal essays about the alienating moments of urban life) has been published by local newspapers and literary magazines.


Gregory Holditch
Phone: 604.323.5050
Office: A308b
Email: gholditch [at] langara.ca (gholditch[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Greg Holditch has been part of the Langara English Department since 2010. He teaches literary criticism, composition and business communication. His academic interests include print culture, trauma narrative, graphic novels and video games. Greg is the co-author of Bare Essentials: 10th ed (2021) and WRITE2: Canadian Edition (2016).

Greg firmly believes that Langara offers a unique learning environment (e.g. small class size, instructor availably) that has a fundamental impact on a student’s success. This learning environment informs his own teaching philosophy: his goal as an educator is to make students active participants in their own learning. To this end, he uses interactive group activities, classroom discussion, humour and popular culture to create a classroom environment where students feel comfortable expressing themselves and their ideas.

In his free time, Greg nurtures his video game obsession, bikes at great speeds around Vancouver, and dreams about Scuba diving.


MJ Holec
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: mholec [at] langara.ca (mholec[at]langara[dot]ca)


Tiffany Johnstone
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2371
Office: A202b
Email: tjohnstone [at] langara.ca (tjohnstone[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio
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A descendant of human rights policy makers, civic leaders, and social justice oriented scholars/teachers/artists/writers from Switzerland to Newfoundland to Québec, I grew up in a small fishing village on the east coast of Newfoundland, and I apply an interest in storytelling, community, and social justice to my life and work. I earned a BA(Hons) from the University of Toronto (2004), an MA from Memorial University of Newfoundland (2005), and a PhD from the University of British Columbia (2012) in Women’s Autobiographical Adventure Literature in Canada. I have been thrilled to teach in the Department of English at Langara College since 2016. I also taught at Memorial University of Newfoundland (2006-2007) and at the University of British Columbia (2007-2017) in the Department of English (including as an Assistant Professor), the Arts Studies in Research and Writing program, the Coordinated Arts Program, and the Institute for Gender, Race, Sexuality and Social Justice. I have internationally presented and published my work (such as a chapter in The Arctic in Literature for Children and Young Adults, Routledge) and I co-edited the award-winning collection, Bearing Witness: Perspectives on War and Peace in the Arts and Humanities with Sherrill Grace and Patrick Imbert (McGill-Queens UP). I recently completed my first novel. In 2024, I co-facilitated (with Kathleen Oliver and Earl Einarson) a faculty book club (TCDC and Indigenous Education and Services) on Eden Robinson’s The Sasquatch at Home and helped with Robinson’s lecture in the Langara Indigenous Speaker Series. As part of this experience, I was grateful to be included in Indigenous cultural tours including a canoe tour (Takya Tours) of Tsleil-Waututh territory near Cates Park, a walking tour of Musqueam, and a tour of the St. Mary's Residential School by Naxaxalhts’i Albert (Sonny) McHalsie. I have also done a Langara Reconciliation Silversmithing workshop with Squamish artist and instructor, Aaron Nelson Moody (Tawx'sin Yexwulla). And as a Sexual Respect Ambassador at the College, I completed "All My Relations: Two-Spirit & Indigenous LGBTQ training" (Indigenous Perspectives Society in Victoria). I am proud to work at a College with a history of fair labour practices, low-barriers to enrollment, and meaningful community engagement here in the geographical heart of the city. And I am proud to work in a Department of world-class teachers, storytellers, mentors, and scholars who understand that good education puts people first. I enjoy promoting and celebrating our Department of English community at events such as LangaraFest. I divide my time between South-East Vancouver, Québec, Newfoundland, and Italy, and if I don’t see you in the halls, I hope to see you on the local pickleball courts.


Estella Kuchta
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2652
Office: A303m
Email: ekuchta [at] langara.ca (ekuchta[at]langara[dot]ca)

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Estella Carolye Kuchta has taught composition, literature, and research writing classes in Canada, Japan, and China. She is the author of the novel Finding the Daydreamer and coauthor of the nonfiction book Ecologizing Education: Nature-Centered Teaching for Cultural Change. She has worked as a research assistant to Dr. Gabor Maté and an intern for CBC Radio. Her creative writing, journalism, and academic research projects have been published in newspapers, literary magazines, and academic journals in Canada, the United States, and Europe. She holds a BFA in Creative Writing and an MA in English Literature from UBC and is completing a PhD in the Philosophy of Education from SFU. 


Ciara Lawlor
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2224
Office: A303k
Email: clawlor [at] langara.ca (clawlor[at]langara[dot]ca)


Tanya Lewis
Phone: 604.323.5910
Office: A202a
Email: tlewis [at] langara.ca (tlewis[at]langara[dot]ca)

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Tanya earned her M.A. from UBC in 2000 as a specialist in Canadian Literature and has been published in Essays on Canadian Writing and Studies in Canadian Literature.  What Tanya is most enthusiastic about, though, is teaching. She therefore considers herself lucky to have landed at snəw̓eyəɬ leləm̓ Langara where she is surrounded by creative colleagues and (mostly) dedicated students.  Tanya has been teaching a wide variety of EAL, first-, and second-year courses since she was hired in 2002, and she looks forward to continuing to do so until her retirement—in roughly 2040.


Neil MacAlister
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: nmacalister [at] langara.ca (nmacalister[at]langara[dot]ca)


Tess MacMillan
Division Chair (Humanities)
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: tmacmillan [at] langara.ca (tmacmillan[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Tess MacMillan has been an instructor at Langara College since September 2002. Before arriving at Langara, she taught at UBC's Writing Centre and at Douglas College.

A native Vancouverite, she earned a BA (Hons.) in English from UBC before heading to London, Ontario where she received an MA in English from the University of Western Ontario.

Tess's areas of academic interest include First Nations literature (particularly the works of Thomas King), multicultural literature (especially Canadian and Caribbean), short fiction, and English grammar. Her non-academic interests include popular culture, yoga, and fashion as an artistic medium.

Tess teaches a wide range of first year courses including English 1107, 1110, 1127, and 1129. She enjoys teaching students grammar, writing skills, and literature and believes that everyone can find a poem to love.


Erin MacWilliam
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2361
Office: A324d
Email: emacwilliam [at] langara.ca (emacwilliam[at]langara[dot]ca)

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Dr. Erin MacWilliam has been teaching post-secondary English literature and business and technical communication since 2004, and loves teaching the vibrant and intelligent students at Langara. Erin has taught at Langara since 2015, and hopes that students taking her classes find texts that spark joy and critical thought, and gain the tools to express themselves more effectively in writing. She loves learning from her students, and aims to teach diverse works and promote an inclusive and participatory classroom.

A native Vancouverite, Erin has a B.A. (hons.) in English Literature and Geography from Bishop’s University in Lennoxville, Quebec, and an M.A. and Ph.D. in English Literature from the University of British Columbia. Her doctoral research focused on the ways in which British cookbooks published between 1660 and 1760, along with the periodicals, literature, and philosophy of the time, shaped conceptions of physical and aesthetic taste. Erin’s current research interests include writing and literary pedagogy, eighteenth-century literature and didactic writing, print culture, taste and aesthetics, domesticity, and the public sphere. At Langara she has taught courses on Jane Austen, Twilight, Taylor Swift, and meme, adaptation, and fandom theory.


Paisley Mann
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2454
Office: A206
Email: pmann [at] langara.ca (pmann[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Paisley Mann has been teaching at Langara since 2014. She has a BA (English and French Literature) and an MA (English Literature) from the University of Victoria and a PhD (English Literature) from the University of British Columbia. Her dissertation and current scholarship focus on representations of the nineteenth-century city, specifically London and Paris, in British fiction and travel guides; she looks at how class, gender, and cultural values shape one’s understanding and experience of the urban environment. She has also published articles on film adaptations of Charlotte Brontë’s Jane Eyre and on nineteenth-century illustrated serial fiction.

She teaches a variety of courses, including English 1100, 1121, 1127, 1130, and 2224. In particular, she enjoys teaching film studies, introducing students to Victorian literature, and helping students to improve aspects of their writing. She appreciates how Langara’s small class sizes allow for class dialogue and participation, and she strives to create a classroom environment that is both intellectually challenging and supportive. She aims to help students to become good readers of the culture around them and to see that fiction is not a retreat from but an entrance into contemporary debates and social critique.


Ameena Mayer
Phone: 604.323.5511
Office: A324c
Email: amayer [at] langara.ca (amayer[at]langara[dot]ca)

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Ameena Mayer has a Masters in English Literature from the University of Victoria. She has been teaching in Langara's English department for fifteen years. In her spare time, she enjoys singing, writing, and volunteering with seniors. She recently wrote a science fiction novel called Love from an Alien Sun, which will be published in spring of 2023 by Running Wild Press.


Sean McAlister
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2581
Office: 
Email: smcalister [at] langara.ca (smcalister[at]langara[dot]ca)


Shannon Meek
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2453
Office: A206
Email: smeek [at] langara.ca (smeek[at]langara[dot]ca)


Jonathan Newell
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2562
Office: A324b
Email: jnewell [at] langara.ca (jnewell[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

I received my PhD from the University of British Columbia in 2017 and taught there for a several years before coming to Langara. My research interests include the Gothic, Weird Fiction, horror, fantasy, science fiction, nineteenth-century literature, and videogames. My theoretical interests particularly include ecocriticism, posthumanism, new materialism, and affect theory. I try to frame my classroom as a space for curiosity and conversation, encouraging students to seek out what interests them most in the subject matter via open and student-driven assignments and extensive class discussions.

In addition to my academic work, I’m a writer, illustrator, mapmaker, and games designer. I maintain an irregularly updated art and games blog at bearded-devil.com where you can see some of my work.


Trevor Newland
Phone: 604.323.5407
Office: A303d
Email: tnewland [at] langara.ca (tnewland[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Currently, I teach English 1123, 1129, 1130, all interesting and practical first-year courses. I also teach 2236 (second-year creative writing: prose fiction) on a regular basis in addition to other second-year courses dealing with the relationship between pictures and words in literature, freak culture, and survivor types. I’m the author/illustrator of several graphic and illustrated novels including The Atheneum and The Marysburgh Vortex series, published and distributed throughout North America and Europe. I’ve taught at BCIT and VCC, and before that, I spent my academic career at SFU (with a focus on conspiracy theory and the works of Umberto Eco) and UBC (with a focus on violence in contemporary American literature and, in particular, the works of Cormac McCarthy). Before that, I was a professional musician and songwriter working at various production houses in Los Angeles and Toronto.


Shannon Page
Phone: 
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Email: spage [at] langara.ca (spage[at]langara[dot]ca)

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Shannon Page (they/them) has taught English, communications, and writing at various post-secondary institutions including Sheridan College, SFU, ECUAD, and Langara College. As an instructor, they are committed to fostering an inclusive environment that encourages all students to take risks and experiment in their learning. Shannon holds a BA in English and Classics from Memorial University of Newfoundland and an MA in English (Creative Writing) from University of Toronto. In addition to teaching, they maintain an active creative practice, and their writing has appeared in Canadian and U.S. publications including Foglifter, Plenitude, Grain, and THIS Magazine.


Daniel Poirier
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2512
Office: A203
Email: dpoirier [at] langara.ca (dpoirier[at]langara[dot]ca)

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BA in World Literature, History Extended Minor from Simon Fraser University (British Columbia)

MFA in Creative Writing - Fiction from Sarah Lawrence College (New York)

Daniel is a teacher and a writer. When not teaching, he’s usually reading literature. If he’s not reading literature, he’s writing it. If he’s not reading or writing it, he’s thinking about reading or writing it. Or he’s watching really good TV. Or poor TV, but rarely awful TV. He tries to squeeze in time for video games. He walks his dog regularly. He’s in denial about his grey hairs. He understands the importance of exercise but has little patience for it. His interests are wide ranging, but usually cycle back to analysis of the human condition and alternating narrative points-of-view.

I have a penchant for Japanese writers but am interested in all far-flung literature. I like to look at which writers may have influenced others across space and time. I like to examine why some works translate and travel while others remain fixed. I stress cross-cultural reading and interdisciplinary study because this makes for a more well-rounded citizen of the world and a more attractive potential employee. 

I aim to make my classes fun and engaging, but not at the expense of hard work. Learning is hard work; becoming a better writer is hard work. Almost anything worth doing is hard work. And so we’ll work hard, and strive, and grow.


Thor Polukoshko
Phone: 604.323.5675
Office: A205
Email: tpolukoshko [at] langara.ca (tpolukoshko[at]langara[dot]ca)

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Thor Polukoshko (he/him) has a B.A. and M.A. in English from Simon Fraser University, and has worked in the Langara English department since 2011.

Thor is one of the organizers of the English Department's readings series, Strangers on a Train. His academic interests include postcolonial/race studies, critical disability studies, hip hop, authorship, graphic narrative, and contemporary BC poetry/poetics. He has taught courses on the poetics of hip hop, robot fiction, fantasy literature, and Star Wars, among other topics.

 

His master’s thesis on Indigenous rap music, “Playing the Role of the Tribe: The Aesthetics of Appropriation in Canadian Aboriginal Hip Hop,” was published in a collection of essays entitled Selves and Subjectivities: Reflections of Canadian Arts and Culture (2012) by Athabasca University Press. His poetry chapbook Passing Through: A Traveler's Log(s) - Movements 1-23 was published by above/ground press in 2025. His poetry has been published in West Coast Line and The Incongruous Quarterly. Thor was one of the founding editors of the literary/interdisciplinary magazine Memewar.
 


Aubyn Rader
Phone: 
Office: A203
Email: arader [at] langara.ca (arader[at]langara[dot]ca)


Sarah Richards
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: srichards [at] langara.ca (srichards[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio
Sarah has been a copywriter/editor for nearly two decades in the fields of career management and business research. She believes professional writing is a skill set, not an innate talent, and everyone — with hard work and dedication — can improve. She loves teaching communications in various PDD programs at the College such as data analytics, web design, and nursing. 
 
Sarah has a master's degree in creative writing from UBC and she teaches fiction (ENGL 2236) and creative non-fiction (ENGL 2276). Her first novel, CHINA WHITE, a finalist in the 2018 HarperCollins Best New Fiction Prize, was published as an Audible Original (2021), available in both French and English. The sequel BORN WINNERS followed in May 2023. Her third novel, a standalone murder mystery set in the Pacific Northwest, THE WORST OF YOU, will be released as an Audible Original in May 2024. Her other stories and non-fiction works have appeared in carte blanche, prism international, The Puritan, Rusty Toque, Room Magazine, The Cardiff Review, The Danforth Review, Eclectica, Fox Adoption, UNBUILD walls, bbc.com, and Lonely Planet, among others. 

 


Erin Robb
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2117
Office: A303l
Email: erobb [at] langara.ca (erobb[at]langara[dot]ca)


Simon Rolston
Phone: 
Office: A303f
Email: srolston [at] langara.ca (srolston[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

My area of expertise is twentieth-century American literature, with a focus on life writing, crime, and the American prison system. I have experience teaching in Canada, the US, and the UK. My work has been published in American Studies, Critical Survey, MELUS, and Canadian Literature, and I am currently working on a book project, The Defiant Ones: Masculinity, Race, and the Ex-Convict in Twentieth-Century American Literature


Jordan Rudek
Phone: 
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Email: jrudek [at] langara.ca (jrudek[at]langara[dot]ca)

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Jordan Rudek joined the Langara English Department in 2014, teaching a wide variety of courses since becoming a faculty member. His subjects of expertise include business communication, English as an additional language (EAL), essay writing, academic research, and literary scholarship. Jordan appreciates being able to teach smaller classes and foster a rapport with his students to create a constructive and welcoming environment.

Jordan focuses on establishing a dialogue with his students so as to open up the learning space of the classroom. He employs group activities, journal writing, and active Q/A sessions to give students various opportunities to share, collaborate, and educate themselves. His intention is for students to leave his courses with improved and practical writing and communication skills that they can use in their future careers and academic pursuits.

When he’s not teaching, Jordan writes video game reviews, plays in and organizes a men’s rec basketball league, attends a weekly board game night, and travels with his family.


Alison Rukavina
Phone: 
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Email: arukavina [at] langara.ca (arukavina[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

I was an imaginative child whose favourite activity, besides visiting a branch of the Vancouver public library, was slipping into the magical world of books where my imagination knew no boundaries. It is perhaps not surprising then that I decided to become an instructor of English literature. I have English degrees from Simon Fraser University (BA, MA) and the University of Alberta (PhD). An instructor in the English department at snəw̓eyəɬ leləm̓ Langara College since 2021, I teach courses in literature, academic writing, and English-as-an-Additional Language. Previously, I worked at Texas Tech University and the University of Alberta.

In my research, I consider books as transnational commodities and explore the growth of an international book trade in the late nineteenth century, as well as the publishers and authors who engaged with the social networks of the global book trade in the Victorian period. I am also interested in the Canadian and British authors who wrote for an international audience and used writing as a vehicle for imperial and global celebrity in the Victorian and Edwardian periods. I have published on the nineteenth-century international book trade, nineteenth-century Australian and British book trades, Canadian print culture and book history, social network theory, and author/publisher relations.

When I’m not teaching, I’m learning how not to kill plants, reading gruesome procedural mysteries, learning about hand-press printing, and making jewelry.


Leah Sharzer
Phone: 604.323.5511 ext. 2238
Office: 
Email: lsharzer [at] langara.ca (lsharzer[at]langara[dot]ca)

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I’ve been teaching at Langara since 2017. My favourite subjects to teach are literary theory, grammar, and academic writing. I love helping students discover that they too can learn to write successfully by using conventions of good writing that remain unknown if we’re not taught to look for them, and undeveloped if we’re not taught to practice them.

I studied French literature at the Université Paris VIII, where I got interested in theories of translation as a creative practice. I went on to do an M.A. in English literature at Simon Fraser University. My research focused on French translations of Emily Dickinson.

When I’m not teaching, you can find me in the faculty union office, where I work as a shop steward supporting Langara’s amazing instructional and non-instructional faculty. In my spare time I like spinning wool, knitting, crocheting, gardening, and hanging out with cats.


Emel Tastekin
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: etastekin [at] langara.ca (etastekin[at]langara[dot]ca)


Lauren Vedal
Phone: 
Office: 
Email: lvedal [at] langara.ca (lvedal[at]langara[dot]ca)


Jacqueline Weal
Phone: 604.323.5943
Office: A302a
Email: jweal [at] langara.ca (jweal[at]langara[dot]ca)

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I studied Art & Design, worked in fashion for over a decade, and returned to post-secondary to study Literature & Film. I have taught at Langara since 2004: first year courses, second year surveys, and specialty courses on shape-shifters, biopics and rom-coms. I also co-instructed a Gothic Field School in the UK in 2013. Recently, I wrote a chapter for the Palgrave Lunar Gothic collection. My specialties include film studies, gothic & horror, biography and romantic comedy.


Skylet Yu
Phone: 
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Email: skyletyu [at] langara.ca (skyletyu[at]langara[dot]ca)

Bio

Skylet is an instructor in the English Department at Langara College. Holding a BA and MA in English Language from UBC and a TESL Diploma from VCC, she has about seven years of experience in the field of English language education and assessment, including more than two years at Paragon Testing Enterprises, where she helped develop ESL instructional materials and proficiency tests, such as the CELPIP Tests and LPI Test. Besides her research interests in corpus linguistics, language change, language assessment, English varieties, and Canadianisms, she is passionate about fostering a learning community and developing inclusive relationships with diverse groups of colleagues and students.

Contact

Email
english [at] langara.ca