Frances Zauhar
Lecturer
zauhar@marywood.edu
School of the Humanities
570-348-6211 x2433Immaculata Hall 112A
Courses taught:
Composition and Rhetoric ENGL-160Argument and Research ENGL-230
Professional and Technical Writing ENGL-240
Women Writers ENGL-318
Environmental Literature ENGL-331
The Contemporary American Novel ENGL-354
American Literature II ENGL-357
American Literature I ENGL-357A
COURSES TAUGHT
Composition and Rhetoric ENGL-160
Women Writers ENGL-318
The Contemporary American Novel ENGL-354
American Literature I: Beginnings to 1865 ENGL-357A
American Literature II: 1865-Present ENGL-357
African American Literature ENGL-359
ST: Immigrant Writers ENGL-399E
ST: British Literature Between the World Wars ENGL-399F
ST: The Harlem Renaissance ENGL-399I
BIO
Dr. Fran Zauhar came to Marywood University in 2012 to serve as Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, after filling both administrative and faculty positions at the University of Pittsburgh, Johnstown; Saint Vincent College; and Gustavus Adolphus College. She returned to teaching in 2020; since then she has taught a variety of courses in writing and literature for the English programs in the Department of Communication, Language, and Literature. Her specialty areas focus on women writers, immigrant writers, and Black writers, and she includes authors from these groups in both the general surveys and the special topics courses she teaches. Her hobbies include knitting, hiking and walking, and music. She especially enjoys singing in the Marywood University Campus Choir.
Composition and Rhetoric ENGL-160
Women Writers ENGL-318
The Contemporary American Novel ENGL-354
American Literature I: Beginnings to 1865 ENGL-357A
American Literature II: 1865-Present ENGL-357
African American Literature ENGL-359
ST: Immigrant Writers ENGL-399E
ST: British Literature Between the World Wars ENGL-399F
ST: The Harlem Renaissance ENGL-399I
BIO
Dr. Fran Zauhar came to Marywood University in 2012 to serve as Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences, after filling both administrative and faculty positions at the University of Pittsburgh, Johnstown; Saint Vincent College; and Gustavus Adolphus College. She returned to teaching in 2020; since then she has taught a variety of courses in writing and literature for the English programs in the Department of Communication, Language, and Literature. Her specialty areas focus on women writers, immigrant writers, and Black writers, and she includes authors from these groups in both the general surveys and the special topics courses she teaches. Her hobbies include knitting, hiking and walking, and music. She especially enjoys singing in the Marywood University Campus Choir.