Program Overview
Curriculum
Master of Arts in Creative Writing (MA)
The Master of Arts program permits students to develop their particular talents through small writing and literature classes, where they receive close attention from faculty. The MA offers three specializations: Fiction, Poetry and Creative Nonfiction. The 10-course curriculum includes three workshops in a concentration, one cross-genre writing seminar and five electives. A creative thesis project completes the MA program experience.
Core Curriculum (4
courses)
- 3 workshops in one genre
- 1 cross-genre course (MCW 479 Poetry for Prose Writers or MCW 480 Prose for Poets)
Electives (5 courses drawn from literature studies, in the MALit program, special topics courses, and seminars and internships in teaching and publishing)
- Must include 2 literature studies courses
- 2 independent study courses (maximum)
Thesis (1 course)
Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing (MFA)
The MFA program incorporates single and multiple-genre study, including numerous opportunities for study within Northwestern University's community of writers. The MFA is a partially funded, interdisciplinary graduate writing program with three tracks: Fiction, Poetry and Creative Nonfiction. The 18-course curriculum includes five workshops in a concentration, six electives and two thesis courses to complete the MFA program experience.
Core Curriculum (10
courses)
- 7 workshops in one genre
- 1 cross-genre course (MCW 479 Poetry for Prose Writers or MCW 480 Prose for Poets)
- 1 seminar on teaching creative writing
- 1 practicum in teaching
Electives (6 courses)
- 6 courses drawn from literature studies in the MALit program, special topics courses, and internships in publishing
- Must include 3 literature studies courses
- Maximum of 2 optional independent study courses
Thesis (2 courses)
Electives
Electives are chosen from the graduate course offerings in literature (MALit), creative writing special topics courses (MCW 490), and the seminars and internships (practica) in teaching and publishing. Since good writers also need to be good readers, students must take electives in literary studies. Recent electives include courses on reading poetry; the narrator in fiction, nonfiction, and poetry; and writing humor. Independent studies with faculty mentors round out the program and provide an opportunity to strengthen writing portfolios.
Thesis
The final project of the both the MA and MFA programs is a creative thesis, an original work of high literary merit (judged on the basis of art as well as craft). The creative thesis is structured and revised under the supervision of a faculty member. The project may be one long piece or a series of shorter pieces. It may include or be an expansion of work written during the student's course of study as long as it represents a culminating effort to shape stories, prose pieces, a long piece, or a group of poems into a coherent, self-sufficient work. This large-scale project supplements the smaller-scale study of craft with the invaluable experience of creating a larger work. And for students who plan to pursue book-length publication after graduation, the master's creative thesis may be the first version of a work in progress.
Independent Study
Besides drawing from the pool of faculty teaching the on-campus
workshops, students may complete an independent study via
email with an instructor from the Faculty
Mentor List. This list provides students with a wider
variety of instructors with diverse writing styles and teaching
methods to choose from. The mentors list changes annually,
though new mentors may be added more frequently. Click
here for instructions on how to register.
Publishing Internships
Chicago has a long history as a home to distinguished literary and cultural journals that seek out up-and-coming writers. Creative writing students can learn first-hand about this publishing arena and how it works by interning at a literary journal and receiving up to a whole class' worth of credit. Students develop projects based on experience at a journal under the guidance of publishing director Susan Harris (sharris@northwestern.edu),
faculty member, editor of Words without Borders, and former director and editor-in-chief of Northwestern University Press. The practicum — along with the 10-week course Seminar on the American Publishing Industry (MCW 575) — prepares
students for publishing careers. Students may contact
one of the following organizations and request a placement or contact a place of their own choosing.
Teaching Practicum
Both the MA and MFA programs qualify degree-holders for entry-level teaching in college-level writing programs. Although participation in a practicum does not guarantee graduates a teaching job, the practicum in teaching enables students to get hands-on teaching experience while receiving credit. The practicum — along with the 10-week course Seminar on Teaching Creative Writing (MCW 570) — prepares students for a teaching career. S. L. Wisenberg (wisenberg@northwestern.edu),
faculty member and creative writing program co-director, guides students. Students may contact
one of the following organizations and request a placement,
or contact S. L. Wisenberg (wisenberg@northwestern.edu)
for placement options.
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