This an article that I wrote and was published in a British writers' magazine, now defunct. I do have a creative writing degree from the then University of Glamorgan in Wales. I've also had 17 books published. Is there a connection? The jury is still out. www.dlnelsonwriter.com
DO YOU NEED A CREATIVE WRITING DEGREE?
It all depends on what a writer needs to further the mastery of his/her writing craft.
What advantages and disadvantages can a university creative writing degree offer?
A publisher won't publish a novel just because the author holds a degree if the novel is bad, nor would they turn down a good novel because the writer didn't have a degree. However, the flicker of the idea that a person who held a degree was serious might cross their minds…or not. However, if the studies help someone write a publishable work, then the degree would be worth it.
If a person wants to teach creative writing, the degree is a plus. One university, Antioch in California offers a post M.A. in teaching creative writing. https://www.antioch.edu/academics/creative-writing-communication/teaching-creative-writing-certificate/ I did find this site on creative writing teaching jobs that are available. https://www.simplyhired.com/search?q=creative+writing+teacher&pn=5&job=gwSk94Um6RUJY7K2ZstlqUtlOja5IIaB8KNG7gkl_5aREiPkJBaG8Q
Degree programs are varied. Some are heavy on theory and academics with courses called things like form and theory in literature, studies in short fiction, etc.
One of the most frequent pieces of advice given to new writers is to read. A degree program that insists students read the great writers and examine them for technique could offer an advantage to those writers who feel they are lacking in these areas. However, if a writer wants to devote as much time as possible to the writing, reading Nathaniel Hawthorne could be a time waster. If one wants to write mysteries, delving into the top crime writers to examine them for things like plotting, technical information, character development.
Other programs concentrate on writing itself putting students through writing workshop after workshop. These are ideal of the writers who want to do little else but write, but not so for those who want theory.
For many adults dropping back to full-time student-status is not financially possible. Distance learning programs or low-residency programs fill this need. Distance learning programs such as Humber in Canada pairs a writer and a student. Low-residency programs such as Goddard requires student to be on campus for short bursts of times then sends them off to write.
How important is it that a "name" writer is on the faculty? Working with a name writer might bestow status and may even result in an endorsement on the back of a novel when it is published. However, working with a name writer won't guarantee an agent or publisher introductions. Working with a university, however, sometimes brings connections. Many invite agents and publishers, but again it is not a guarantee of publication.
Writing students want to work with good writers (with or without a name) who can teach. The quality of individual teacher is only apparent after enrollment when students talk about who is good and who is bad. One writer, paired with a successful writer, spent six months working on the first twenty pages of her novel, but when she finished she was sure of every word and more importantly why the word was there. She could then go on with the novel and had a greater confidence in what she was doing.
The critiquing is a major element, but a writer involved with Open University felt that the criticism wasn't deep enough - certainly nothing like the woman who spent six months on twenty pages. In fact he felt the comments were so superficial they were almost useless.
Many of the people I talked with cited the major advantage for them was to be around other writers who could look at their work and see its strengths and weaknesses. They also cited the discipline. Having to write created or strengthened good work habits.
My own personal experience with two creative writing degree programs was mixed. One helped me make giant strides in my writing, thanks to the perceptive demands of my talented mentors writers Catherine Merriman and Siân James. Both pushed me to be the best I could be. The second program hurt my writing. I was caught between my own voice and what the school wanted and I dropped out.
Here are some things to check on:
- Do graduates have publishing credits?
- How much emphasis is there on writing vs. theory/literature?
- Is the program accredited (depending on the country)?
- What type of writing support is there?
- What writers will be working directly with the students (guest name writers can be inspiring, but will they evaluate student work?)
- Is it possible to take a test course?
- Who is on the faculty and how much involvement do they have with the students?
- How much professional writer-student contact is there?
- How are workshops handled?
- What needs to be produced for the degree (novel, play, chapbook, academic paper, etc.)
- How long is the program?
- Cost?
- Are there networking opportunities?
- Will the program help you improve your writing?
Only
after you weigh what the degree offers with your own needs will you
know whether to proceed or not. As for me I regret neither the program
that brought me so much nor the one I didn't finish. Both advanced my
own sense of my craft, albeit in very different ways.
EXAMPLES
Here are samples from people who went
through degree programs and were kind enough to share their feelings.
Lynne Rees THE OVEN
The
MA was, both at the time and in retrospect, a very positive experience
for me. I was at a very early stage in my development as a writer and
the structure of the course - regular submission of work, feedback from
my tutor and other students/members of staff at the weekend meetings,
reflecting on my own processes and discoveries - gave me a much needed
discipline and focus, and encouraged me to immerse myself fully into the
world of contemporary poetry.
At the end of the two years,
while I had a number of very strong poems and a few publication credits,
my work was, generally, still in an embryonic stage and the submitted
collection a long way from being ready for publication, though I was
still awarded the degree. I like to think that my potential was recognized (my poetry has been widely published and anthologized in the
last six years, this year my first novel was published, and a poetry
collection is forthcoming in 2005) and I value that a great deal, and
hope that tutors and leaders of all creative writing courses keep this
in mind when assessing creative work. It's something I'm aware of as a
tutor myself now.
No writer's development can be confined to a
particular time scale. Some graduates…published very quickly and very
successfully, others, like myself, needed more time and/or have
published more in the world of the small presses, some are yet to place
their work. But we have all succeeded in our own ways.
I
understand that MA programmes thrive on the recognized publication
successes of their graduates, but I'd still like to see a continuing
place for the nurturing and encouragement of new voices, the recognition
and celebration of 'good' writing regardless of it's ability to find a
place in the current market.
Tony Curtis THE ART OF SEAMUS
HEANEY, THE LAST CANDLES LOVE FROM WALES, THE ARCHES, WAR VOICES, TAKEN
FOR PEARLS, The POETRY OF SNOWDONIA (and more)(Note: Curtis is a
graduate of Goddard in the US and went on to found the creative writing
program at Glamorgan University in Wales)
I decided to enrol
in the Goddard program because it seemed like the right thing to do at
my stage - I'd published one book and won a couple of prizes, but needed
a kick. Goddard fitted in with my family and professional commitments
(my college also paid the fees!!). Also, I was open to the American
confessional approach because I'd dealt in my poetry with the recent
deaths of my father and grandmother.
The Glamorgan Masters was based on the distance-learning program at Goddard. It was the first such in the UK.
Our
course brings personal satisfaction, a professional qualification by a
research degree and, for over two dozen writers, publication.
Kaytie
M. Lee (Note: I have included this lengthy description to help those who
want an in-depth program to share the experiences of one degree
candidate.)
I am a thesis candidate…(for a) Master of Professional
Writing Program. The MPW program is set up so that a student takes 15
units in a major, 9 Units of electives, and two mandatory classes, one
with a thesis advisor and the other a survey course. The idea is that
writers should be able to create in different forms, so diversity in
electives is encouraged.
As a fiction major, I took fiction workshops
with Gina Nahai, S. L. Stebel, Aram Saroyan, and Shelly Lowenkopf, and I
was fortunate to take Hubert Selby Jr.'s last fiction workshop--he died
in the spring, a few weeks before the end of the semester. Each
instructor is a published and publishing author, and they each had very
different approaches to fiction.
For electives I took non-fiction
with Noel Riley Fitch, and two sections of screenplay development with
Jason Squire. Though I had the opportunity, I did not take poetry,
playwriting or technical writing.
I enjoyed the screenplay
development classes. They helped me focus on dialogue and character
development in a focused form because I was not able to rely on
description and internalization for my characters. Story arc was more
rigid than I was accustomed too - it's good for novelists to think in
overall terms. Diversity of form is a benefit of the program--students
are encouraged to try something outside of their experience--many
traditional MFA programs limit a student to Poetry and/or Prose.
There
are approximately 130 students enrolled in it at any one time, some
just starting and taking three classes a semester, others at my stage,
taking only a one-credit class with their thesis advisor. The large
number of enrolled students is, I think, a benefit in the long run
because every class affords a new opportunity for fresh perspective on
writing, whereas I imagine in those smaller programs, the same faces
across the table in each class might get a little predictable in
commentary. Of course, it's difficult to develop camaraderie when people
disappear after the class is over, but since I wanted to hear as many
opinions about my writing as possible, the large student body worked for
me - most of the time.
Some instructors used exercises and prompts, others assigned submission times and looked at whatever a student brought in.
Each
workshop consists of a mixture of students-a fiction workshop is never
just fiction students. While this mixture allows for a range of
viewpoints, it became discouraging to me when students commenting on my
prose claimed never to read novels because they were too busy watching
films or reading poetry. It was when one (screenplay) student objected
to an assignment that required reading novels in a fiction workshop that
I began to long for a more traditional MFA program experience.
The
MPW program wants its students to be writers, not scholars.
Consequently there is very little emphasis placed on reading and
discussion what's being published and virtually no study on literary
critique. By not bogging down students with "homework" the program
encourages students to "create."
While I am grateful for the
extra hours to write, I think the program stunts its students by not
giving them the vocabulary or even basic understanding of literary
criticism that a Master's degree ought to deliver. It may not be a
Literature Degree, but if we're trying to create it we damn well better
know what's being said about it!
There were no novel
workshops! As an aspiring novelist, I was looking forward to developing
my novel and having the whole of it work shopped. This did not happen.
Most of the instructors requested that students start new projects in
their classes. I can see their point--it's difficult for a new teacher
to take over where another left off, since comments and suggestions may
be very different or even contradictory from one instructor to the next.
And it never seemed to work when students brought sections from the
middle of a novel that no one in the class had read-what could we say
since we hadn't read the rest of it?
Since I wanted to take as
many of the teachers as possible, I sacrificed continuity in my novel. I
wrote more short stories (which was a good thing) and now that I've
just got my thesis to complete (which is a novel) I am working solely
with my thesis advisor. I suspect that novels would flourish more in a
smaller program--but perhaps that's just me longing for greener grass.
My
Own Bias: I prefer to read and write literary fiction -many of my peers
want to write genre fiction. Nothing wrong with genres, and I'm pleased
to know that there are writers of genre fiction who love to read and
love to write and want to make their work of the highest calibre they
can. I quickly found the other students who shared my interest, and we
seek each other out when we feel we aren't getting the criticism we
need. After the program that's what will last--the small community we
created, our own salon of writers who write very different work but who
share the sensibility that we want our writing to transcend the confines
of genre.
I'm Terrified of the Creative Writing MFA Backlash: Now that I'm done I fear that my writing has ceased to be my own or that I have lost my "voice." Work shopping is a dangerous tool- if a person isn't stubborn or able to refuse suggestions (not belligerent in class, not that at all), she risks morphing into the sanitary graduate writer that some critics loath and deride. Is that me?
I don't know.
I
think not--but the fear is there. Perhaps I'd have been better off
toiling or traveling, working odd jobs and writing in coffee shops or
laundromats.
When I get too angsty about writing I shut up, sit down, and just write. Better to do than to agonize over doing.
EXERCISE
Sit
quietly and think what help you need to improve your writing: feedback
from other writers, a single course, a writing group, a degree program.
Then go out and find it. By the way the internet gives lots of degree
programs if you enter university writing programs.
No comments:
Post a Comment