MLitt Creative Writing Practice & Study
This course translate your creative interests into a postgraduate degree that has flexibility, and learn how to write in a productive, intellectually stimulating, and highly creative way. You will learn how to create and develop your own writing practice through a series of creative and practical workshops. You'll build a significant folio of creative work, and develop this into work of a standard that is ready for formal presentation. We are highly engaged in the world of contemporary publishing, and offer you the opportunity to meet with writers and publishers from around the UK and beyond. You'll be able to take part in a varied and exciting range of literary activities, including publishing events, readings, festivals, and magazines.
Our students write novels, stories, poetry, monologues, as well as exploring creativity in non-fiction, essays, journalism, reviewing, and writing for the theatre. You will also learn how to present and talk about your work with authority and confidence, in the context of literary studies and a knowledge of the creative marketplace, while also learning how to read others' writing with sensitivity, intelligence and critical awareness.
In addition, you'll explore the details of publishing, finding agents, setting your work in a context and making the important connection between the scale and shape of your writing and your aspirations for it. There will be opportunities to undertake specialist master classes with top-name authors, and go on visits to sites of special interest.
Careers:
Graduates can go on to become festival managers, editors, published authors and poets, writing teachers, and performers. Previous student successes have included:
- publishing novels with Sandstone, Polygon, and Contraband
- a placement in Canongate Publishing
- writers' awards from Creative Scotland and the Scottish Books Trust
- inclusion in the Sunday Times 'Must Read' list
- the performance of a play.
This course translate your creative interests into a postgraduate degree that has flexibility, and learn how to write in a productive, intellectually stimulating, and highly creative way. You will learn how to create and develop your own writing practice through a series of creative and practical workshops. You'll build a significant folio of creative work, and develop this into work of a standard that is ready for formal presentation. We are highly engaged in the world of contemporary publishing, and offer you the opportunity to meet with writers and publishers from around the UK and beyond. You'll be able to take part in a varied and exciting range of literary activities, including publishing events, readings, festivals, and magazines.
Our students write novels, stories, poetry, monologues, as well as exploring creativity in non-fiction, essays, journalism, reviewing, and writing for the theatre. You will also learn how to present and talk about your work with authority and confidence, in the context of literary studies and a knowledge of the creative marketplace, while also learning how to read others' writing with sensitivity, intelligence and critical awareness.
In addition, you'll explore the details of publishing, finding agents, setting your work in a context and making the important connection between the scale and shape of your writing and your aspirations for it. There will be opportunities to undertake specialist master classes with top-name authors, and go on visits to sites of special interest.
Careers:
Graduates can go on to become festival managers, editors, published authors and poets, writing teachers, and performers. Previous student successes have included:
- publishing novels with Sandstone, Polygon, and Contraband
- a placement in Canongate Publishing
- writers' awards from Creative Scotland and the Scottish Books Trust
- inclusion in the Sunday Times 'Must Read' list
- the performance of a play.