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Requirements: MFA Creative Writing & MA Publishing Double Masters

Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing and

Master of Arts in Publishing

Double Degree Requirements

The School of Graduate Studies: Traditional, On Campus and Online

The Graduate Studies Creative Writing and Publishing program offers a Master of Fine Arts (MFA) in Creative Writing that requires 30 credits (10 courses) and an online Master of Arts (MA) in Publishing that requires 30 credits (10 courses) for a total of 60 credits (20 courses) including:

MFA Creative Writing Hybrid Workshop Literature Courses. 0-21 credits (0-7 courses). Hybrid courses can be applied toward workshop (12 credits) and/or literature (9 credits) requirements, and are otherwise NOT required. Choose hybrid courses from among any of the available 3 hybrid tracks below. Course selection need not be limited to a given track. Tracks are intended solely to highlight courses that may be relevant to a student’s specific interest in creative writing and to facilitate faculty advising. Tracks are not formally recognized on student transcripts. Discuss with your advisor.

Poetry: 0-12 credits (0-4 courses).

Prose: Dramatic Writing: 0-21 credits (0-7 courses).

Prose: Young Adults: 0-9 credits (0-3 courses).

MFA Creative Writing Workshops: 12 credits (4 courses). Workshop requirements can also be fulfilled by Hybrid Workshop Literature Courses. Choose workshop courses from among any of the available 8 workshop tracks below. Course selection need not be limited to a given track. Tracks are intended solely to highlight courses that may be relevant to a student’s specific interest in creative writing and to facilitate faculty advising. Tracks are not formally recognized on student transcripts. Discuss with your advisor.

Poetry: 0-12 credits (0-4 courses).

Prose: Creative Nonfiction: 0-12 credits (0-4 courses).

Prose: Dramatic Writing: 0-12 credits (0-4 courses).

Prose: Flash Fiction: 0-3 credits (0-1 courses).

Prose: Generative Writing: 0-3 credits (0-1 courses).

Prose: Novel Writing: 0-3 credits (0-1 courses).

Prose: Rhetorical Pedagogy: 0-3 credits (0-1 courses).

Prose: Short Fiction: 0-12 credits (0-4 courses).

MFA Creative Writing Literature Courses: 9 credits (3 courses). Literature requirements can also be fulfilled by Hybrid Workshop Literature Courses.

MFA Creative Writing Elective Courses: 6 credits (2 courses).

MFA Creative Writing Thesis: 3 credits (1 course).

MA Publishing Master Courses: 15 credits (5 courses). The MA Publishing program is delivered fully online.

MA Publishing Elective Courses: 12 credits (4 courses). Choose courses from among any of the available 4 tracks below. Course selection need not be limited to a given track. Tracks are intended solely to highlight courses that may be relevant to a student’s specific interest in publishing and to facilitate faculty advising. Tracks are not formally recognized on student transcripts. Discuss with your advisor.

Children’s (including Middle Grade and Young Adult): 0-9 credits (0-3 courses).

Editorial: 0-9 credits (0-3 courses).

Marketing: 0-9 credits (0-3 courses).

Sales: 0-6 credits (0-2 courses).

MA Publishing Thesis: 3 credits (1 course).

All Certificates

MFA Creative Writing & MA Publishing (60 Credits)

3 Year Double Master Degrees

The MFA in Creative Writing and MA in Publishing Double Degree offer students the opportunity to get the best of both programs. These two degrees are offered in a compressed time frame with fewer credits than needed to complete both degrees separately. Students will leave the double degree program with full length creative work to satisfy the MFA requirements, and a thesis or capstone project satisfying the MA requirements. Students can complete this double degree in as little as three years.

MFA Creative Writing (30 Credits)

MFA Creative Writing Hybrid Workshop Literature Courses (0-21 Credits)

Choose from hybrid tracks in poetry, dramatic writing or young adults. Course selection need not be limited to a given track. Tracks are intended solely to highlight courses that may be relevant to a student’s specific interest in creative writing and to facilitate faculty advising. Tracks are not formally recognized on student transcripts. Discuss with your advisor.

*Hybrid courses can be applied to fulfill workshop (12 credits) and/or literature (9 credits) requirements, and are otherwise NOT required.

Choose 0-7* of the Following 15 Courses

Poetry (0-12 Credits)

CRW 7118: Content and Form in Poetry

Prerequisite: None

This course is a seminar designed to help writers explore the relationship between content and form in poetry. The goal of this approach is to both further the student’s literary background and to survey and assess the repertoire of strategies and techniques employed by a variety of authors. The emphasis for this course is the study of poetry forms, and how the content of the poem affects or directs the choice of form. Students write new creative work in addition to analyzing and evaluating the work of others.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7131: Ekphrasis and Mad Artists

Prerequisite: None

Ekphrasis is a literary response to visual art. This course combines the analysis and critique of ekphrastic poetry, drama, and fiction with critical work on ekphrasis. Students also review excerpts from the journals and letters of artists. In addition to close readings of literary texts and the consideration of visual art, students generate original ekphrastic pieces of their own for peer evaluation.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7142: Creative Nonfiction Craft

Prerequisite: None

This course provides craft exercises and research strategies for the writer of book-length creative nonfiction manuscripts. Narrative and prose theory along with hands-on exercises provide the basis for the instruction in developing a knowledge of and facility with the craft of writing long form creative nonfiction. Students breakdown and assess seminal examples of book-length creative nonfiction and in the process devise and construct a formal plan for the creation of their own work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7143: Content and Form in Creative Writing

Prerequisite: None

This seminar enables writers to break down the relationship between content and form in creative nonfiction. The goal is to both enhance the student’s literary repertoire and to assess the strategies and techniques employed by creative nonfiction authors. Readings include compressed essays, memoirs, and lyric essays, and other work that illustrates a range of styles and effects. Students integrate theory and practice by writing original creative nonfiction in a variety of styles.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Dramatic Writing (0-21 Credits)

CRW 7150: Mystery/Horror Writing

Prerequisite: None

Horror is meant to invoke intense feelings of revulsion and surprise, while a mystery is something that is difficult or impossible to understand. These two genres of writing have long been linked together for a variety of reasons. In this course, students analyze and evaluate seminal works in both categories and create new work of their own.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7160: Researching and Writing Historical Fiction and Creative Nonfiction

Prerequisite: None

This course instructs students in research methods for writing historical fiction or creative nonfiction. The emphasis is on constructing believable and accurate historical details whether the work is fiction or nonfiction. Students create original historical fiction, memoir, or creative nonfiction and engage in peer critique.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7218: Exploring the Middle Grade Novel

Prerequisite: None

Students in this course analyze and evaluate the evolution of middle-grade novel (books for readers ages 8-12). Students will break down critical analysis relative to the audience, and consider some popular middle-grade novels, both classic and contemporary. Writing styles, authors, themes, topics, and content will also be considered. Students will generate original creative work appropriate for middle-grade readers and new critical work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7219: Graphic Novel Literature

Prerequisite: None

Since the 1960’s, comics have had a special place in the college community. Students in this course appraise and assess seminal titles in the genre and investigate the cultural importance of these works by generating original critical and creative work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7350: Manuscript Mentorship

Prerequisite: None

A semester of individual mentorship where the candidate works one-on-one with a mentor revising their novel manuscript.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7405: The World of Film

Prerequisite: None

The art of putting together a film is one that is different from any other. This course offers an intensive study into the world of film, from the independent, small budget market, to the major markets of Hollywood. To build a career in screenwriting, a writer must understand all aspects of the market from pitch to final product. Students consider and compare initial scripts to shooting scripts to final films and produce original work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7407: Writing for Television and Film

Prerequisite: None

Students survey television and film screenwriting strategies, including how to write and develop half-hour pilot formats for television comedies, how to write and develop one-hour pilot formats for television dramas, and how to write and develop feature length films. Students analyze and evaluate scripts from produced work and create original work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7445: The Creative Nonfiction Book

Prerequisite: None

This course provides craft exercises and research strategies specific to the writers of book length memoirs and nonfiction narratives. Narrative and prose theory along with hands-on exercises provide the basis for the instruction. Reading memoirs as a writer and reading critical writings about memoirs supplement the craft coursework.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Young Adults (0-9 Credits)

CRW 7237: YA Genre Study

Prerequisite: None

Young adult literature pushes at historical boundaries by exploring topics such as race, gender roles, and suicide. YA is also comprised of action-adventure, fantasy, historical, mystery, sci-fi, speculative fiction, and memoir. Students in this class will break down and assess a variety of YA titles. Is it truly a genre or subgenre? Are there different levels of YA fiction and nonfiction, or should there be? And why do adults love some YA titles and not others? Students lead this industry discussion by developing a set of standards and criteria to define the genre through class evaluations and projects.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7450: Writing for Young Adults

Prerequisite: None

Students execute craft exercises and research strategies specific to the writers of young adult fiction. Narrative and prose theory along with hands-on exercises provide the basis for instruction. Analyzing and evaluating young adult texts as a writer and assessing critical writings about young adult fiction supplement the craft coursework. To develop a knowledge of and facility with the craft of young adult writing, students generate original work and engage in peer review in a supportive environment.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7453: YA Genre Study

Prerequisite: None

As the YA (young adult) market grows, it continues to push at the historical boundaries by exploring controversial and edgy topics such as divorce, ethnicity, gender roles, suicide, and much more. It is also comprised of action-adventure, fantasy, historical, mystery, sci-fi, speculative fiction, as well as memoir.

As a result, this has made it difficult to define the YA genre. This class, through exploration of many YA titles, will seek to define the YA genre. Is it truly a genre or sub-genre? Are there different levels of YA fiction and non-fiction, or should there be?

And why do adults love some YA titles and not others? Students will lead this industry discussion by developing a set of standards and criteria to define the genre through class discussions and projects.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

MFA Creative Writing Workshop Courses (12 Credits)

Choose from workshops in poetry, creative nonfiction, dramatic writing, flash fiction, generative writing, novel writing, rhetorical pedagogy, and/or short fiction. Course selection need not be limited to a given track. Tracks are intended solely to highlight courses that may be relevant to a student’s specific interest in creative writing and to facilitate faculty advising. Tracks are not formally recognized on student transcripts. Discuss with your advisor.

*Workshop requirements can also be fulfilled by Hybrid Workshop Literature Courses.

Choose 0-4 of the Following 24 Courses*

Poetry (0-12 Credits)

CRW 7120: Poetry Workshop I

Prerequisites: None

This course concentrates on the craft of writing poetry. Students generate and evaluate new poetry of their own and the work of their peers in a supportive atmosphere. The poetry workshop may concentrate on specific aspects of the poet's art, such as studying the techniques of a specific poetic genre or movement (e.g., the Romantics); focusing on specific methods or aspects of creating poetry, such as subverting sentimentality; or investigating larger issues of the poetic life, such as creating a chapbook or thematic collection of poetry.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7121: Poetry Workshop II

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7122: Poetry Workshop III

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7123: Poetry Workshop IV

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7132: Workshop: The Poetry of Witness and Resistance

Prerequisites: None

Using model poems from the 20th and 21st centuries, written or translated into English, this course surveys theories and poetic practices of bearing witness and mounting resistance to cultural oppression and social injustice. The course asks how the poem both contextualizes, resists, and repairs perceived injustice or imbalance. Movements include the Harlem Renaissance, Black Arts Movement, and poems in response to global and domestic anti-war and pro-social justice movements. Through a combination of analytical discourse and poetry critique workshops, students construct poems of aesthetic and cultural value in dialogue with the poetic traditions of witness and resistance.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7133: Workshop Poetry Sequence

Prerequisites: CRW 7100 Poetry Workshop or CRW 7124 Workshop: Flash Fiction

This course provides the opportunity to write and workshop distinct types of poetry and prose poetry sequences. Students learn strategies and theories about the ordering, arrangement, design, thematic patterning, and editing of traditional and contemporary sequences. The writing, reading, and critical review of student work is complemented by the analyzation and evaluation of published sequences and scholarly articles. The course also considers the use of the sequence in the construction of chapbooks and full-length books, along with markets open to publishing entire sequences.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Creative Nonfiction (0-12 Credits)

CRW 7111: Freelance Nonfiction

Prerequisites: None

This course provides craft exercises and research strategies specific to the writers of contemporary creative nonfiction article-length works. This includes travel and food writing, feature articles and profiles, interviews, and news writing. Students write, workshop, revise, read, analyze, and critically respond to student-generated and published articles, with a focus on establishing a primary or secondary career in freelance writing.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7145: Creative Nonfiction Workshop I

Prerequisites: None

This workshop focuses on a variety of creative nonfiction genres. The course is structured as a workshop with a central emphasis on the production of new student writing and peer review. The analyzation of published work and consideration of elements of craft such as voice, sensory detail, characterization, and dialogue is undertaken. Students produce such elements in their own original work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7146 : Creative Nonfiction Workshop II

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7148 : Creative Nonfiction Workshop III

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7149 : Creative Nonfiction Workshop IV

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Dramatic Writing (0-12 Credits)

CRW 7125: Workshop

Prerequisites: None

A workshop course in which students write their own plays. Emphasis is placed upon dramatic rules and current theatrical practices.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7126: Screen Writing/Play Writing I

Prerequisites: None

This workshop concentrates on the craft of creating screenplays and stage plays. Students generate new creative work and engage in peer critique in a supportive environment. They also analyze the tools of the script writer's art by reading and evaluating the published work of successful writers. Special attention is given to formatting and style with an emphasis on script craft and content.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7127: Screen Writing/Play Writing II

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7128: Screen Writing/Play Writing III

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7129: Screen Writing/Play Writing IV

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Flash Fiction (0-3 Credits)

CRW 7124: Workshop: Flash Fiction

Prerequisites: None

Flash Fiction focuses on the fundamentals of writing (very) short fiction generally work under 1,000 words. This includes generating ideas, narrative structures, voice, image patterns, endings, revision, and submission strategies to get the work published. Students use online, peer, and workshop methods of critique. Published works of flash fiction are analyzed and reviewed. The course culminates with the students' compilation of a chapbook of original work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Generative Writing (0-3 Credits)

CRW 7255: Pushing Beyond Genre Boundaries

Prerequisites: None

Designed for students who wish to explore genres outside their normal boundaries, this workshop specifically focuses on prose writers who want to explore poetry techniques and poets who want to try prose. This course is the ideal place for the poetry phobic and the fiction fearful to experiment. Students also assess how all genres overlap and how good writing technique is universal.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Novel Writing (0-3 Credits)

MFA Creative Writing students can earn a Graduate Certificate in Novel Writing faster due to overlapping course requirements. See MFA Creative Writing with an Embedded Novel Writing Graduate Certificate requirements for details. Discuss with your advisor.

CRW 7165: Workshop: Novel Writing

Prerequisites: None

Students evaluate their own work and the work of their peers in an intense, but supportive, atmosphere that is focused on addressing the particular issues inherent in writing novels. Students develop plans for revision and strategies for publication. The course culminates in a public reading. To enroll in this course, students must have completed a novel draft and have permission from the program director.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Rhetorical Pedagogy Writing (0-3 Credits)

CRW 7440 : Workshopping the Workshop

Prerequisites: None

Students survey strategies for teaching writing workshops in undergraduate and graduate settings and workshops for adults in non-credit community settings. Adaptation of both pedagogical theory and workshop leadership techniques for younger writers is also addressed. Students analyze and evaluate academic writings on pedagogical theory, group process/dynamics theory, and concurrently, participate in and periodically lead their own writing workshops. As part of workshop participation, students break down and assess assigned examples of published writings. In addition, they produce and workshop their own writings. All genres of creative writing—poetry, fiction, and creative non-fiction are examined and workshopped.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

Prose: Short Fiction (0-12 Credits)

CRW 7100: Fiction Workshop I

Prerequisites: None

A workshop that focuses on short fiction craft. Students engage in peer critique in a supportive environment. They also analyze the tools of the fiction writer's art by reading and evaluating the published work of successful fiction writers. Emphasis is on the craft of fiction and how content should be used in devising form. Students submit a variety of fictive forms for analysis that may include short stories, flash fiction, and excerpts from novels.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7101: Fiction Workshop II

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7102: Fiction Workshop III

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7103: Fiction Workshop IV

Prerequisites: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

MFA Creative Writing Literature Courses (9 Credits)

*Literature requirements can also be fulfilled by Hybrid Workshop Literature Courses.

Choose 0-3 of the Following 23 Courses*

CRW 7075: Script Analysis

Prerequisite: None

In this course students breakdown and assess the texts of plays, television scripts, and film scripts using in-depth analysis, with an emphasis on the vision and intention of the authors. Special consideration is given to how an author’s vision for the text can come into conflict with the vision of the director during production. Students generate new critical and creative work inspired by these discussions.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7435: Novel Craft

Prerequisite: None

Students analyze, evaluate, and develop craft exercises and research strategies necessary for writers of book length fiction manuscripts. Narrative and prose theory along with hands-on exercises provide the basis for the instruction in developing a knowledge of and facility with the craft of writing novels. Students assess and design a collection of research that forms the foundation from which to draft a novel. A variety of novels are read, evaluated, and critiqued for elements of craft by students who then synthesize what they’ve learned and apply it to their own work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7444: Content and Form in Fiction

Prerequisite: None

Students investigate and integrate the relationship between content and form in fiction. The goal of this approach is to expand the student’s literary background and to explore the repertoire of strategies and techniques employed by a variety of authors. Students evaluate and assess these works and adapt new methods for their own use. Readings include short fiction, novels, and novellas that illustrate a range of styles and effects.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7445: Constructing the CNF Book

Prerequisite: None

CONSTRUCTING THE CREATIVE NONFICTION BOOK

Students in this course write a complete draft of a book-length work of creative nonfiction. The emphasis is on generating material and not revising or analyzing. In addition to writing in class, students will analyze and assess a variety of small memoirs and works of creative nonfiction as examples and for inspiration.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7447: Science Fiction and Fantasy

Prerequisite: None

SCIENCE FICTION AND FANTASY: THE LITERATURE OF IDEAS VERSUS THE LITERATURE OF LONGING

These two arguably very different forms of literature have long been linked together. Students break down and assess seminal works in both genres in terms of form, content, and influence, both on other writers and on society. They also evaluate the overlap of these two forms while generating new creative and critical work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7455: Critical Writings for Creative Writers

Prerequisite: None

This course uses contemporary literature as the “teachers” for the contemporary writer. Students work with the instructor to create a reading list of four (4) books or collections that correspond with the students’ genre (poetry, creative non-fiction, and/or fiction), literary interests (steampunk, literary fiction, urban fantasy, young adult gothic, and so on), and project goals (memoir, poetry chapbook, flash fiction collection, novella, literary fiction novel, and so on). Students produce critical writings and present their findings while publishing for the community of writers the craft lessons and insights they’ve gleaned from their readings.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7465: Magic Realism and the Americas

Prerequisite: None

Magic realism is work in which the supernatural is commonplace and is accepted as reality by the inhabitants of the work. This course examines seminal works in the genre long associated with Latin America. Students will analyze and evaluate this work and create original works of their own.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7000: Seminar: Contemporary Women Writers

Prerequisite: None

Students will survey and assess seminal works of poetry, creative nonfiction, and fiction written by authors who identify as women with a particular emphasis on BIPOC authors and their often under acknowledged contributions to the literary cannon. This course will also examine issues surrounding female-identifying authorship particularly as they relate to the literary marketplace.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7002: Seminar in the Short Story

Prerequisite: None

Students in this course will survey and review the literary short story, its permutations and development from its inception in the 19th century up through the work of contemporary 601 writers by reading individual texts and entire collections. While the insights of some short story theoreticians will be given consideration, the vision, sensibilities, and craft of the authors will be the chief objects of analysis. Students will generate both critical and original creative work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7007: Poet Laureates

Prerequisite: None

In this class students engage in collaborative learning and will, in a participatory seminar setting, construct their understanding of the issue of voice in poetry. Through the analysis and evaluation of many of America’s Poets Laureate, students will break down the concept of an “American” voice and consider whether such a thing does or should exist. Student will also consider the impact individual poets have had on the contemporary American poetic cannon.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7030: The Modern Novel

Prerequisite: None

An exploration in depth of the literary condition called Modernism through an investigation of the work of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Anita Loos, Gertrude Stein, Nella Larson, E.M. Forster, Rose Macaulay, Virginia Woolf, and D.H. Lawrence.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7031: Seminar: Classical Readings

Prerequisite: None

Students survey and assess classical Greek and Latin plays, lyric poetry, mythology, and prose along with contemporary work inspired by such writing. The purpose of this course is to ground the student in the material that was the common repertory for western authors and to explore its continued influence on contemporary writers and culture. Students will write critical and original

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7041: Introduction to Critical Theory: Exploring Meaning

Prerequisite: None

In this course students survey the discipline of critical thought and its use in the study of literature and art. Special emphasis is paid to the concept of how meaning is shaped and interpreted by both the individual and society at large. Students will generate original critical analyses in response to the work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7042: Rhetoric and Composition

Prerequisite: None

Composition pedagogies—process, expressive, rhetorical, collaborative, cultural studies, critical, feminist, community-service, writing across the curriculum, writing center, and basic writing—and the compositional and rhetorical practices associated with them make up the content of this course. As writers, readers, teachers, and scholars, students develop the skills and experience to teach, develop, and assess critical reading, writing, and research skills in the composition classroom.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7045: Self Portraits in Literature

Prerequisite: None

How do writers shape their experience and try to define themselves in their art? Students deconstruct these questions by reading and assessing a variety of work that engages in the art of self-portraiture. Students also keep a journal and draw from that journal to produce original creative work based on their experience. This work will include short stories, poems, short memoirs, or essays.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7052: Shakespeare and Adaption

Prerequisite: None

One of the reasons that Shakespeare has survived to become the literary and cultural force he is today is because of the endless possibilities embodied in his dramatic works. Shakespeare's plays have fostered a nearly endless trail of adaptations, continuations, reinterpretations, and revisions, reaching as far back as the seventeenth century. This course will focus both on Shakespeare's original texts and on a corresponding body of adapted works including novels, short stories, television, films, ballet, opera, and musical theatre. Students will interrogate the intertextuality between source material and adaptation by producing original critical work. Students will also produce their own adapted creative work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7056: Contemporary Plays and Playwrights

Prerequisite: None

Students in this course survey the work of some of the most influential and interesting playwrights of the 20th and 21st centuries, and the specific themes and issues that connect them. Particular attention will be paid to how the playwright's success hinges not only on the actual written element of their work, but also upon production of the work.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7061: Gothic Literature

Prerequisite: None

This course is an examination of Gothic literature, its prevailing tropes, and the far-reaching effects that this genre has had on subsequent literary movements and contemporary fiction. Students will analyze and evaluate the conflict between the high-reaching artistic achievements of certain classic Gothic works and popular, money-making works of the Gothic trade. Students will also break down the influence of Gothic literature on contemporary writing.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7065: Perceptions of Witchcraft in Literature

Prerequisite: None

Students survey and assess a variety of eras and styles of writing, from the Renaissance to the 21st century, which include “the witch” as a character. Students will consider “the witch” as a perennial figure and examine the social and cultural forces that affect our perception of her. This course will necessarily consider community and marginality and how history has demonized outsiders, particularly women—and how recent generations have reclaimed witchcraft as a tool for empowerment.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7070: Film: Adaption of Literature to Film

Prerequisites: None

Like the translator, the writer who adapts a work of literature for the screen is engaged in an act of transformation that requires them to balance the narrational, thematic, and stylistic elements of one moment in a text with those in another. Usually the goal is to choose from this nexus of interaction and meaning a solution that is cinematically equivalent to the original text. But should this be the end goal? The central aim of this course is for students to analyze and assess the intertextual relationship between what is adapted (text) and the adaptation (film) by writing critical responses and by creating original adaptations.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7072: Pop Culture in Literature

Prerequisite: None

Students in this course survey and debate the relationship between pop culture and literature. Students will break down the ways that film, radio, television, music, comic books, pop art, and advertising have influenced literature, in terms of both form and content. Situating each work within its historical, social, and political contexts, students will critique how specific writers engaged with the pop culture of their day and confronted such issues as civil rights, feminism, class conflict, racial antagonism, intimacy, sexual liberation, war, and terrorism. In addition to works of pop culture, the reading list will draw on fiction, poems, plays, memoir, and creative nonfiction.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7075: Script Analysis

Prerequisite: None

The course will examine the text of plays from contemporary dramatic writing with in-depth analysis, with emphasis on the vision and intention of the playwright.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

LIT 7080: Modern Creative Nonfiction

Prerequisite: None

Students in this course appraise and review the changing landscape of contemporary creative nonfiction, which includes personal essays, memoir, travel and food writing, biography, literary journalism, and other hybridized forms. This course not only involves reading contemporary creative nonfiction texts but also scholarly and generalist writings about contemporary creative nonfiction, its characteristics and definitions, and the ethics of writing creative nonfiction.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

MFA Creative Writing Elective Courses (6 Credits)

Choose 2 of the Following 9 Courses

CRW 7134: Constructing the Novel

Prerequisite: None

Following the example of National Novel Writing Month, students draft a complete novel of at least 50,000 words over the course of a semester. The emphasis is on generating new material and not on revising or workshopping chapters. By the end of the semester, the draft must be complete in the sense that it has a structural beginning, middle, and end. Students read several small novels and use them as models for assessing and developing craft.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7163: Editing the Literary Magazine

Prerequisite: None

Students working on the Rosemont Literary Magazine, Rathalla Review, are eligible to register for three credits of independent study once during their course of study. Students work together to create the editorial and managerial processes involved in publishing a literary journal both online and in print. Students work with the directors of the MFA and Publishing programs and solicit, evaluate, and select submissions for publication, communicate with contributors about editorial decisions, determine the layout and design of the journal, and make decisions about distribution. Students are also responsible for assisting in fundraising and working within the constraints of a budget.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7175: Summer Writing Seminar I

Prerequisite: None

A weekend and week-long writing seminar during which students attend intense daily workshops in the genre of their choice such as poetry, fiction, novel writing, or creative nonfiction. The noontime Writers and Readers series allows students to experience their 567 instructors' work and to engage in conversation about that work. Nightly readings and panels provide students with the opportunity to learn more about the business of being a writer and to share their own work in a public forum. Students submit a final project (either a substantive revision of a workshop submission or a new piece) that directly incorporates the work covered during the seminar as well as a substantial reflection paper.

Offered summer semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7176: Summer Writing Seminar II

Prerequisite: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered summer semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7177: Summer Writing Seminar III

Prerequisite: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered summer semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7178: Summer Writing Seminar IV

Prerequisite: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered summer semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7185: Winter Writing Seminar Abroad

Prerequisite: None

This intensive 10-day course of study concentrates on generative writing workshops in a variety of writing styles (such as poetry, fiction, novel writing, or creative nonfiction) while traveling abroad. Workshops are balanced with cultural and academic enrichment activities that form the foundation for the writing prompts. Opportunities for feedback and critique are part of the scheduled workshop time. Students analyze and evaluate selected works by published authors native to the countries visited and write a paper that synthesizes their own travel experiences and that of the work. Students also submit original creative work generated during the trip and a substantial reflection paper.

Offered winter semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7186: Winter Writing Semester Abroad II

Prerequisite: None

Course description coming soon.

Offered winter semester. (3 Credits)

CRW 7425: Surviving as a Writer

Prerequisite: None

Students break down and assess ways to earn a living writing and/or teaching, as well as, how to protect and nurture their craft after graduation. Students also develop plans for applying for grants, entering contests, attending writers' conferences, and going to artists' colonies, and 569 how, through careful consideration, networking, and tenacity, they can expand those opportunities and push through to publication.

Offered summer semester. (3 Credits)

MFA Creative Writing Thesis Course (3 Credits)

CRW 7500: Thesis

Prerequisite: None

The thesis is designed as a culminating experience that allows students to undertake original work to reflect and extend the breadth of their graduate program experience. Eligible students choose a topic and a faculty thesis advisor and submit, for review and approval by the program director, a written plan for the thesis project. Open only to matriculated students in good academic standing (GPA of 3.0 or higher) who are within 12 credit hours of graduation.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

MA Publishing (30 Credits)

The fully online Publishing Program at Rosemont College offers educational opportunities that allow for practical, real world experiences, in depth research, knowledge of current practices, and interaction with industry professionals. 

MA Publishing Courses (15 Credits)

GPP 7005: Mechanics of Editing

Prerequisite: None

This course will explore the various forms of editing while paying particular attention to what editing professionals do, how and why they do what they do matters, as well as where their skills can be applied in the editing profession. Students will learn and enhance editing skills such as proofreading, copyediting, fact-checking, indexing, and using style guides and other resources. Students will also learn about the day-to-day responsibilities and the challenges of working both “in-house” and as freelancers.

Offered spring semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7200: Publishing Overview

Prerequisite: None

This course offers a broad overview of the publishing industry, from its origins in the 15th century to the very latest trends and key indicators. In completing this course, students will acquire a foundational understanding of the industry’s major sectors and categories: the roles of relationships between a range of publishing professionals and key business processes and practices, practical knowledge of which is essential for further, more specialized study.

Offered fall semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7214: Libraries and K-12 Trade Publishing

Prerequisite: None

Library and school markets for books aimed at young readers change under several factors including shifts in educational approaches, cultural developments, and social changes. This course explores the ideas related to how children’s books are defined, structured, and analyzed through the lenses of these affiliated with schools, libraries, and the general public. This course will also explore how these attitudes and practices have changed during the 20th and 21st centuries and how these attitudes and practices have affected publishers and the collections of schools and libraries.

Offered fall semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7345: Digital Design I

Prerequisite: None

This course is an introduction to the electronic tools necessary to function in the graphic design field. Industry-standard software will be taught to create page layouts incorporating scanning and illustration. Emphasis will be placed on the work created as well as the mechanics of the software.

Offered fall semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7380: Practices of the Publishing Professional

Prerequisite: None

This course guides students in the best practices of successful publishing professionals by focusing on two crucial core skills: industry research and professional peer-to-peer communication. Over the term, students will study examples of open questions in publishing and join conversations (literal and figurative) with publishing professionals to better understand or answer these questions. Further, as students consider these questions and interact with publishing professionals, they will position themselves to be adequately prepared to begin work in GPP 7500 Publishing Thesis and GPP 7275 Publishing Internship.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

MA Publishing Elective Courses (12 Credits)

Choose courses from among children’s publishing (including young adults), editorial, marketing and/or sales. Course selection need not be limited to a given track. The tracks are intended solely to highlight courses that may be relevant to a student’s specific interest in publishing and to facilitate faculty advising. Tracks are not formally recognized on student transcripts. Discuss with your advisor.

*Course is listed under more than one track.

Choose 4 of the Following 11 Courses*:

Children’s Publishing (including Young Adults) (0-9 Credits)

GPP 7203: Illustrated Books - Children's

Prerequisite: None

The images and text must work together seamlessly in children’s books to tell the whole story. In this class, students will develop a historical and artistic understanding of the illustrated book: how images enhance the story in terms of pacing, page-turning, anticipation, etc. Students will also learn more technical skills, such as what it takes to succeed in the children’s book market, how to develop a character model sheet, and how to prepare a book-worthy dummy, among other skills.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7213: Marketing and Promotion - Children's

Prerequisite: None

This course will introduce students to the role of marketing within the children’s book publishing house. Students will learn the principles of successful marketing strategies – print and online – and the fundamentals of product development, branding, and advertising across multiple channels in trade and school/library markets. Students will study the latest trends in children’s publishing along with successful marketing campaigns.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7275: Publishing Internship*

Prerequisite: 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher

This is an on-the-job experience in a commercial publishing environment that offers training in a variety of editorial, production, or marketing areas. Participation is supervised by a publishing professional from the host publishing organization and by a faculty advisor. Students may obtain internships at any point during their academic career; however, only those students who have successfully completed 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher are eligible to receive academic credit for an internship.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

*Course is listed under more than one track.

Editorial (0-9 Credits)

GPP 7228: Editorial Roles in Publishing

Prerequisite: None

The terms Developmental Editor or Acquisitions Editor lead to a common misconception that there are only two editorial behaviors: fixing manuscripts and saying “yes” or “no” to a manuscript. In reality, the editorial process is complex. Editors manage the expectations (and frustrations) of individuals both up and down the production chain, from authors and agents to senior editors and imprint directors. Editorial work means managing resources, managing people, staying informed, researching, communicating clearly and persuasively, using data to make informed decisions, and performing other tasks to help projects succeed. Through readings, discussions, and projects, students will learn terms and skills that will allow them to better perform a range of editorial duties in book publishing.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7243: Academic Journal Publishing

Prerequisites: None

Philadelphia and its surrounding region are home to many public and private research institutions in medicine and other fields, and this reality positions the city as a hub for academic and research journal publishers. The publishing of journals differs from magazine and book publishing in several ways, and this course provides an overview of journal publishing to explain those differences and prepare students to work in this sector of the publishing industry. Various administrative roles key to journal publishing are also explained: editorial, production, marketing, sales, and the positions within these roles. This course also looks at recent sector changes and how those changes suggest the industry’s future.

Offered spring semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7275: Publishing Internship*

Prerequisite: 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher

This is an on-the-job experience in a commercial publishing environment that offers training in a variety of editorial, production, or marketing areas. Participation is supervised by a publishing professional from the host publishing organization and by a faculty advisor. Students may obtain internships at any point during their academic career; however, only those students who have successfully completed 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher are eligible to receive academic credit for an internship.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

*Course is listed under more than one track.

Marketing (0-9 Credits)

GPP 7210: Role of the Literary Agent

Prerequisite: None

The Literary Agent plays a crucial role in the book publishing industry as the liaison between the author and the publishing house. A successful literary agent must have the ability to seek out and recognize good quality and marketable book content, and a judicious editorial eye to help authors craft successful proposals and manuscripts.

The agent must also build and maintain a strong network with editors in various publishing categories, and serve as an advocate and sales agent on behalf of their author clients. Agents conduct sales, negotiate contracts, and then mentor the fulfillment of contractual negotiations, including handling financial issues and subsidiary rights. In this changing era of book publishing, authors rely heavily on literary agents to shepherd them through the publishing process.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7217: Branding and Social Media

Prerequisites: None

With the popularity and widespread use of social media, branding has become easier and yet more complicated. In this class, students will focus on using various digital platforms to effectively build a brand in order to better understand the concepts behind branding, the components of a brand, and how publishers and others use contemporary digital platforms to construct, maintain, and adapt their brands.

Offered spring semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7275: Publishing Internship*

Prerequisite: 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher

This is an on-the-job experience in a commercial publishing environment that offers training in a variety of editorial, production, or marketing areas. Participation is supervised by a publishing professional from the host publishing organization and by a faculty advisor. Students may obtain internships at any point during their academic career; however, only those students who have successfully completed 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher are eligible to receive academic credit for an internship.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

*Course is listed under more than one track.

Sales (0-6 Credits)

GPP 7260: Small Press Practices

Prerequisites: None

This course will give students hands-on experience in running a small publishing company. Through the course, students will follow the stages of publishing a book from acquisition, editorial, layout, design, promotion, marketing, and distribution. Students will publish a book available to the public. Students will establish and manage a small “break even” or better budget.

Offered fall semester. (3 Credits)

GPP 7275: Publishing Internship*

Prerequisite: 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher

This is an on-the-job experience in a commercial publishing environment that offers training in a variety of editorial, production, or marketing areas. Participation is supervised by a publishing professional from the host publishing organization and by a faculty advisor. Students may obtain internships at any point during their academic career; however, only those students who have successfully completed 18 credits with a 3.0 GPA or higher are eligible to receive academic credit for an internship.

Offered fall/spring semester. (3 Credits)

*Course is listed under more than one track.

MA Publishing Thesis Course (3 Credits)

GPP 7500: Thesis

Prerequisite: Minimum 3.0 GPA & within 18 credits of graduation and Permission Of Instructor (POI).

This course is designed as a culminating experience that allows students to undertake original work to reflect and extend the breadth of their graduate program experience. Eligible students choose a topic, secure a faculty thesis advisor, and submit a written plan for their project for review and approval by the program director. The Thesis allows students to connect with professionals in the industry as they research. This course has a 1:1 student-to-faculty ratio, as the instructor for the course is the student’s project advisor.

The thesis is an academic research project related to the publishing industry. Thesis are 50-60 pages long and includes a 10–20-page process paper, where students reflect on their thesis experience. A capstone project is a physical project designed and implemented by the student
that has relevance to the industry.

Offered fall semester. (3 Credits)

Strengthen Your Degree with a Graduate Certificate

Graduate Certificates

Set yourself apart by adding a graduate certificate to your master's degree. Students enrolled in graduate professional studies programs may choose from a diverse selection of graduate certificates to further enrich their educational experience. The graduate certificates may be taken as a stand alone option or, in some cases, achieved with additional courses embedded within the course of study. This additional focus provides specialized knowledge and experience tailored to your career and personal goals.

At Rosemont, we offer a high quality education and a pathway to success that provides exceptional value within a challenging yet supportive environment. Recognizing the demands faced by adult learners, we offer flexible degree options designed to support your continued growth through education.