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BA (Hons) Creative Writing
DURATION
3 up to 6 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time, Part time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
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EARLIEST START DATE
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TUITION FEES
GBP 13,450 *
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* international students full time, part time £1680 per 15 credits / UK students full time £9250, part time £1155 per 15 credits / EU students full time £13450, part time £1680 per 15 credits
Scholarships
Explore scholarship opportunities to help fund your studies
Introduction
"Due to the ongoing Coronavirus pandemic, examinations may be replaced by an alternative form of assessment during the academic year 2021/2022. Please refer to the Programme Specification on these pages for further details."
Why choose this course?
Do you have a passion for writing? Spend your time writing stories instead of doing your homework? No need to choose anymore. With this course, writing stories is your homework. You’ll be taught by leading poets, fiction, and non-fiction writers. All our lecturers are active writers in their field. Some are even internationally published authors. This means you’ll be learning from writers who have excellent industry connections and have the latest knowledge when it comes to trends, styles, and publishing guides. In short, they have everything you need to become a published author yourself.
Here are some of your lecturers:
- Poetry lecturer Dr. Wayne Holloway-Smith, winner of the Poetry Society’s Geoffrey Dearmer Prize and Seamus Heaney Prize nominee.
- Fiction and Non-Fiction writer, Dr. Lorna Gibb, author of five books, winner of the Granta Memoir prize and shortlisted for the Sperber Biography prize in the US.
- Dramatists Simon Vinnicombe and Drew Pautz, with writing credits that include the whole range of scriptwriting, from work in current production as feature films to EastEnders to the Old Vic and Royal Court. They have international reputations with performances, in original and translated versions, in Canada, Europe, and the United States.
- Fiction and non-fiction writer, Helen Gordon, a former editor at the renowned, world-famous publisher Granta, with two acclaimed books and numerous short publications.
What's the course about?
Creative Writing is more than just writing stories. It’s about learning how to engage your readers, how to capture their attention. It’s about how to communicate with others; to help them see the world through your eyes, while still giving them space to use their own views. You can use these skills in many fields and career paths, including marketing, education, and even business.
You’ll learn about different genres, cultures, and eras when it comes to writing. You can join competitions in poetry, prose, fiction, drama, and short stories. You’ll learn the theory that underpins what writing is about. You’ll then put into practice what you learned. You’ll be given writing tasks; read each other’s stories and comment on the stories you have read for that week. As homework, you’ll write stories, poetry, and prose, which you’ll then discuss in a friendly class environment with your coursemates.
In your first year, your modules will focus on giving you a solid understanding of what it means to be a writer and what genres are out there. You’ll study writing for the screen, learn to interpret stories, and delve into contemporary as well as traditional writing.
In your second year, you’ll learn more about the art of writing to an audience. You’ll also look at writing for the stage, literature, and poetry. You’ll choose two optional modules that suit your interests, for example how to make a historical documentary or 20th-century literature. Our students can choose a work experience module, Literature at Work, which explores English in the classroom and aspects of the literary heritage industry. The module is centred around a six-week work placement where you’ll gain valuable transferable skills. Our students have worked as school classroom assistants, in publishing houses or attractions such as London’s Charles Dickens Museum and Dr. Johnson’s House.
Study abroad/work placement option: In between your second and third year, you can take an optional study abroad or work placement year. During this year you have the chance to study at one of our partner universities in a different country or spend a year in the industry gaining valuable experience. If you prefer, you can go straight to your third year without this ‘extra’ year in between. The choice is all yours.
In your third year, most modules are optional. That means you can choose the ones you like the most and really tailor your degree to what you want to do in life. You’ll delve deeper into the thin line between reality and fiction and examine the ethical questions this raises. You will take a compulsory module on writing for popular fiction markets, to increase your employability. Lastly, if you are studying B.A. (Hons) Creative Writing, you will work on a final year writing project in the genre of your own choosing, with one-to-one tutor support throughout. You will have produced something to be proud of that you can take with you when you leave university.
Your main campus is de Havilland
You’ll share this campus with students from business, law, sport, education, and humanities subjects. The student housing is close to our Sports Village which includes a gym, swimming pool, and climbing wall. You can get breakfast, lunch, or dinner in our on-campus restaurant or bar (in the newly built Enterprise Hub) on days you don’t feel like cooking. You can also use the common room to play pool, video games or just to hang out with friends. Our Learning Resources Centres are open 24/7, which means you can study whenever suits you best. Want to pop over to the other campus? You can take the free shuttle bus or walk there in just 15 minutes.
This course includes the options of:
- Work placement
- Study abroad
Gallery
Admissions
Scholarships and Funding
Curriculum
What will I study?
Degree programmes are structured into levels, 4, 5, and 6. These correspond to your first, second, and third/final year of study. Below you can see what modules you’ll be studying in each.
Level 4
- Becoming a Writer II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Genre Fiction: Building Worlds II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Writing for the Screen II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Texts Up Close: Reading and Interpretation II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Make it New: Literary Tradition and Experimentation II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Journeys and Quests: Adventures in Literature II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Identity and Contemporary Writing II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Leisure and Lifestyle: 20th Century American Music, Sport and Entertainment II 15 Credits II Compulsory
Level 5
- Graduate Skills II 0 Credits II Compulsory
- Writing for the Stage II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Language and Imagination: The Art of the Poem II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Poetry, Prose and Publishing II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Real Stories Well Told II 30 Credits II Compulsory
- The Short Story Workshop II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Studies in Twentieth-Century Literature, 1900-1945 II 15 Credits II Optional
- Literature at Work II 15 Credits II Optional
- Making a Historical Documentary II 15 Credits II Optional
Level 6
- Tell It Slant: Writing and Reality II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Year Abroad II 0 Credits II Compulsory
- Graduate Skills II 0 Credits II Compulsory
- The Humanities Placement Year II 0 Credits II Compulsory
- Placement with Study Abroad II 0 Credits II Compulsory
- Writing Serial Drama II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Writing for Popular Fiction Markets II 15 Credits II Compulsory
- Between the Acts: Late Victorian and Edwardian Literature 1890-1920 II 15 Credits II Optional
- Texts and Screens: Studies in Literary Adaptation II 15 Credits II Optional
- African-American Literature II 15 Credits II Optional
- Generation Dead: Young Adult Fiction and the Gothic II 15 Credits II Optional
- Everyday Lives: an Intimate History of Twentieth-Century Women A II 15 Credits II Optional
- Euro-Crime on Page and Screen II 15 Credits II Optional
- Creative Writing Project Poetry II 30 Credits II Optional
- Creative Writing Project Prose II 30 Credits II Optional
- Creative Writing Project Script II 30 Credits II Optional
Study abroad
An opportunity for an amazing experience, which will help make you stand out from the crowd. With more and more companies working internationally, experience of living in another country can make a great impression on future employers.
This course offers you the opportunity to enhance your study and CV with a sandwich year abroad. The University has partnerships with over 150 universities around the world, including the USA, Canada, Asia, Africa, Australia, South America, and closer to home in Europe.
If you study abroad between your second and third year of study, you’ll pay no tuition fee to the partner university and no tuition fee to us either. We’ll ask you to make your decision in your second year, so there is plenty of time to think about it.
Work placement
Graduate with invaluable work experience alongside your degree and stand out from the crowd.
This course offers you the opportunity to enhance your study and CV with a work placement sandwich year. It’s a chance to explore career possibilities, make valuable contacts and gain sought-after professional skills.
Our dedicated Careers and Employment team are here to help guide you through the process.
If you take up a work placement between your second and third year of study, at the University of Hertfordshire you’ll pay no tuition fee for this year. We’ll ask you to make your decision in your second year, so there is plenty of time to think about it.
Program Tuition Fee
Career Opportunities
What's next for my career?
You will have the opportunity to gain the professional, intellectual, and creative skills necessary to establish yourself as an author or for a career in a related communications field or for postgraduate study. Career development is supported through the Poetry, Prose, and Publishing Module in your second year taught by a former editor of Granta, the renowned magazine of new writing, who will teach you the practicalities of getting published or working in literary publishing.
Specialist modules in Year 2 and Year 3 also look at the skills required and the opportunities afforded in the areas of commercial fiction, non-fiction and drama.