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The Department of English at Virginia Commonwealth University a Master of Arts in English and a Master
of Fine Arts in Creative Writing. Additionally, the English department,
working with the School of the Arts and the School of Mass Communications,
has inaugurated a new interdisciplinary doctoral program, the PhD
in Media, Art, & Text (MATX)
The Master of Arts
in English is a 30-semester-hour (ten-course) degree, and students
may choose as their area of
concentration
either Literature
or Writing and Rhetoric. Designed for students who wish to continue
their education beyond the bachelor’s degree, the program
helps students prepare for PhD programs, teaching, and a variety
of other positions in the public and private sectors.
The Master of Fine Arts
in Creative Writing is a 48-semester-hour (sixteen-course) program of advanced writing
workshops
and graduate
course work.
The primary tracks are poetry and fiction, and admission is highly
competitive. In addition to the poetry and fiction workshops,
there are courses available that focus on writing drama, nonfiction,
and screenplays, as well as courses that provide practical experience
in editing.
The new Ph.D. In Media, Art, and Text is a 42 credit hour interdisciplinary Ph.D initiated by The Department of English, the School of the Arts, and the School of Mass Communications. The program is not limited to one department or discipline within the participating units. Rather, it is designed to break down “disciplinary walls” in order to cultivate the research possibilities available to students, allowing them to fashion new intellectual areas for the creation and dissemination of knowledge. While the Ph.D. focuses on new media, it also retains a historical and theoretical dimension by including study in the production, dissemination, and employment of literary texts, art, and other kinds of texts, and in turn how these texts function within specific settings informed by gender, ethnicity, race and other cultural factors. The creation of a Ph.D. that extends its reach to film and New Media, television and advertising, addresses the growing need for the study of virtual and visual texts. Designed for students who enter the program with an M.A., M.S., M.A.E., or M.F.A., the program assumes that students have a strong background in one of the participating disciplines. The coursework is designed both to build on their existing strength, and to compel them to work outside their existing strengths in order to develop new intellectual and creative connections within the multiple media, disciplines, and approaches joined in the program.
Thom Didato, Graduate Programs Advisor
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