2023-2024 Course Catalog

Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing

The Master of Fine Arts in Creative Writing is a broad program of study (42 credit hours) designed to prepare students for careers as writers or other positions requiring similar professional skills, such as editing, publishing, and content development for the web; to enable students to improve their writing in more than one genre through interaction with our faculty and other writing students; and to become experienced critics of literary works. Our focus on nature, environmental, and travel writing provides students unique opportunities to explore the world and travel as part of their degree programs.

Most full-time students will be able to complete the program in two years. All students must complete the program within five years of entrance into the program.

Program of Study:
Complete 42 credits hours of graduate coursework beyond the BA or BS. Students who have not completed an undergraduate major in writing, or in English with a writing focus, may be required to take a basic core of 3 courses before registering for the advanced curriculum.

Admission Requirements

Early Decision Deadline for Fall 2020 for Fellowship/Assistantship MFACW Interviews: Feb 15

Recommended regular application deadline for FALL entry: April 1

Note: applications will continue to be accepted and considered for admission as long as seats remain in the class.

  • Have a completed baccalaureate degree from an accredited college or university, with an overall undergraduate grade point average (GPA) of 3.0 or above on a 4.0 scale (3.5 or higher recommended for Assistantship/Fellowship consideration).
  • 6 credits in undergraduate Writing are recommended, but not required.
    If a Student has below a 3.0 GPA, please feel free to apply if you show extreme promise through other achievements. Additional Admissions documents may be requested.
  • Complete application for admission, including:
    • Online application
    • In approximately 500 words, please tell us about yourself as a creative writer. What do you like to write? What contemporary authors do you enjoy reading? What are your writing goals? Why do you want to pursue graduate-level study in creative writing at Chatham?
    • Curriculum vita or resume
    • Two official letters of recommendation, preferably written by former writing teachers or professors who know your writing
    • Official transcripts from all colleges and universities attended
    • Writing Sample ranging from 10-20 (maximum) pages. It can be one work or several pieces combined.

Admissions Materials may be submitted to:
Chatham University
Office of Graduate Admission
Woodland Road
Pittsburgh, PA 15232
Fax:  (412) 365-1609
Email: graduate@chatham.edu

For specific questions about the Program, please reach out to Grant Catton at g.catton@chatham.edu.

Integrated Degree Program

Chatham University undergraduates applying through the Integrated Degree Program (IDP) must complete all requirements outlined on their respective admission or track tab on the IDP Portal Site. All IDP applicants should work closely with their academic advisor to ensure they are meeting all requirements according to their IDP course of study.

Learning Outcomes

At the completion of the MFA program students will:

  • Develop and hone skills in creating, editing and revising in the student's primary genre.
  • Demonstrate ability to read and respond thoughtfully and critically in both oral and written form to other student’s work.
  • Analyze and write with care about literary texts of considerable difficulty. Recognize critical positions, including the student’s own critical position. Demonstrate a good reading knowledge of modern and contemporary literature.
  • Cultivate a professional identity in terms of self-presentation in both written and oral forms. Write and publicly present (orally) a polished creative manuscript of marketable quality. 

Curriculum

+Degree Requirements

ONE craft course in your primary genre (3 credits)
ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres

This course may substitute for any other craft course for students specializing in any genre. Students will be introduced to the craft of poetry, fiction, and non-fiction, and will also be introduced to the workshop method and given instruction on sending out work for publication.

3
ENG581 The Craft of Fiction

This is a required course for MFA students specializing in fiction. Students will experiment with creating scene, sense of place, summary, dialogue, framing, flashbacks, and transitions. Students will be introduced to the workshop method and given instruction on sending work out for publication.

3
ENG582 The Art and Craft of Narrative

Readings and writing in this multi-genre course will focus on constructing narratives in fiction, nonfiction, poetry or writing for children. Students will be introduced to the workshop method and given instruction on sending work out for publication.

3
ENG583 The Art and Craft of the Lyric

Readings and writing in this multi-genre course will focus on writing lyrically in poetry and prose. Students will be introduced to the workshop method and given instruction on sending work out for publication.

3
Craft course must be taken during the fall of student’s first year. Craft courses are Prerequisite(s): for all workshops of any genre
ONE readings course in student's primary genre or multi-genre (3) chosen from the following:
ENG531 Readings in Contemporary Lyricism

This course is a graduate seminar focusing on the close reading of text from various genres (poetry, fiction, nonfiction, and children's writing) that use lyricism as a primary craft device. Designed to complement the craft workshop, this course or Readings in Contemporary Narrative is required for all MFA students.

3
ENG532 Readings in Prose and Poetry

This course is a graduate seminar focusing on the close reading of prose and poetry drawn primarily from the modern and contemporary periods. Designed to complement the craft workshops, this course is required of all MFA students.

3
ENG533 Readings in Contemporary Narrative

This course is a graduate seminar focusing on the close reading of narrative texts from several genres (fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and children's writing), drawn from modern and contemporary periods. Designed to complement craft workshops, this course or Readings in the Contemporary Lyric is required of all MFA students.

3
TWO advanced writing workshops (6 credits) in your primary genre chosen from the following:
ENG535 Writing Poetry: Form

A poetry writing workshop to focus on form. Pre Requisite: ENG583

Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG583 The Craft of Poetry
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG539 Writing Creative Nonfiction: Memoir

    A creative Non-Fiction workshop focusing mainly on the memoir. Pre requisite: ENG582

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG582 The Craft of Nonfiction
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG537 Writing Poetry: Literary Movements

    A poetry workshop focusing on readings from a particular poetic movement, and writing poetry that models or responds to movement. Pre-requisite: ENG583

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG583 The Craft of Poetry
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG544 Writing Creative Nonfiction: The Lyric & Formally Adventurous Essay

    A creative non-fiction workshop focused on lyric and experimental essay forms.

    Pre-requisites Complete the following course:
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG545 Writing Creative Nonfiction: Literary Journalism

    A creative non-fiction workshop focusing on literary journalism. Pre Requisite: ENG 582

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG582 The Craft of Nonfiction
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG548 Writing Creative Nonfiction

    This course is designed to teach the techniques and practice of creative nonfiction through participation in a process of peer review and commentary, reading and discussions of selections of other writers and stories, and regular submissions of original creative compositions. The course is taught in a workshop format. Pre-requisite: ENG582

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG582 The Craft of Nonfiction
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG551 Writing Fiction: The Short Story

    This course furthers one's technique and practice of fiction writing via focusing on the short story. Classic models are read and analyzed for variety of P.O.V., character development, story structure, etc. Students are expected to participate in ongoing discussions and weekly peer review. This course is taught in a workshop format.

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG581 The Craft of Fiction
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG553 Writing Poetry

    This course is designed to teach the techniques and practice of poetry writing through participation in a process of peer review and commentary, reading and discussions of selections of other poets and poems, and regular submissions of original creative compositions. The course is taught in a workshop format.

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG583 The Craft of Poetry
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG554 Writing Fiction

    This course is designed to teach the techniques and practice of fiction writing through participation in a process of peer review and commentary, reading and discussions of selections of other writers and stories, and regular submissions of original creative compositions. The course is taught in a workshop format. Pre Requisite: ENG581

    Pre-requisites Complete any 1 of the following courses:
  • ENG581 The Craft of Fiction
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • ENG582 The Craft of Nonfiction
  • 3
    ENG557 Writing Fiction: Story Collections/Novel-in-Stories

    This course furthers one's technique and practice of fiction writing via studying book length story collections and/or story cycles. Contemporary models are considered for their creative melding of varied themes. P.O.V.'s structures, etc. Students are expected to participate in ongoing discussions and weekly peer review. This course is taught in in a workshop format. Pre requisite: ENG581

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • ENG581 The Craft of Fiction
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ENG589 Creative Writing: Multi-Genre

    A multi-genre craft course that includes poetry, fiction, creative nonfiction, children's writing and hybrid genres. This course fulfills the craft requirement for all genres.

    Pre-requisites Complete the following course:
  • ENG523 The Craft of Creative Writing: Multiple Genres
  • 3
    ONE of Nature Writing or Travel Writing:
    ENG584 The Environmental Imagination

    This is a multi-genre course that focuses on the art and craft of nature and environmental writing. Students will read and study contemporary nature and environmental writing, and will be expected to generate creative work that illustrates a deep understanding of the literary tools available to writers in this genre.

    3
    ENG585 Travel Writing

    This course focuses on the art and craft of travel writing. Students will read and study contemporary travel writing, and will be expected to generate creative work that illustrates a deep understanding of the literary tools available to writers in this genre.

    3
    FOUR content courses (12 credits), at least 2 which must be literature-based courses. Sample courses include:
    ENG527 Ethnicity and Place

    This course focuses on the connection between geographic places and cultural identities. Ethnic, regional, and linguistic markers help define writers' distinctive voices. Dislocation from the place of origination can also result in a creative tension. Students will read a variety of texts that explore the borderlands between ethnicity and place.

    3
    ENG546 Wildness and Literature

    Students read poetry, nonfiction and fiction that explore the relationship between wilderness and humans as well as the relationship between wilderness and culture. This seminar will trace the idea of wilderness in American literature through the twenty-first century.

    3
    ENG552 Ecofeminist Literature

    This course brings together theoretical, non-fictional, and fictional approaches to the study of women and the environment. This course focuses particularly on how representations of women and environment can help students rethink and re-imagine their relationships to the Earth.

    3
    ONE elective (3) from any course in the MFA program that does not require pre-requisites.
    ONE ENG710 Summer Community of Writers (6)
    ONE Thesis Seminar corresponding to the student's primary genre (3). Choose from:
    ENG605 Prose Thesis Seminar

    A workshop focusing on generating a thesis proposal, bibliography and significant creative work towards completion of the student's thesis. Readings will focus on creating and articulating a creative process and vision as well as models for longer creative projects. Normally taken the first semester of the student's second year, this course is a prerequisite for ENG698 Final Manuscript.

    3
    ENG606 Thesis Seminar

    A workshop focusing on generating a thesis proposal, bibliography and significant creative work towards completion of the student's thesis. Readings will focus on creating and articulating a creative process and vision as well as models for longer creative projects. Normally taken the first semester of the student's second year, this course is a prerequisite for ENG698 Final Manuscript.

    3
    ENG607 Thesis Seminar: Poetry

    A workshop focusing on generating a thesis proposal, bibliography and significant creative work towards completion of the student's thesis. Readings will focus on creating and articulating a creative process and vision as well as models for longer creative projects. Normally taken the first semester of the student's second year, this course is a prerequisite for ENG698 Final Manuscript.

    3
    Note: The Thesis Seminar is a prerequisite for Final Manuscript (698)
    ONE ENG 698 Final Manuscript (3)

    +Concentration in the Teaching of Writing

    At Chatham, our teaching concentration focuses on critical pedagogy, practical classroom training, and preparing students for the life of a teaching artist. We provide opportunities to teach both on and off campus, with undergraduates, or through our Words Without Walls program, which brings creative writing classes to students who might not otherwise have the opportunity to engage with literary arts.

    To earn the concentration in teaching, students choose two of the following courses:
    ENG515 Teaching Writing

    Students will explore the genres of creative and academic writing from the perspective of a teacher, producing lesson plans and developing a final curricular design for a creative or academic writing course. Aspects of lesson design, classroom environment/management, the writing process, writing workshops, assessment, publication, and performance will be emphasized.

    3
    ENG512 Teaching Creative Writing in Alternative Spaces

    This course prepares students to teach creative writing in alternative spaces, including jails, prisons, halfway houses, and medical facilities. Students will study existing programs, learn strategies to work with special populations, design a course, observe community based classes, and facilitate a community workshop.

    3
    PSY646 Intergroup Dialogue Facilitation Training

    This course gives students a foundation to facilitate intergroup dialogue classes and workshops. The topics of this course include group facilitation skills; individual and group social identity development; impact of prejudice and stereotyping; difference and dominance and the nature of social oppression; culture, cultural cues and judgments.

    3
    After completing two courses, students apply for a supervised teaching placement. Teaching placements are normally fulfilled by teaching a section of ENG105 to Chatham undergraduates, or through a placement in our Words Without Walls program.

    +Concentration in Literary Publishing

    Students who wish to concentrate in literary publishing may take nine hours of related courses to do so.

    Choose from:
    ENG595 Independent Literary Publishing

    This course gives students the opportunity to gain hands-on experience as publishers. Students will research independent literary presses or magazines of their own choosing, and then they will publish a literary chapbook by an author other than themselves.

    3
    ENG569 Practicum: Fourth River Journal-2

    This course is a practicum in which grad students publish the print edition of Chatham's national literary journal, The Fourth River. All phases of the publishing process are addressed, with a special emphasis on design, production, proofreading, marketing, and distribution.

    3
    ENG694 Internship

    Internship with a publishing company, literary press or other writing organization.  

    3

    +Concentration in Travel Writing

    Students who wish to concentrate in Travel Writing must take nine hours of related courses to do so.

    Choose from:
    ENG585 Travel Writing

    This course focuses on the art and craft of travel writing. Students will read and study contemporary travel writing, and will be expected to generate creative work that illustrates a deep understanding of the literary tools available to writers in this genre.

    3
    ENG674 Field Seminar: International

    The field seminar is a traveling creative writing workshop designed to push students outside the realm of comfort and make them question their assumptions about themselves and their culture. Travel locations and specific topics will vary, but will always be outside the United States. May be repeated for credit. Additional fee(s): Field Seminar fee.

    3
    ENG676 Artists in the Community

    The field seminar is a traveling creative writing workshop designed to push students outside the realm of comfort and make them question their assumptions about themselves and their culture. Travel locations and specific topics will vary, but will be within Pittsburgh and Western Pennsylvania. May be repeated for credit. Additional fee(s): Field Seminar fee.

    3
    ENG693 Independent Study

    Independent study on topics of the student’s choosing.

    Pre-requisites Complete the following course:
  • XXX123 Permission of Instructor
  • 3

    +Concentration in Nature Writing

    Students who wish to concentrate in Nature Writing must take nine hours of related courses to do so.

    Choose from:
    ENG552 Ecofeminist Literature

    This course brings together theoretical, non-fictional, and fictional approaches to the study of women and the environment. This course focuses particularly on how representations of women and environment can help students rethink and re-imagine their relationships to the Earth.

    3
    ENG584 The Environmental Imagination

    This is a multi-genre course that focuses on the art and craft of nature and environmental writing. Students will read and study contemporary nature and environmental writing, and will be expected to generate creative work that illustrates a deep understanding of the literary tools available to writers in this genre.

    3
    ENG546 Wildness and Literature

    Students read poetry, nonfiction and fiction that explore the relationship between wilderness and humans as well as the relationship between wilderness and culture. This seminar will trace the idea of wilderness in American literature through the twenty-first century.

    3

    +Concentration in Food Writing

    Students who choose the Food Writing Concentration may count one of the FST courses as one of their MFA required content courses, and may count the other FST course as an elective. With permission of the MFA and Food Studies Program Directors students may choose to substitute a special topics Food Studies course (i.e., FST 602 Grains FST610 Culture and Politics of Sustainable Meat; FST 531 Fermentation; FST 609 Dairy; or FST 6XX Chocolate)

    Required:
    ENG513 Writing About Food

    Students will develop technique and skills for writing about food and culture by studying ethics; journalism, advertising, multimodal and new technology venues, recipe writing, food criticism, writing about food in a variety of genres from history to fiction, magazines, and websites. Course emphasizes both print and online media.

    3
    Plus two of the following:
    FST505 Food and Representations

    Food is elemental to survival, culture, home, and subjectivity - to rituals of love, loss, and celebration. Focusing on representations of food and eating in spiritual narratives, epic texts, myth, novels, and film, this class examines the cultural work food performs along with the varying meanings assigned to food and eating.

    3
    FST683 Special Topics

    Special Topics

    3
    FST603 Food Journeys

    From the Columbian Exchange to eco-tourism food travels the world, the traveler journeys through food, and the citizen consumes place and goods in a journey towards selfhood. This course examines food and geographic movement with an applied emphasis on culinary tourism and writing about food in global and local contexts.

    Pre-requisites Complete all 2 of the following courses:
  • FST508 Food Systems
  • FST509 Food Access
  • 3

    +MFA Thesis Requirements

    All MFA students (full and low-residency) will convene a thesis board committee comprised of four members: the student, their director, and two outside readers. Students must choose a thesis director during the spring of their second year. For full-res students this director must be a member of the full-time MFA faculty. For low-res students, it may be a member of the full-time faculty or one from a list of trusted, long term adjunct mentors identified by the MFA program. Students will also choose two readers for their thesis committee. These readers may be from the full-time faculty or from a list of trusted, long term adjunct mentors. Adjunct readers and directors receive honoraria for their work. Depending on individual circumstances, the program director may allow a reader from outside of Chatham to participate on a student’s board. Students should have such conversations early in the process so there is no confusion or surprise. All thesis boards must be approved by the program director.

    +Concentration in Social Engagement

    Students who wish to concentrate in Social Engagement may take nine hours of related courses to do so:
    ENG572 The Literature of Social Engagement

    A course in which students examine literature that engages with social problems. Readings will include poetry, creative nonfiction, literary journalism, scriptwriting, and fiction. In examining these texts, we will analyze the finished product as well as research methods authors used to research a topic and render it on the page.

    3
    ENG694 Internship

    Internship with a publishing company, literary press or other writing organization.  

    3
    PSY646 Intergroup Dialogue Facilitation Training

    This course gives students a foundation to facilitate intergroup dialogue classes and workshops. The topics of this course include group facilitation skills; individual and group social identity development; impact of prejudice and stereotyping; difference and dominance and the nature of social oppression; culture, cultural cues and judgments.

    3
    OR
    ENG512 Teaching Creative Writing in Alternative Spaces

    This course prepares students to teach creative writing in alternative spaces, including jails, prisons, halfway houses, and medical facilities. Students will study existing programs, learn strategies to work with special populations, design a course, observe community based classes, and facilitate a community workshop.

    3