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MA/PgDip/PgCert Writing

Full-time, Part-time

Location • City Campus
Subject area • English


By adding to My Courses you can compare courses and create a personalised prospectus.

The MA Writing is a professionally-focused course which treats your ambition as a writer seriously.

It will appeal if you are a graduate in the arts or a teacher with a professional interest in writing. It is also beneficial if you are a practising writer who would like contact with other writers.

To achieve the MA you complete a novel, script or collection of poems or stories. Some of our most successful students include best selling author of A Short History of Tractors in Ukrainian, Marina Lewycka, T.S. Eliot short-listed poet Frances Leviston and Radio 4 and BBC TV script writer Sharon Oakes.

Our internationally-acclaimed team of professional writers publish and teach in all areas of contemporary literary practice. They include
• David Harmer – award-winning children's writer and performer
• Mike Harris – scriptwriter and theatre director
• Chris Jones – Forward prize-nominee poet
• James McCreet – literary detective fiction writer
• John Milne – award-winning TV dramatist and novelist
• Conor O'Callaghan – prize-winning poet and memoirist
• Maurice Riordan – poet (former editor of Poetry London)
• Jane Rogers – novelist, short-story writer and playwright (fellow of the Royal Society of Literature)
• Harriet Tarlo – environmental poet and editor

Our current visiting professors include
• Sean O'Brien – poet
• Michele Roberts – fiction writer

Funding
We have an Arts and Humanities Research Council (AHRC) funding award to give to one of our September 2012 entry MA Writing students. It will be awarded to the student who we feel is most likely to succeed in developing a professional writing career. Please e-mail Dr Kathy Doherty, head of postgraduate research, k.h.doherty@shu.ac.uk for further details.

E.A Markham short story scholarship
The E.A Markham prize is awarded to the best entrant in short story. It is usually for January entry students, although for this year only, we are offering one place for January 2012 and one place for September 2012 entries. This will be awarded to students specialising in short story and is based solely on merit and potential.

The award covers the full-time study fees for this course. It is offered in honour of Professor Emeritus E.A Markham who was a respected tutor here who worked to shape the development of this course.

Short course – single modules
If you are not able to commit to the whole course, you can apply to take a single module. Choose a genre from the optional modules listed in the course content and apply as normal. Your portfolio needs to include examples of writing in your chosen genre. The credit you gain for completing one module will count towards the full MA if you choose to pursue this at a later date.

We offer up to 12 master classes every semester on Wednesday evenings. This is where writers, agents, publishers and directors give you insights to their worlds.

Find out more about MA/PgDip/PgCert Writing

Related courses

Attendance

Full-time – one year to complete taught seminar courses, two years to full MA
Part-time – typically two years, up to five years for writing up

Seminars are held on Wednesday afternoons.

Start dates – September and January.

How to apply

Complete the application form available at www.shu.ac.uk/study/form

Fees – home and EU students

2012/13 academic year

Full-time – typically £4,695
Part-time – typically £1,565 a stage for PgCert, PgDip and MA stages

For further information on fees and funding see www.shu.ac.uk/funding

Fees – international students

2012/13 academic year

Typically £10,260 for the course

2013/14 academic year

Typically £10,980 for the course

For further information on fees, scholarships and bursaries see www.shu.ac.uk/international/fees

Assessment

• submission of written work to specified word lengths

Contact us

For further information please contact the Faculty of Development and Society, Sheffield Hallam University, City Campus, Sheffield S1 1WB, phone +44 (0)114 225 5555, fax +44 (0)114 225 5514, e-mail fdsenquiries@shu.ac.uk

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Professor Lisa Hopkins

Professor Lisa Hopkins

Professor of English and head of the graduate school

I did my undergraduate degree at King’s College, Cambridge before going on to an MA and PhD in English Renaissance drama from the University of Warwick. I have taught at Sheffield Hallam since 1990, although I am now only part-time in the department. The rest of my time is taken up with heading the faculty graduate school and chairing the University research degrees sub-committee.

I co-edit Shakespeare, the journal of the British Shakespeare Association, and am also co-editor of the Continuum Renaissance Drama series. My own work has been mainly on Shakespeare, John Ford, and Christopher Marlowe, but I have also written about the influence of Darwinian theory on fiction and on film adaptations of literary texts. I am a vice-president of the Marlowe Society and a member of the Shakespeare Society of India, and usually speak in India once a year.

I welcome applications from prospective PhD students in any area of Renaissance drama. I have supervised nine PhD students to satisfactory completion, of whom three are now in full-time, permanent academic posts, and I am currently supervising three more.

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Sheffield Hallam University, City Campus, Howard Street, Sheffield S1 1WB, UK

Phone +44 (0)114 225 5555 | Fax +44 (0)114 225 4449

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