About the Program
The Rutgers-Newark MFA Program is a 36-hour, studio/academic program, which means that our writers study literature as they endeavor to write it. The Program focuses strongly on four (6 credit hour) writing workshops in a declared genre (one workshop, with permission of the department, may be cross-genre), and requires 9 thesis hours in which students work one-on-one with their mentor professors. We also require 15 credit hours of graduate courses in literature. While some MFA grads go on to law or business school or into publishing, many seek teaching jobs. The MFA is the terminal degree in creative writing, which allows graduates to teach at the university level, and the Rutgers-Newark MFA offers our students the essential advantage of substantial coursework in literature.

At Rutgers-Newark, students may choose five electives (15 credit hours) from a long and exciting list of graduate literature courses taught by important scholars. Study the 20th Century British novel with Professor Virginia Tiger, literary critic and authority on Doris Lessing and William Golding. Read Samuel Johnson with Professor Jack Lynch, nationally renowned Johnson scholar. Study the proletarian novel with Marxist theorist Professor Barbara Foley, or “Women in Literature” with feminist scholar Professor Fran Bartkowski. Explore the still unresolved Vietnam era with Professor H. Bruce Franklin. Discover Victorian literature with Professor Janet Larson, discuss Latino literature and culture with Professor Laura Lomas or read Afro-American history with Newark historian and distinguished Professor Clement A. Price.

Deepen and specify still more: MFA students will fulfill 6 of the required 15 elective hrs by choosing one of three unique Electives concentrations. Virtually no other program in the country gives students the opportunity to work in such a wide range of genres for elective credits. Those who choose Literature/Book Arts will work with printmaker Karen Guancione to design and publish a chapbook of their own work. Performance/Media Studies allows students to study writing for television or the stage with playwright Michelle Rittenhouse, urban and narrative journalism with Professor Rob Snyder, or jazz influences with Lewis Porter. Cultural/Political/Ethnic Studies allows students to choose courses in Liberal Studies, American Studies, Urban Education, Political Science, Global Affairs, African-American Studies, or Women’s and Gender Studies. R-N’s Electives Concentration is designed to support our MFA students in their completion of courses that specifically contribute to the fiction, poetry or nonfiction works they will turn in as Theses.

Rutgers-Newark MFA students may also make use of resources provided by the Institute for Jazz Studies, the Center for Ethnicity, Culture and the Modern Experience, the Robeson Gallery, Dana Library and its Book Arts program, and the Cornwall Center for Metropolitan Studies. The R-N MFA Program also enjoys affiliations with The Newark Museum, the New Jersey Historical Society, the Newark Public Library, and Aljira, a Center for Contemporary Art, all a short walk from campus.

Rutgers-Newark is developing a respected and exciting MFA Program that will attract national and international applicants, yet we feel strongly about maintaining and deepening the University’s commitment to the diversity and flavor of the Rutgers-Newark community. Our MFA Program is influenced and inspired by Newark, a community of long and remarkable history now enjoying a political and cultural Renaissance. We describe our Program as Rutgers-Newark: Real lives, real stories because we’re interested in the real world experience of our applicants as well as in their creative work and intellectual rigor.

The Rutgers-Newark MFA can be completed in two years, full time, or three years, part time. Most of our classes, workshops and readings will begin at 5:30 p.m., Monday through Thursday, allowing students to commit to rigorous daily writing schedules, work day jobs, or raise families. Though we live in the real world more affordably than in Manhattan, Rutgers-Newark MFA faculty and students also comprise an arts community. Workshops are encouraged to adjourn at 8:30 for drinks and refreshments at chic local eatery Mix 27, or at one of many inexpensive Portuguese restaurants in the Ironbound. Newark is changing and thriving, and Rutgers-Newark is changing with it. The residence dorm at University Square (where Provost Steve Diner has reserved a number of rooms for MFA students) is just one of the University’s commitments to a burgeoning campus whose expansion will eventually reach the shores of the Passaic River.

     
     
     
         
         
         
 
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