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Creative Writing

Degrees and fields of study.

  • M.F.A. in Creative Writing - Fiction
  • M.F.A.  in Creative Writing - Poetry
  • M.F.A.  in Creative Writing - Creative Nonfiction
  • M.F.A.  in Low Residency Writers Workshop in Paris Program - Fiction
  • M.F.A. in Low Residency Writers Workshop in Paris Program - Poetry
  • M.F.A. in Low Residency Writers Workshop in Paris Program - Creative Nonfiction

Application Deadlines

Applications and all supporting materials must be  submitted online by 5PM  Eastern Time. If a listed deadline falls on a Saturday, Sunday, or U.S. federal holiday, then the next business day will be the actual deadline.

Creative Writing Programs

  • December 18 : Fall admission

Writers Workshop in Paris Programs

  • September 1 : January residency (January term application)
  • March 1 : July residency (summer application)

Requirements

In addition to the general application requirements, the department specifically requires:

Test Scores

  • Please do not send GRE test scores — they will not be reviewed by our Admissions Committee.

TOEFL/IELTS

Applicants must submit official TOEFL or IELTS scores unless they:

Are a native English speaker; OR

Are a US citizen or permanent resident; OR

Have completed (or will complete) a baccalaureate or master's degree at an institution where the language of instruction is English.

Statement of Academic Purpose

In a concisely written statement, please describe your past and present work as it relates to your intended field of study, your educational objectives, and your career goals. In addition, please include your intellectual and professional reasons for choosing your field of study and why your studies/research can best be done at the Graduate School of Arts and Science at NYU. The statement should not exceed two double-spaced pages.

Writing Sample

A creative writing sample is required. It should not exceed 25 double-spaced pages for fiction and nonfiction applicants and 10 single-spaced pages for poetry applicants. The font size should be 12 point or larger.

Useful Links

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The Graduate School of Arts and Science reserves the right to change this information at any time. This page supersedes all previous versions.

Last updated June 2024.

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  • Program of Study

Course Offerings

Creative writing (2022 - 2024).

In addition to the on-campus creative writing courses offered throughout the year, special January term and summer programs offer students a chance to study intensively and generate new writing in Florence, New York, and Paris.

Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry CRWRI-UA 815  Formerly Creative Writing: Introduction to Fiction and Poetry. Identical to CRWRI-UA 9815. Not repeatable for credit. Workshop. Offered in fall, winter, spring, and summer. 4 points. An exciting introduction to the basic elements of poetry and prose, with in-class writing, take-home reading and writing assignments, and substantive discussions of craft. Structured as a workshop: students receive feedback from their instructor and their fellow writers in a roundtable setting and should be prepared to offer their classmates responses to their work.

Intermediate Workshops in Fiction, Poetry, and Creative Nonfiction CRWRI-UA 816   (Intermediate Fiction Workshop), CRWRI-UA 817 (Intermediate Poetry Workshop), CRWRI-UA 825 (Intermediate Creative Nonfiction Workshop) Prerequisite for Fiction : Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry (CRWRI-UA 815), or Creative Writing (CRWRI-UA 9815), or Writers in New York: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 818), or Writers in New York: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 819), or Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 835), or Writers in Paris: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9818), or Writers in Paris: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9819), or Writers in Florence: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9828), or Writers in Florence: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9829), or Intensive Seminar in Fiction (CRWRI-UA 861; formerly Master Class in Fiction, CRWRI-UA 860), or equivalent. Workshop. Offered in fall, winter, spring, and summer. 4 points. Prerequisite for Poetry : Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry (CRWRI-UA 815), or Creative Writing (CRWRI-UA 9815), or Writers in New York: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 818), or Writers in New York: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 819), or Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 835), or Writers in Paris: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9818), or Writers in Paris: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9819), or Writers in Florence: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9828), or Writers in Florence: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9829), or Intensive Seminar in Poetry (CRWRI-UA 862; formerly Master Class in Poetry, CRWRI-UA 870), or equivalent. Workshop. Offered in fall, spring, and summer. 4 points. Prerequisite for Creative Nonfiction : Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry (CRWRI-UA 815), or Creative Writing (CRWRI-UA 9815), or Writers in New York: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 818), or Writers in New York: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 819), or Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 835), or Writers in Paris: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9818), or Writers in Paris: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9819), or Writers in Florence: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9828), or Writers in Florence: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9829), or Intensive Seminar in Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 863; formerly Master Class in Creative Nonfiction, CRWRI-UA 880), or equivalent. Workshop. Offered in fall and spring. 4 points. Offer an opportunity to continue the pursuit of writing at the intermediate level. Integrate in-depth craft discussions and extensive outside reading to deepen students' understanding of their chosen genre and broaden their knowledge of the evolution of literary forms and techniques. Each may be repeated three times for credit.

Writers in New York: Fiction, Poetry, or Creative Nonfiction CRWRI-UA 818   (Writers in New York: Fiction), CRWRI-UA 819 (Writers in New York: Poetry), CRWRI-UA 835 (Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction) Application required. Workshop. Offered in the summer. 8 points per course. Offer poets and fiction writers an opportunity to develop their craft while living the writer's life in Greenwich Village. Students participate in daily workshops and craft classes, are mentored by accomplished professional writers, and attend readings, lectures, panel discussions, and seminars led by New York-based writers and editors. Assignments encourage immersion in the city. Students work intensively to generate new writing and also attend a lively series of readings, lectures, literary walking tours, and special events. May be repeated once for credit.

Advanced Workshops in Fiction, Poetry, and Creative Nonfiction CRWRI-UA 820 (Advanced Fiction Workshop), CRWRI-UA 830 (Advanced Poetry Workshop), CRWRI-UA 850 (Advanced Creative Nonfiction Workshop) Prerequisite for Fiction : Intermediate Fiction Workshop (CRWRI-UA 816), or Writers in New York: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 818), or Writers in Paris: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9818), or Writers in Florence: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9828), or Intensive Seminar in Fiction (CRWRI-UA 861; formerly Master Class in Fiction, CRWRI-UA 860), or equivalent. Workshop. Offered in fall and spring. 4 points. Prerequisite for Poetry : Intermediate Poetry Workshop (CRWRI-UA 817), or Writers in New York: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 819), or Writers in Paris: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9819), or Writers in Florence: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9829), or Intensive Seminar in Poetry (CRWRI-UA 862; formerly Master Class in Poetry, CRWRI-UA 870), or equivalent. Workshop. Offered in fall and spring. 4 points. Prerequisite for Creative Nonfiction : Intermediate Creative Nonfiction Workshop (CRWRI-UA 825), or Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 835), or Intensive Seminar in Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 863; formerly Master Class in Creative Nonfiction, CRWRI-UA 880), or equivalent. Workshop. Offered in fall and spring. 4 points. Provide students with the opportunity to hone their individual voices and experiment with different aesthetic strategies in genre-specific workshops taught by eminent writers in the field. Focus on revision techniques, the development of sustainable writing processes, and the broadening of students' knowledge of classical and contemporary masters. Each workshop has a distinct emphasis and area of exploration; course descriptions are available online prior to registration. Each may be repeated three times for credit.

Intensive Seminars in Fiction, Poetry, and Creative Nonfiction CRWRI-UA 861 Intensive Seminar in Fiction, CRWRI-UA 862 Intensive Seminar in Poetry, CRWRI-UA 863 Intensive Seminar in Creative Nonfiction Prerequisite for Fiction : Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry (CRWRI-UA 815), or Creative Writing (CRWRI-UA 9815), or Intermediate Fiction Workshop (CRWRI-UA 816), or Writers in New York: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 818), or Writers in New York: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 819), or Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 835) or Writers in Paris: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9818), or Writers in Paris: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9819), or Writers in Florence: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9828), or Writers in Florence: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9829), or Advanced Fiction Workshop (CRWRI-UA 820), or equivalent. Recommended prerequisite: Advanced Fiction (CRWRI-UA 820). Application required. Workshop. Offered in fall and spring. 4 points. Prerequisite for Poetry : Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry (CRWRI-UA 815), or Creative Writing (CRWRI-UA 9815), or Intermediate Poetry Workshop (CRWRI-UA 817), or Writers in New York: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 818), or Writers in New York: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 819), or Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 835), or Writers in Paris: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9818), or Writers in Paris: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9819), or Writers in Florence: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9828), or Writers in Florence: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9829), or Advanced Poetry Workshop (CRWRI-UA 830), or equivalent. Recommended prerequisite: Advanced Poetry (CRWRI-UA 830). Application required. Workshop. Offered in fall and spring. 4 points. Prerequisite for Creative Nonfiction : Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry (CRWRI-UA 815), or Creative Writing (CRWRI-UA 9815), or Writers in New York: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 818), or Writers in New York: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 819), or Writers in New York: Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 835), or Writers in Paris: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9818), or Writers in Paris: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9819), or Writers in Florence: Fiction (CRWRI-UA 9828), or Writers in Florence: Poetry (CRWRI-UA 9829), or Intermediate Creative Nonfiction Workshop (CRWRI-UA 825), or Advanced Creative Nonfiction Workshop (CRWRI-UA 850), or equivalent. Recommended prerequisite: Advanced Creative Nonfiction (CRWRI-UA 850). Application required. Workshop. Offered in fall and spring. 4 points. Taught by acclaimed poets and prose writers to select NYU undergraduates. Application is required for admission. Each is limited to 12 students and provides intensive mentoring and guidance for serious and talented undergraduate writers. Full details of these courses and their applications are shared on the program’s undergraduate listserv; students are added to the listserv when they enroll in Creative Writing: Introduction to Prose and Poetry (CRWRI-UA 815). They may also contact [email protected] for information.

Creative Writing Internship CRWRI-UA 980 Prerequisites: a declared minor in creative writing, two CRWRI-UA courses or the equivalent, and approval of the program. An internship may not be used to fulfill the minimum requirements of the minor. For full policies, registration procedures, and the application form, please visit the program's website. Offered in fall, spring, and summer. 2 points. Requires 8 to 12 hours of work per week. Must be with an external (non-NYU) organization related to creative writing (e.g., a literary agency, magazine, publisher, or outreach program) and should involve some substantive aspect of writerly work. Requires a final five- to seven-page report, and an evaluation is solicited from the intern's supervisor. Grading is pass/fail. Students are responsible for finding the internship and receiving program approval before the end of the Albert add/drop period each term.

Writers in Paris: Fiction or Poetry CRWRI-UA 9818   (Writers in Paris: Fiction), CRWRI-UA 9819 (Writers in Paris: Poetry) Application required. Workshop. Offered in the summer. 8 points per course. Offer poets and fiction writers an opportunity to experience the writer's life in Paris. Students participate in daily workshops and craft classes, are mentored by accomplished professional writers, and attend readings and special seminars led by Paris-based writers and editors. Assignments encourage immersion in the city. Students work intensively to generate new writing and also attend a lively series of readings, lectures, literary walking tours, and special events. May be repeated once for credit.

Writers in Florence: Fiction or Poetry CRWRI-UA 9828   (Writers in Florence: Fiction), CRWRI-UA 9829 (Writers in Florence: Poetry) Application required. Workshop. Offered in the summer. 8 points per course. A literary retreat in Florence for poets and fiction writers. Students participate in daily workshops and craft classes, are mentored by acclaimed writers, and attend readings and special seminars on all aspects of the writer's life. Assignments are designed to encourage serious literary study, as well as immersion in the local landscape, and students are expected to work intensively to generate new writing. May be repeated once for credit.

Award-Winning Poet Ocean Vuong to Join NYU’s Creative Writing Program Faculty

Ocean Vuong, an award-winning poet, will join the Faculty of Arts & Science as a Professor of Creative Writing this fall.

Ocean Vuong, an award-winning poet, will join the Faculty of Arts & Science at New York University as a Professor of Creative Writing this fall.

Vuong is the author of two collections of poetry—most recently, Time Is a Mother (Penguin Press, 2022)—as well as a New York Times bestselling novel, On Earth We’re Briefly Gorgeous (Penguin Press 2019), which has been translated into 36 languages. A previous collection of his verses, Night Sky with Exit Wounds (Copper Canyon Press, 2016), was the winner of the T.S. Eliot Prize, the Whiting Award, the Thom Gunn Award, and the Forward Prize for Best First Collection. 

A recipient of a 2019 MacArthur “Genius” Grant, Vuong is currently a Distinguished Writer in Residence at NYU and was previously an associate professor in the MFA Program for Poets and Writers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His appointment as a tenured faculty member in NYU’s Creative Writing Program begins September 1, 2022.  

“It is our great honor to welcome our alumnus Ocean Vuong as a colleague,” said Antonio Merlo, dean of the Faculty of Arts & Science at NYU. “The students and community of internationally acclaimed writers that make up our Creative Writing Program are richer for his phenomenal talent, distinctive voice, and the vital connection he makes with broad-ranging fans of his work.”

Named by BuzzFeed Books as one of “32 Essential Asian American Writers,” Vuong was born in Saigon and raised in Hartford, Connecticut. He holds a bachelor’s degree from Brooklyn College and an MFA in poetry from NYU. 

“Ocean Vuong is a major talent, an internationally celebrated writer, and an essential and singular literary voice,” said Deborah Landau, director of NYU’s Creative Writing Program . “He’s also an exceptionally gifted teacher and inspiring mentor for our students. We’re thrilled he’s joined our community at the Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House.”

Vuong’s writings have also been featured in the Atlantic , Granta , Harpers , the Nation , the New Republic , the New Yorker , the New York Times , and the Paris Review , among other publications. 

Editor’s Note: Founded in 1831, NYU is one of the world’s foremost research universities and is a member of the selective Association of American Universities. NYU has degree-granting university campuses in New York, Abu Dhabi, and Shanghai; has 11 other global academic sites, including London, Paris, Florence, Tel Aviv, Buenos Aires, and Accra; and sends more students to study abroad than any other U.S. college or university. Through its numerous schools and colleges, NYU conducts research and provides education in the arts and sciences, law, medicine, business, dentistry, education, nursing, the cinematic and performing arts, music and studio arts, public administration, social work, and continuing and professional studies, among other areas. For more, please visit www.nyu.edu .

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New York University MA in Creative Writing

How much does a master’s in creative writing from nyu cost, nyu graduate tuition and fees.

In StateOut of State
Tuition$34,704$34,704
Fees$2,188$2,188

Does NYU Offer an Online MA in Creative Writing?

Nyu master’s student diversity for creative writing, male-to-female ratio.

About 68.1% of the students who received their MA in creative writing in 2019-2020 were women. This is in the same ballpark of the nationwide number of 66.6%.

Racial-Ethnic Diversity

Around 38.3% of creative writing master’s degree recipients at NYU in 2019-2020 were awarded to racial-ethnic minorities*. This is higher than the nationwide number of 24%.

Race/EthnicityNumber of Students
Asian2
Black or African American5
Hispanic or Latino8
Native American or Alaska Native0
Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander0
White22
International Students2
Other Races/Ethnicities8

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Creative Writing

  • Finding Books
  • Resources by Genre

Finding literary journals and magazines

A selection of literary magazines and journals.

  • Organizations and events
  • Getting Published
  • Citing Sources This link opens in a new window

Below is a selection of the NYU Libraries' holdings of literary journals and magazines that publish new fiction, poetry, and other writing. To see whether the library subscribes to a given journal, you can use the advanced search options in the NYU Libraries' catalog , to search for a title and limit the material type to "Journal."

  • American Poetry Review The American Poetry Review is dedicated to reaching a worldwide audience with a diverse array of the best contemporary poetry and literary prose. APR also aims to expand the audience interested in poetry and literature, and to provide authors, especially poets, with a far-reaching forum in which to present their work.
  • Antioch Review The Antioch Review, a small independent literary magazine founded in 1941 by the faculty of Antioch College in a small town in the cornfields of Ohio, is one of the oldest literary magazines in America. Publishing nonfiction essays, fiction, and poetry from promising and prominent authors, the Antioch Review has an international readership and reputation of publishing the “best words in the best order” for nearly 85 years.
  • Ecotone: Reimagining Place Ecotone is based at the University of North Carolina Wilmington and comes out twice a year. Each issue contains new fiction, poetry, essays, and artwork. The magazine bridges the gap between science and culture, bringing together the literary and the scientific, the urban and the rural, the personal and the biological.
  • Gettysburg Review The Gettysburg Review, published by Gettysburg College, is recognized as one of the country’s premier literary journals. Since its debut in 1988, work by such luminaries as E. L. Doctorow, Rita Dove, James Tate, Joyce Carol Oates, Richard Wilbur, and Donald Hall has appeared alongside that of emerging artists such as JM Holmes, Lydia Conklin, Jessica Hollander, Emily Nemens, Charles Yu, and Ashley Wurzbacher, who was recently named a National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree.
  • Granta Granta magazine was founded in 1889 by students at Cambridge University as The Granta, a periodical of student politics, badinage and literary enterprise. In 1979, Bill Buford and Pete de Bolla transformed Granta from a student publication to the literary quarterly it remains today. Each themed issue of Granta turns the attention of the world’s best writers on to one aspect of the way we live now.
  • Kenyon Review One of the most vibrant and innovative literary journals in the world, the Kenyon Review maintains an international reach and significance. Founded at Kenyon College in 1939 by poet and critic John Crowe Ransom, KR remains committed to discovering, publishing, and supporting new voices from the broadest and most diverse backgrounds, as well as featuring singularly distinguished authors of this generation.
  • McSweeney's McSweeney’s Quarterly Concern began in 1998 as a literary journal that published only works rejected by other magazines. That rule was soon abandoned, and since then McSweeney’s has attracted some of the finest writers in the world, from George Saunders and Lydia Davis, to Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie and David Foster Wallace.
  • New England Review Over the past 30 years, New England Review has established itself as one of the nation's most distinguished literary journals, a publication that encourages lively artistic exchange and innovation. Presenting work in a wide variety of genres by writers both new and established, each 200-page issue ranges over an unusually comprehensive literary spectrum. You’ll find highly accomplished traditional narratives as well as challenging experiments in style and form, poetry and works of drama of the highest quality, translations of works from many languages and time periods, far-reaching essays on art and literature, and rediscoveries from our cultural past.
  • New Yorker The New Yorker is a national weekly magazine that offers a signature mix of reporting and commentary on politics, foreign affairs, business, technology, popular culture and the arts, along with humor, fiction, poetry and cartoons. Founded in 1925, The New Yorker publishes the best writers of its time and has received more National Magazine Awards than any other magazine
  • Paris Review The Paris Review is a quarterly English-language literary magazine established in Paris in 1953. It is known for known for presenting quality fiction and poetry by both established authors and new or relatively unknown writers.
  • Ploughshares Ploughshares is an American literary journal established in 1971. Since 1989, Ploughshares has been based at Emerson College in Boston. Ploughshares publishes issues four times a year, two of which are guest-edited by a prominent writer who explores personal visions, aesthetics, and literary circles.
  • Poetry Founded in Chicago by Harriet Monroe in 1912, Poetry is the oldest monthly devoted to verse in the English-speaking world. Monroe’s Open Door policy, set forth in volume 1 of the magazine, remains the most succinct statement of Poetry’s mission: to print the best contemporary poetry, of any style, genre, or approach. The magazine established its reputation early by publishing the first important poems of H.D., T.S. Eliot, Marianne Moore, Ezra Pound, Carl Sandburg, Wallace Stevens, William Carlos Williams, and other now-classic authors.
  • Prairie Schooner Prairie Schooner, a national literary quarterly published with the support of the English Department at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln and the University of Nebraska Press, is home to the best fiction, poetry, essays, and reviews being published today by beginning, mid-career, and established writers.
  • Sewanee Review Founded in 1892, the Sewanee Review is America’s oldest continuously published literary quarterly. Many of the twentieth century’s great writers, including T. S. Eliot, William Faulkner, Eudora Welty, Wallace Stevens, Saul Bellow, Katherine Anne Porter, Marianne Moore, and Ezra Pound, have appeared in the magazine.
  • Southern Review The Southern Review is one of the nation’s premiere literary journals. Hailed by Time as "superior to any other journal in the English language," we have made literary history since our founding in 1935. We publish a diverse array of fiction, nonfiction, and poetry by the country’s—and the world’s—most respected contemporary writers.
  • Tin House The first issue of Tin House magazine arrived in the spring of 1999, the singular lovechild of an eclectic literary journal and a beautiful glossy magazine. During its 20-year print run, the magazine established Tin House as a vital and vibrant part of the American literary landscape, a showcase for not only established, prize-winning authors, but undiscovered writers as well.
  • TriQuarterly TriQuarterly is the literary magazine of Northwestern University. It is edited by students in the Litowitz MFA+MA Graduate Creative Writing Program and the MFA in Prose and Poetry in the School of Professional Studies. Alumni of these programs and other readers also serve as editorial staff. Available around the world, TriQuarterly has remained "an international journal of writing, art, and cultural inquiry."
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  • Last Updated: Sep 5, 2024 9:30 AM
  • URL: https://guides.nyu.edu/creative-writing

Gallatin Writing Program

Writing is at the heart of Gallatin’s curriculum. Undergraduate students have opportunities to develop their academic writing skills in seminars and advanced writing courses, as well as experiencing writing beyond the classroom through the Gallatin Writing Program’s diverse events, publications, and civic engagement projects. At the graduate level, Gallatin graduate writing specialists provide writing support and ongoing programming, including writing workshops, for Gallatin MA students. 

Learn more about the resources offered through the Gallatin Writing Program.

nyu ma creative writing

Undergraduate Writing Program

Find out more about The Gallatin Writing Program at the undergraduate level.

nyu ma creative writing

Graduate Writing Support

Through the Gallatin Writing Program, writing specialists are available for individual consultations with Gallatin graduate students. They also organize workshops and writing groups.

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Discussions about the writing craft.

NYU MFA Creative writing

Hey everyone, I and a 21 year old student from Scotland (Dundee University, about to start 4th year MA English and Creative Writing) applying for a masters in prose fiction at NYU. For anyone that has applied and been accepted in the past or works in the department or admissions, I had some questions about the application, specifically the writing sample. How long are the writing samples normally? I am currently working on a piece titled ‘The Neighbours of Waterfront Apartments’, which is a collection of shorter works each about a different neighbour (their lives and their apartments all fictional). It draws on relevant themes and issues and gives an emotive and imaginative account of the characters lives and their living spaces, something which my friend, who studies at Yale, told me is important.

I was wondering how long the writing samples normally are? The GSAS application information says the writing sample is to be a MAXIMUM of 25 pages. Mine is sitting at 14.

I believe I have more or less finished, but realise it may still be too short. If this is the case I would be happy to expand it, but would appreciate if anyone can give advice on this.

I would also like to include that I am applying for a postgraduate course in creative writing at the University of St Andrews too. Their creative writing sample requirement is 10-15 pages, so I am going to send it along with my application and academic essay to there too.

Again I appreciate any guidance anyone can offer!

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Creative Writing (CWRG1-UC)

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Creative Writing

The Creative Writing concentration is designed for beginner through experienced writers who wish to develop their craft. Through studio classes in poetry, prose, and performance, you will concentrate on generating texts and learning the conventions of particular genres and forms. You also will participate in interdisciplinary humanities seminars that bring together reading, writing, theory, and method.

Build Your Audience

Improve as a writer with practice and feedback and increase your audience through publication in our literary and arts journal, Dovetail.

Faculty Contact

Dr. Clif Hubby

(212) 992-8397

[email protected]

Requirements

Creative writing concentration: craft studios category.

Students select four credits from Craft Studios and four credits from Workshops and an additional eight credits from either category.

  • CWRG1-UC5243 The Craft of Playwriting 4
  • CWRG1-UC5242 Poetry Studio 4
  • CWRG1-UC5241 Prose Studio 4

Creative Writing Concentration: Workshops Category

Students select four credits from Workshops and four credits from Craft Studios and an additional eight credits from either category.

  • CWRG1-UC5277 Creative Nonfiction Workshop 4
  • CWRG1-UC5271 Fiction Workshop 4
  • CWRG1-UC5272 Poetry Workshop 4
  • CWRG1-UC5280 Writing for Children & Adolescents 4
  • CWRG1-UC5275 Writing for The Screen 4
  • CWRG1-UC5273 Writing for The Theater 4
  • MEST1-UC6050 Digital Storytelling 4
  • MEST1-UC6013 Writing for Media and Communication 4

COMMENTS

  1. Creative Writing Program

    Creative Writing Program

  2. Creative Writing (MFA)

    The MFA in Creative Writing is designed to offer students an opportunity to concentrate intensively on their writing. This program is recommended for students who may want to apply for creative writing positions at colleges and universities, which often require the MFA degree. The MFA program does not have a foreign language requirement.

  3. PDF Creative Writing (MFA)

    The MFA in Creative Writing is designed to offer students an opportunity to concentrate intensively on their writing. This program is recommended for students who may want to apply for creative writing positions at colleges and universities, which often require the MFA degree. The MFA program does not have a foreign language requirement.

  4. Graduate Program

    For further information about how to apply, please visit the GSAS Application Resource Center's useful online publication, " Application Requirements and Deadlines for Departments and Programs." Specific departmental requirements can be found here. You may also contact the Creative Writing Program at (212) 998-8816 or [email protected].

  5. Program in Creative Writing

    Program in Creative Writing. as.nyu.edu/cwp. Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House, 58 West 10th Street, New York, NY 10011-8702 • 212-998-8816.

  6. Creative Writing

    Writing Sample. A creative writing sample is required. It should not exceed 25 double-spaced pages for fiction and nonfiction applicants and 10 single-spaced pages for poetry applicants. The font size should be 12 point or larger. The Graduate School of Arts and Science reserves the right to change this information at any time.

  7. Undergraduate Program

    If you have questions about the undergraduate Creative Writing Program, please look over our Undergraduate FAQ or contact us by phone (212-998-8816) or email ([email protected]).

  8. Welcome Message

    Welcome Message. Welcome to the NYU Creative Writing Program. For more than four decades, the Creative Writing Program has distinguished itself as a leading national center for the study of literature and writing. At the heart of the program is our exceptional faculty: Catherine Barnett, Alex Dimitrov, Jeffrey Eugenides, Nathan Englander ...

  9. Course Offerings

    Creative Writing (2022 - 2024) In addition to the on-campus creative writing courses offered throughout the year, special January term and summer programs offer students a chance to study intensively and generate new writing in Florence, New York, and Paris. CRWRI-UA 815 Formerly Creative Writing: Introduction to Fiction and Poetry.

  10. Program of Study (CAS Bulletin)

    NYU London offers courses that may be used to fulfill major requirements, as well as courses in British politics, creative writing, and the history of British art and architecture. A list of both ENGL-UA and non- ENGL-UA courses offered by the various NYU study away programs that may be counted toward specific requirements for the major can be ...

  11. Information for Prospective MA Students

    Please note that NYU's Creative Writing Program, while affiliated with the Department of English, is administered separately, and a different application process is required for students interested in their MFA Program. ... (for example with a panel of recent NYU MA Alumni) and on applying to PhD programs. In recent years, our MA graduates ...

  12. Master's (MS) in Professional Writing Online

    Master's (MS) in Professional Writing Online

  13. Award-Winning Poet Ocean Vuong to Join NYU's Creative Writing Program

    A recipient of a 2019 MacArthur "Genius" Grant, Vuong is currently a Distinguished Writer in Residence at NYU and was previously an associate professor in the MFA Program for Poets and Writers at the University of Massachusetts Amherst. His appointment as a tenured faculty member in NYU's Creative Writing Program begins September 1, 2022.

  14. Home

    The pages of this guide highlight books and other resources from our collection and suggestions for finding books on creative writing in general. The "Resources by Genre" page lists books from our collection on writing in specific genres (fiction, poetry, playwriting, screenwriting, and creative nonfiction). ... URL: https://guides.nyu.edu ...

  15. Organizations and events

    The NYU Creative Writing Program hosts a series of public readings by established and emerging writers at the Lillian Vernon Creative Writers House at 58 West 10th Street. To view the schedule for this semester's readings, visit the full NYU Creative Writing Program website. You can also find video recordings of NYU Creative Writing Program ...

  16. New York University MA in Creative Writing

    New York University MA in Creative Writing. Creative Writing is a concentration offered under the writing studies major at New York University. We've gathered data and other essential information about the master's degree program in creative writing, such as if the program is offered online, ethnicity of students, how many students ...

  17. Literary journals

    Ploughshares is an American literary journal established in 1971. Since 1989, Ploughshares has been based at Emerson College in Boston. Ploughshares publishes issues four times a year, two of which are guest-edited by a prominent writer who explores personal visions, aesthetics, and literary circles. Poetry.

  18. Gallatin Writing Program > Academics > NYU Gallatin

    NYU Gallatin School of Individualized Study. Writing is at the heart of Gallatin's curriculum. Undergraduate students have opportunities to develop their academic writing skills in seminars and advanced writing courses, as well as experiencing writing beyond the classroom through the Gallatin Writing Program's diverse events, publications, and civic engagement projects.

  19. NYU MFA Creative writing : r/writing

    NYU MFA Creative writing Discussion Hey everyone, I and a 21 year old student from Scotland (Dundee University, about to start 4th year MA English and Creative Writing) applying for a masters in prose fiction at NYU. For anyone that has applied and been accepted in the past or works in the department or admissions, I had some questions about ...

  20. Creative Writing in Spanish (MFA)

    Program Description. Due to its location in New York City, home to an important and diverse Latino and Latin American community, NYU is uniquely situated to offer a graduate Creative Writing Program in Spanish. New York has been a meeting point for Spanish and Latin American writers and journalists since the 19th century and a home to many of them.

  21. Creative Writing (CWRG1-UC)

    Creative Writing (CWRG1-UC) This course focuses on several aspects of reading and writing, with particular attention paid to narrative, critical responses to text, research, argumentative writing and the interconnectedness of various types of reading and writing. Writing will be examined as a recursive process with a specific focus on revision ...

  22. Creative Writing

    The Creative Writing concentration is designed for beginner through experienced writers who wish to develop their craft. Through studio classes in poetry, prose, and performance, you will concentrate on generating texts and learning the conventions of particular genres and forms. You also will participate in interdisciplinary humanities ...

  23. NYU Creative Writing Program

    NYU Creative Writing Program, New York, New York. 7,544 likes · 3 talking about this · 701 were here. NYU Creative Writing Program, among the most distinguished programs in the country, is a leading nat