

BA Creative Writing
About this course
Creative writing is both a practice and a discipline, concerned not only with producing fiction, poetry, and creative non-fiction but with understanding how and why it works. The study of creative writing involves close attention to the craft decisions that distinguish effective prose from ineffective, the way rhythm and imagery operate in a poem, the structures that make narrative compelling, and the relationship between a writer's intentions and a reader's experience. It also demands a willingness to examine your own assumptions about language and form, to give and receive critical feedback generously, and to develop a distinctive voice through sustained and disciplined practice. The Open University's creative writing programme is delivered through distance learning on a part-time basis, which makes it genuinely accessible to people at any stage of life and from any background. You will study a range of forms and genres, developing your skills in fiction writing, poetry, life writing, and possibly scriptwriting or other forms depending on the structure of the modules you follow. Critical reading is central to the work: you will engage with texts from a wide range of periods and traditions, thinking about what techniques are being used and why. Tutorial feedback, online discussion with fellow students, and a developing portfolio of your own work build your confidence and your ability to reflect on your practice with increasing sophistication. The programme's distance learning format means you can study at times that fit around your existing commitments. Graduates who have developed their creative writing through serious academic study are well placed for a range of careers in which writing, communication, and storytelling are central. Publishing, journalism, copywriting, content strategy, and communications roles in the public and private sectors are common destinations. Some graduates pursue careers as authors, poets, or playwrights, often alongside related work in education, literary events, or arts organisations. Teaching creative writing at secondary and post-secondary level is another route. For those who wish to develop their practice further, postgraduate programmes in creative writing at masters level, including both taught and practice-based doctorates, are widely available.
Syllabus & Modules
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