PhD in Creative Writing
The PhD in Creative Writing at Lancaster is enabled via face-to-face supervision and the Virtual Learning and Research faclities, allowing students to study from anywhere in the world and to modulate between different forms of support if necessary. Our constituency of students is therefore transcultural in identity and support ranges from face-to-face supervision on campus to distance learning through electronic means. Read about PhD Supervision in Creative Writing.
The Challenge of the Creative Writing PhD
A doctoral award is the highest award that the UK Higher Education system can confer. It is usually seen as a pre-requisite to an academic career and should be anticipated as an extremely challenging and demanding programme of study. Students accepted onto the programme need a strong creative and academic track record, usually including published work; supervisors will be widely published, experienced academics, and regarded as experts in their field.
The PhD in Creative Writing is still relatively new to the academy and brings with it special challenges since it privileges creative output over critical reflection, whilst combining the two. Research in Creative Writing is achieved through praxis as well as through more formal or traditional critical strategies. Critical reflection may also be approached through aspects of creative writing practice in the most adventurous doctoral theses.
Students should expect to have all their ideas and pre-conceptions challenged during doctoral study and to embark upon a relationship with their supervisor that is intensely demanding, both intellectually and emotionally. This is especially true of the Creative Writing PhD where there is an inevitably close emotional connection to the creative work being critiqued. It is important that a strong structure exists for such a relationship and that both supervisors and students have a clear understanding of what to expect from the process.