From:"Schmidt, Claire Margaret" <SchmidtCla@missouri.edu>
Date: Tue, 9 Apr 2013 21:06:06 +0000
I responded off-list to the student's particular questions, but
thought I'd throw in with general suggestions.
The English department at the University of Missouri has strong
programs in folklore and creative writing. Within our English
department, the Folklore, Oral Tradition and Culture Studies Program
has a strong relationship with the Creative Writing Program, and many
university-based resources for PhD work that draws on creative writing
and folklore. Our PhD students (I am one, defended and about to
deposit, and lucky to have landed a good academic job) are funded with
a decent living stipend and health care, we get to teach a wide
variety of exciting classes, there are a number of writing fellowships
available, and we have a very good job placement history. There are MA
and PhD students in fiction writing, poetry, and creative nonfiction
who specialize in folklore, and vice versa; some of these students are
international and some are domestic.
The website for the folklore program is here:
http://folklore.missouri.edu/
The Center for Studies in Oral Tradition and the journal Oral
Tradition is also at the University of Missouri:
http://oraltradition.org/
The University of Missouri's Creative Writing Program is ranked quite
highly:
http://english.missouri.edu/creative-writing.html
Best,
Claire Schmidt
President, English Graduate Student Association
Folklore, Oral Tradition and Culture Studies Program
Department of English
University of Missouri
__________________________________________________________________________________
From: M?nire Bozdemir [munirebozdemir@googlemail.com<mailto:munirebozdemir@googlemail.com
>]
Sent: Monday, April 08, 2013 9:05 PM
To: Mills, Margaret
Subject: folk tales from Turkey & fiction writing
Dear Professor Mills,
I am a second year MFA student in fiction writing at Columbia
University, School of the Arts. For my thesis I am working on writing/
re-writing folk tales that I collected and video-recorded traveling
through villages in Aegean Turkey. In my collection, I also have
legends, love stories that turned into legends and some other tales
that I find a little difficult to categorize.
I am looking for writing and/or teaching fellowships or PhD programs
that will allow me continue working on folk/fairy tales. As I am an
international student I am not eligible to apply for many writing
fellowships in the USA and I don`t have enough information about the
programs that welcomes both research and creative writing in folklore
studies. I would appreciate it a lot if you could offer me suggestions
and advise on this issue. Thank you very much. Please send any ideas
to me off the list.
Thank you,
Date: Tue, 9 Apr 2013 21:06:06 +0000
I responded off-list to the student's particular questions, but
thought I'd throw in with general suggestions.
The English department at the University of Missouri has strong
programs in folklore and creative writing. Within our English
department, the Folklore, Oral Tradition and Culture Studies Program
has a strong relationship with the Creative Writing Program, and many
university-based resources for PhD work that draws on creative writing
and folklore. Our PhD students (I am one, defended and about to
deposit, and lucky to have landed a good academic job) are funded with
a decent living stipend and health care, we get to teach a wide
variety of exciting classes, there are a number of writing fellowships
available, and we have a very good job placement history. There are MA
and PhD students in fiction writing, poetry, and creative nonfiction
who specialize in folklore, and vice versa; some of these students are
international and some are domestic.
The website for the folklore program is here:
http://folklore.missouri.edu/
The Center for Studies in Oral Tradition and the journal Oral
Tradition is also at the University of Missouri:
http://oraltradition.org/
The University of Missouri's Creative Writing Program is ranked quite
highly:
http://english.missouri.edu/creative-writing.html
Best,
Claire Schmidt
President, English Graduate Student Association
Folklore, Oral Tradition and Culture Studies Program
Department of English
University of Missouri
__________________________________________________________________________________
From: M?nire Bozdemir [munirebozdemir@googlemail.com<mailto:munirebozdemir@googlemail.com
>]
Sent: Monday, April 08, 2013 9:05 PM
To: Mills, Margaret
Subject: folk tales from Turkey & fiction writing
Dear Professor Mills,
I am a second year MFA student in fiction writing at Columbia
University, School of the Arts. For my thesis I am working on writing/
re-writing folk tales that I collected and video-recorded traveling
through villages in Aegean Turkey. In my collection, I also have
legends, love stories that turned into legends and some other tales
that I find a little difficult to categorize.
I am looking for writing and/or teaching fellowships or PhD programs
that will allow me continue working on folk/fairy tales. As I am an
international student I am not eligible to apply for many writing
fellowships in the USA and I don`t have enough information about the
programs that welcomes both research and creative writing in folklore
studies. I would appreciate it a lot if you could offer me suggestions
and advise on this issue. Thank you very much. Please send any ideas
to me off the list.
Thank you,
Δεν υπάρχουν σχόλια:
Δημοσίευση σχολίου