Statement of Values

We are practicing literary artists: our authority to teach arises directly from the discoveries we make in our own writing, daily and over a lifetime.

MFA students playing guitar at a readingAccording to diverse aesthetics, we use words to engage the world and create works of beauty and significance. We cultivate an artistic sensibility through language, on the page and out loud, both for its accuracy and for its music. We strive for artistic excellence through the diligent practice of craft. Our collective goal is to inspire each other and our students to our best creative work—expressed in writing that is technically proficient, clean, and professionally presentable. Grammar, diction, and syntax are the paint and brushstrokes by which we build drama and artistic meaning. We believe in helping our students establish sound, professional working habits so they will approach their craft with respect. We also actively encourage their engagement with other arts.

We believe in the book as an essential endeavor.

The book expresses a whole, sustained vision. Short forms all have their undeniable virtues, but the literary marketplace is first a marketplace of books. We write them and teach our students to write not only short stories, essays, and poems, but unified books. Reading, a lifelong engagement with books of literary quality, is central to the writer's life and our individual and collective identity. Reading books helps a writer calibrate an original aesthetic and challenges the writer to grow beyond comfortable certainties and habits.

We value research as a creative act.

Broadly conceived, research means going into the world and finding out what is necessary to know in order to write about a chosen subject perceptively, knowledgably, and imaginatively. The value of research lies not only in its product but in the very act of discovering one's truest self in the context of public subjects. Research at its best enlarges the writer's vision and the scope of subjects available, challenging the writer to develop new structures and forms with which to address them. Finally it helps a writer achieve an effective balance between self-awareness and awareness of the world.

Teaching is a complementary and parallel art.

Our faculty members are engaged and available. For us all, teaching our craft and mentoring new writers is an important way to become better writers ourselves, for the act of articulating one's aesthetic requires exploring it, continually testing basic assumptions, and evolving as an artist. We are part of a tradition, and our students' experience and work are a significant part of our collective legacy. This legacy extends to the larger community of writers and readers beyond campus.

A work of poetry, fiction, or creative non-fiction completes itself in the imagination of the reader.

Creative Writing is, at heart, an act of extraordinary communication. Just as we as faculty writers strive to find the right audience for our work, so too we encourage our students to find their readership, rather than write merely for therapy or self-expression. The publishing process is one more stage in the writer's apprenticeship.

UNC Wilmington | 601 S. College Road, Wilmington NC 28403 | 910.962.3000 | About this Site | Copyright Notice | Feedback | Page maintained by:  L. Bertini[ bertinil AT uncw DOT edu ]