Ways to help
Assistantships are the most crucial way we support our students and our most crucial need. But gifts to the program also allow us to support our students in additional, innovative ways:
Summer Stipends give students the opportunity to devote their summers to writing.
Student Support Funds assist our students' writing and publishing efforts. The expenses of applying for residencies and conferences, and of making inroads with agents, contests, publishers, and other professional opportunities, mount quickly. The Excellence Fund helps students pursue their creative goals with less financial burden and worry. Support funds also assist students so that they can pursue writing and research-related travel that they otherwise could not afford. With the help of the Excellence Fund, our students have traveled to locations around the globe, including China, Argentina, Mexico, India, Uruguay, and Iceland. Without the Excellence Fund, these students wouldn't have such opportunities to enrich and enhance their work with on-the-ground research and with immersion in the places and communities about which they wish to write.
The Shortgrass Steppe Residencies give thesis-writing students time and space for their writing in a quiet and distinctively beautiful western landscape.
Our Visiting Writers Series brings emerging and renowned authors to campus and gives our students the chance to learn about the writing life from a diverse range of contemporary writers.
Creative Writing Excellence Fund
by Mel Cox
During the recently concluded Distinction Campaign I asked Dean Walter how I might best help to provide a continuing source of funding in an area of A&S that had not then seen many benefits from the endowment giving. He identified, among others, the Creative Writing Program as deserving of support.
I knew Janice Harris from my participation in the A&S Board of Visitors. She had made it known that she wanted to create a MFA program in creative writing and I knew she would welcome my support to help toward that goal.
Although lawyers are not often thought of as being in the same category as creative writers in their use of the English language, I have always valued the ability to express ideas powerfully and passionately through the written word. No other medium of expression, in my opinion, is quite so malleable to the creator's will in its ability to transmit the complexities of mood, thought and description. I then considered, "Why Wyoming?" when there are so many competing established programs available. One answer was found in my long-held belief that in this place there is a unique stress between isolation and stimuli which creates time and opportunities to develop ideas somewhat free from the distractions of an urban environment. That ought to offer the creative writer the quiet and distance needed to form and develop their work plus the academic environment at UW is exciting and vibrant enough to stimulate and nurture creativity. And finally, over arching all of this is my strong personal commitment to support the mission of the College of Arts and Sciences in providing superior opportunities for study in the fine arts. The MFA in Creative Writing, without doubt, qualifies by definition and purpose.