About half the students who applied this spring to the English department's 13 creative writing seminars were accepted, Director of the Creative Writing Program Jill McCorkle said yesterday.
The rest were not so lucky.
"We have many, many disappointed students," McCorkle said. "It is the hardest part of the semester for us. If we had our druthers, there would be room for more people."
McCorkle said she plans to write a letter to English department chair Leo Damrosch this week telling him the percentage of students accepted and asking for more creative writing courses.
"The popularity of these courses just continues to go up, and the number of courses offered has not grown with the demand of the students," McCorkle said.
Although McCorkle did not have exact figures yesterday, she said that about 400 people applied and about 200 were accepted to the program's four nonfiction classes, four poetry classes and five fiction classes.
The creative writing program held an information session last week for those interested in applying to the seminars. The list of those chosen was posted Saturday.
Damrosch said yesterday that he did not think the program would expand in the short run.
"It's simply the demand is so great, and we can't satisfy all that," Damrosch said. "If we provide as many seminars as students would be willing to take, we'd have to stop teaching Shakespeare or something."
It would be possible to add more part-time lecturers in creative writing but not to create new professorial positions in the department, Damrosch said.
Student Perspectives
One first-year student turned down for a poetry seminar taught by Louise Gluck, a visiting lecturer from Williams College, said she was unhappy to have missed out on an unusual opportunity.
"I was bummed because the professor I wanted, Louise Gluck, is this really incredible teacher from Williams and [this semester] is the only time she's teaching at Harvard," said Erica A. Silverstein '98.
Silverstein said that she might visit the creative writing department at some point and talk to someone about what to do if she applies again.
She said she will probably concentrate in English and has thought She said she will probably concentrate inEnglish and has thought about focusing on creativewriting, "but if I never get into [a] creativewriting [seminar], that might not happen." Read more in News