Susan McHugh teaches graduate writing workshops in Norway, serves as external examiner for Ph.D. candidate in Iceland
Susan McHugh, Ph.D., professor and chair in the Department of English, taught writing workshops on August 22-23 to twenty incoming graduate students enrolled in the Master鈥檚 Degree Program in Development, Environment and Cultural Change at the Centre for Development and Environment (SUM), a vibrant international and interdisciplinary research institution at the University of Oslo in Norway.
Part of a required course in interdisciplinary research methods and project design, McHugh鈥檚 workshops gave students practice with techniques of invention and response specific to writing in interdisciplinary environments, with special attention to drafting and revising the master鈥檚 thesis required of their program.
SUM is currently one of the few institutions in Scandinavia advancing interdisciplinary research on development and the environment, combining insights from the social sciences, natural sciences and humanities, and its graduate programs are extremely competitive. This year, the master's students were selected from over 400 applicants and they represent over a dozen countries.
Additionally, on August 25, McHugh served as an opponent (external examiner) at a Ph.D. defense at the University of Iceland in Reykjavik. The thesis, titled 鈥淟iteral Animals: An Exploration of Animal Worlds through Language, Culture and Narrative,鈥 was successfully defended by Gunnar Eggertsson, who consequently earned a Ph.D. in Comparative Literature.
To learn more about the College of Arts and Sciences, visit www.une.edu/cas
To apply, visit www.une.edu/admissions