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Durham University

Durham , England ,United Kingdom

BA in English Literature

Single Honours in English Studies offers a comprehensive syllabus, which combines traditional areas of literary study with new and developing areas of the discipline. It aims to develop your conceptual abilities and analytical skills by exposing you to a variety of literary-critical approaches, to promote and develop clarity and persuasiveness in argument and expression, and to enable you to develop, to a high degree of competence, a range of skills which are at once subject-specific and transferable. A Degree in English Studies will equip you for a wide variety of professions and employment, as well as for the advanced postgraduate study of English and related disciplines.

Year 1

There are three compulsory modules in Year 1 – Introduction to Drama, Introduction to the Novel, and Introduction to Poetry – each of which introduces you to representative works in the major literary genres. There are also four optional modules, from which Single Honours students may select one, two or three. Previously these have offered the possibility to study important influences on English literature (Classical and Biblical Backgrounds to English Literature), early literature (Romance and the Literature of Chivalry and Myth and Epic of the North) and the history of the English language (English: Language, Use, Theory).

This year will focus on advancing skills of critical analysis and argument you have already acquired at A-level, critical skills in the close reading and analysis of texts, such as the awareness of formal and aesthetic dimensions of literature and of the affective power of language, and on the introduction of more advanced concepts and theories relating to literature.

Compulsory modules:

  • Introduction to Drama
  • Introduction to the Novel
  • Introduction to Poetry.

Optional modules:

Up to three of the following selected from a range which has previously included (or up to two open modules offered by other departments):

  • Romance and the Literature of Chivalry
  • Myth and Epic of the North
  • Classical and Biblical Backgrounds to English Literature
  • English: Language, Use, Theory.

Year 2

Year 2 builds on the knowledge and skills developed in the first year by broadening the range of literary texts and periods with which you will engage. You will study a substantial number of authors, topics, and texts and gain awareness of the range and variety of approaches to literary study. The second-year also develops your ability to articulate knowledge and understanding of concepts and theories relating to literature, as well as your powers of critical argument and command of written English. You will develop your capacity for autonomous learning and independence of thought by, for example, exploring, selecting from, and drawing together in an appropriate way specific texts and topics chosen from a wide syllabus.

Students must take the modules Theory and Practice of Literary Criticism and Shakespeare in Year 2 and choose up to three lecture modules and a seminar module. Some lecture modules cover historical periods, such as Renaissance Literature and Victorian Literature, while others focus on key literary figures, themes or language, such as Shakespeare, Chaucer, American Poetry, Old English, Old Norse, and Old French.

Compulsory modules:

  • Theory and Practice of Literary Criticism
  • Shakespeare

Optional lecture modules (taught by weekly lectures and four one-hour tutorials) have previously included:

  • Chaucer
  • Old English
  • Old Norse
  • Old French
  • Renaissance Literature
  • Victorian Literature
  • The literature of the Modern Period
  • American Poetry.

Optional seminar modules (taught by fortnightly two-hour seminars) have previously included:

  • Modern Poetry
  • Literature in England and Wales, 1066-1300
  • Germanic Myth and Legend
  • The Australian Legend
  • Toni Morrison: Texts and Contexts
  • John Milton
  • Evelyn Waugh
  • Shakespeare’s History Plays
  • The Brontes.

Year 3

In the final year, you will be able to demonstrate a comprehensive and detailed knowledge of the subject, together with a mature awareness of the variety of ideas relating to it. You will be able to demonstrate an ability to make connections and comparisons within your extensive range of reading. You will have developed the ability to interpret different ideas and values represented in literature, to test the ideas of others and to pursue ideas of your own. You will have acquired mature critical skills in the close reading and analysis of texts, confident powers of critical argument and a developed command of written English. You will appreciate the importance of scholarly standards of presentation and of writing accurately, clearly and effectively.

The final year includes a compulsory 12,000-word Dissertation on a subject of your choice related to English literature. The Dissertation involves guided research on a self-formulated question, the gathering and processing of relevant information and materials, and results in the work of sustained argumentative and analytic power.

In addition to the Dissertation, students may choose up to three lecture modules and up to two ‘Special Topics’, which develop the skills introduced in seminar modules at Level 2.

Compulsory modules:

  • Dissertation (40 credits).

Optional lecture modules (taught by weekly lectures and four one-hour tutorials) have previously included:

  • Old English
  • Old Norse
  • Old French
  • Restoration and 18th Century Literature
  • The literature of the Romantic Period
  • Post-War Fiction and Poetry
  • American Fiction
  • Medieval Literature.

Optional Special Topics (taught by fortnightly two-hour seminars) have previously included:

  • Literature, Cinema, and Neuroscience
  • Shakespeare on Film
  • US Cold War Literature and Culture
  • Writing Prose Fiction
  • Fictions of Terrorism
  • B. Yeats
  • Keats and Shelley
  • Elizabeth Bishop and Twentieth-Century Verse
  • A Society of Equals? Literature, Culture, and Equality
  • Creative Writing Poetry
  • Writing Mountains in the Early Twentieth Century
  • Seamus Heaney
  • Jewish American Fiction
  • Ballads and Popular Romance.

Options Available:-

  • 4 Year With Foundation Year

Intakes

  • Sep Deadline: Jan

Application Processing Time in Days: 30

Application Process

More information Required
10 Days
Possible Interview Call from Institution
10 Days
Provisional/Unconditional Offer
20 Days
Visa Process
30 Days

Minimum English Language Requirements

English Level Description IELTS (1.0 -9.0) TOEFL IBT (0-120) TOEFL CBT (0-300) PTE (10-90)
Expert 9 120 297-300 86-90
Very Good 8.5 115-119 280-293 83-86
Very Good 8 110-114 270-280 79-83
Good 7.5 102-109 253-267 73-79
Good 7 94-101 240-253 65-73
Competent 6.5 79-93 213-233 58-65
Competent 6 60-78 170-210 50-58
Modest 5.5 46-59 133-210 43-50
Modest 5 35-45 107-133 36-43
Limited 4 32-34 97-103 30-36
Extremely Limited < 4 < 31 < 93 < 30