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2024/25 Undergraduate Programme Catalogue

BA English Literature

Programme code:BA-ENGL/LITUCAS code:Q306
Duration:3 Years Method of Attendance: Full Time
Programme manager:Dr Sam Durrant Contact address:s.r.durrant@leeds.ac.uk

Total credits: 360

Entry requirements:

Entry Requirements are available on the Course Search entry

School/Unit responsible for the parenting of students and programme:

School of English

Examination board through which the programme will be considered:

School of English

Relevant QAA Subject Benchmark Groups:

English Studies

Programme specification:

Course Overview:
Reading and understanding literature can help us to find out about ourselves and see the world from other perspectives. Through engaging with different kinds of texts from across the globe and from different periods of history, you will learn how language reflects and shapes human experience. You’ll also develop your skills as a critical reader, a clear thinker, and a persuasive writer. 

Effective communication drives the world. Studying English at Leeds prepares you for an exciting, rewarding and fulfilling professional future. Graduates often pursue careers in media, publishing, journalism, education, the cultural industries and creative arts, or enter fields including management, marketing, and business, where strong analytical skills are prized.

Taught by world-leading academics, you’ll develop a nuanced understanding of literatures in English from the medieval to the present moment, and from the local to the global. Our English Literature degree offers a comprehensive and inclusive exploration of different periods, genres, and cultures. Our modules explore themes relevant to how we live today, including race and ethnicity, gender, climate change and nature, social class, disability, and wellbeing. 

A foundational first year will develop your ability to read critically and write with flair, precision, and persuasion. You’ll also explore the diversity and range of literatures in English. Second year will deepen your understanding of literature’s relationship to the environment and to the self, whilst consolidating your knowledge of the breadth and range of the subject. At Level 3, you will build your expertise through choosing from a range of specialist option modules taught by cutting-edge researchers. A final year project on a topic of your choice will allow you to sharpen and confirm your own distinctive critical voice.

Course Details
At Level 1, you will take Reading Between the Lines and Writing Matters, introducing you to university-level study, equipping you to read critically and write with rigour and persuasion. A further compulsory module on Race, Writing and Decolonisation, reflecting the School’s commitment to decolonising literary studies, looks at literary representations of race and racism from around the world. Optional modules focus on poetry, fiction and drama. You may also take Discovery modules from across the University.

At Level 2, you will take two core modules, Writing Environments and Body Language. These modules explore two urgent contemporary challenges, the climate crisis and how we navigate the relationship between the body and the mind. Students will also select four further modules from a choice of eight, ranging historically and geographically from Medieval to Contemporary, and from Postcolonial to American. Level 2 will deepen and enrich subject knowledge, alongside intellectual and academic skills, preparing you for more independent learning.
After your second year of study, students may apply for transfer to an International Degree at one of a wide range of universities with which the University of Leeds has established connections. Alternatively, they may spend a year in industry on a work placement as an optional third year of their degree programme.

At Level 3, you have free choice of a wide range of specialist modules taught by the School’s world-leading researchers. These modules, which focus on particular writers, genres, political issues, and cultural debates, will help you develop and refine the active research and writing skills which you will demonstrate in your final year project. This sustained and extended piece of work may be a dissertation or a textual edition, and it will be guided by an academic supervisor. The Final Year Project is the capstone achievement of your degree in English Literature, consolidating and enhancing the skills of project planning, research initiative and self-motivation which are highly valued by future employers.


Year1 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Compulsory modules:

At Level 1, candidates will be required to study the following compulsory modules: 

ENGL1055Writing Matters20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL1065Reading Between the Lines20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1855Race, Writing and Decolonization20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Optional modules:

Candidates may select 20-60 credits of modules from the following optional modules. Alternatively, they may take up to 40 credits of Discovery modules in place of two of the option modules.

ENGL1070Drama: Text and Performance20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL1221Modern Fictions in English: Conflict, Liminality, Translation20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1261Poetry: Reading and Interpretation20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Discovery modules:

Candidates may take up to 40 credits of Discovery modules in place of two of the optional modules.


Year2 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Compulsory modules:

At Level 2, candidates will be required to study the following compulsory modules:

ENGL2030Writing Environments: Literature, Nature, Culture20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2045Body Language: Literature and Embodiment20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Optional modules:

Candidates will also be required to choose four optional modules from the following five baskets. They may not select more than one module from each basket. Alternatively, they may take up to 20 credits of Discovery modules in place of one of the option modules.

Basket 1:

ENGL2029Renaissance Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2085Medieval and Tudor Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Basket 2:

ENGL2065Postcolonial Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL2090Modern Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Basket 3:

ENGL2095Other Voices: Rethinking Nineteenth-Century Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2096The World Before Us: Literature 1660–183020 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Basket 4:

ENGL2055American Words, American Worlds20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL2080Contemporary Literature20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Basket 5:

FOAH2020Towards the Future: Skills in Context20 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
HIST2260Digital Methods for History, Art and Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Discovery modules:

Candidates may take up to 20 credits of Discovery modules in place of one of the option modules.


Year3 - View timetable

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]

Compulsory modules:

Optional modules:

At Level 3 Candidates will be required to study ONE of the following modules:

ENGL3005Textual Editing Project40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)
ENGL3041Final Year Project40 creditsSemesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)

''Candidates will normally be required to study 40 credits of specialist research modules from Basket 1 and 40 credits of specialist research modules from Basket 2. Up to 20 credits of Discovery modules may be taken in place of one specialist research module. Students are not eligible to take Level 1 Discovery modules in Level 3 (with the exception of up to a maximum of 20 credits in Special Skills modules – these can be identified by the code ‘skd’ in the online module catalogue).
The list of specialist research modules provided below is indicative and subject to change year by year depending on staff availability. Modules will be timetabled clash-free.

Basket 1:

ENGL3031Sex and Suffering in the Eighteenth-Century Novel20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3033Writing and Gender in Seventeenth-Century England20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3034Romantic Lyric Poetry20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3046Parts, Periodicals, Newspapers: Literature and the Nineteenth-Century Press20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3063Haunted Hinterlands: Wyrd Works and Folk Horror Fictions20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3114Forming Victorian Fiction20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32154Prose Fiction Stylistics and the Mind20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3233Forensic Approaches to Language20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3268Transformations20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32997Keywords: The Words We Use and The Ways We Use Them20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3321Angry Young Men and Women: Literature of the Mid-Twentieth Century20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3365Theatricalities: Beckett, Pinter, Kane20 creditsNot running in 202425
ENGL3386Telling Lives: Reading and Writing Family Memoir20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3406Home Bodies: Companion Animals in Contemporary Literature20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3407Shakespeare and Global Cinema20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3680Postcolonial London20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)
FOAH3001Global African Writing20 creditsSemester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Basket 2:

ENGL3004The Writings of Graham Greene20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3008Writing Modern Sexualities20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3027Shakespeare20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3036Speech Acts: Contemporary Approaches to Text and Performance20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3062Charles Dickens Then & Now20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3065Page, Publication and Audience20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3153Refugee Narratives20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3163Milton20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32111Gender, Culture and Politics: Readings of Jane Austen20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32155Crime Fiction Stylistics: Crossing Languages, Cultures, Media20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32763Children, Talk and Learning20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3284Trial Discourse - The Proceedings of the Old Bailey 1674 - 191320 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3294The Politics of Language20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32941‘Global English’: Colonialism, Postcolonialism, and Decolonisation20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3391September 11 in Fact and Fiction20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3394Bowie, Reading, Writing20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3396Fictions of the End: Apocalypse and After20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3408Digital Discourse: language and social media20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3461Imagining the United States: Citizenship, Domesticity and Slavery20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3579Law and Literature: Transgression, Justice, and Interpretation20 creditsSemester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Discovery modules:

Last updated: 28/08/2024 14:45:34

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