2021/22 Taught Postgraduate Programme Catalogue
MA Postcolonial Literary and Cultural Studies
Programme code: | MA-PL&CS-FT | UCAS code: | |
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Duration: | 12 Months | Method of Attendance: | Full Time |
Programme manager: | Professor Graham Huggan | Contact address: | G.D.M.Huggan@leeds.ac.uk |
This programme is available to UK and EU applicants for part time study (over 2 academic years). Please contact pgtenglish@leeds.ac.uk for further information.
Total credits: 180
Entry requirements:
Good honours degree (First or 2:i or its equivalent) in English or Postcolonial Literature, or a degree scheme including English or Postcolonial Literature, or in a related subject. Appropriate IELTS.
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
Programme specification:
The programme will allow participating students to discover the richness and diversity of Anglophone postcolonial cultures, their social and historical contexts, and the theoretical but also practical issues they raise. An understanding of these issues will allow students to gain an in-depth knowledge of how creative outputs like literature, music, and film engage with race, place and identity across a variety of contexts, from the stereotyping of Turks, Moors and Jews in the Renaissance to the global ‘migration crisis’ and Black Lives Matter movement of present times.
Leeds is widely recognised as being the national leader in this field, and the MA accordingly attracts students of the highest calibre from all over the world. The most ambitious scheme of its kind in the UK, the MA in Postcolonial Literary and Cultural Studies is distinctive in that it covers the entire range of the field, which is represented by no fewer than seven School-based specialists working in such areas as decolonial thought and anti-colonial struggle, states of refuge and asylum, postcolonial ecocriticism, indigenous knowledges, and postcolonial representations.
The unmatched scope and scale of the MA in Postcolonial Literary and Cultural Studies will allow students to examine postcolonial societies and cultures from a broad range of perspectives. This flexibility gives students many opportunities to pursue their personal interests, while an independent research project (the MA dissertation) enables them to explore a topic of their choice in even greater depth. While the degree is a discrete 12-month taught degree, it also provides essential groundwork for doctoral study and a unique opportunity to develop strong PhD applications in consultation with potential supervisors. Specialist resources at Leeds include the Brotherton Library, one of the best research libraries in the UK with holdings across the entire range of postcolonial literatures/cultures and special collections in a number of areas directly relating to the postcolonial field. Participating students will also be welcome to participate in a lively and inclusive postgraduate research culture in the School and beyond, as represented in such early career scholar-oriented bodies as the cross-disciplinary Institute for Colonial and Postcolonial Studies (ICPS), the Leeds University Centre of African Studies (LUCAS), and the Postcolonial Research Group (PRG). These collectives and others like them hold regular workshops, conferences and other activities and events in which MA students are actively encouraged to get involved.
A wide range of option modules will allow participating students to shape the programme to their own personal desires and interests, and as they progress through their studies they will apply what they have learned to their independent research project, which will be expertly supervised. Topics chosen for research projects must lie within the field of Postcolonial literary and cultural studies.
Year1 - View timetable
[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]
Compulsory modules:
Candidates will be required to study the following compulsory modules:
ENGL5842M | Research Project | 60 credits | 1 Sep to 30 Sept (13mth) |
Optional modules:
Candidates must take a minimum of 60 credits and a maximum of 120 credits from the list of programme-specific option modules listed below.
ENGL5105M | Caribbean and Black British Writing | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5343M | Africas of the Mind | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5737M | Postcolonialism, Animals and the Environment | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5828M | Global Indigeneity | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) |
Please note that this is an indicative module list. A different selection of modules is offered each year.
A maximum of 60 credits may be taken from the list of all other English MA modules. Some modules are subject to availability - see individual descriptions.
ENGL5117M | Romantic Identities: Literary Constructions of the Self, 1789-1821 | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5345M | Reading (with) Psychoanalysis | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5346M | So Where do you come from? Selves, Families, Stories | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5700M | Writing, Archives, Race | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5756M | Fictions of Citizenship in Contemporary American Literature | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5760M | The Enigmatic Body of Modernism | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5830M | Apprentices to Life: The Nineteenth-Century Bildungsroman | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5831M | Feeling Time | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5833M | The Magic of Mimesis | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5834M | Romantic Ecologies | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5835M | The Literature of Crisis: Politics and Gender in 1790s Britain | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5837M | Victorian New Media | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5845M | Writing Identities: Criticism, Creativity, Practice | 30 credits | Semester 1 (Sep to Jan) | |
ENGL5847M | War, Mourning, Memory: 1914-1939 | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5850M | Culture and Anarchy: 1945-1968 | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) | |
ENGL5860M | Turks, Moors, and Jews: Race and Identity in English Renaissance Drama | 30 credits | Semester 2 (Jan to Jun) |
Please note that this is an indicative module list. A different selection of modules is offered each year.
Elective modules:
Up to 30 credits of discovery modules may be taken (from outside the School of English, subject to availability).
Last updated: 01/09/2021 12:44:33
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