

BA English and Philosophy
About this course
English and philosophy is a degree that sits at the intersection of two great traditions of humanistic inquiry, each of which enriches the other. English literary study develops your capacity for close reading, interpretive subtlety, and engagement with the range of human experience that literature makes available. Philosophy develops your capacity for rigorous argument, conceptual analysis, and engagement with the foundational questions about knowledge, ethics, language, and the nature of reality that underlie all other inquiry. At the University of Sheffield, this four-year full-time programme includes a year abroad, and the programme is designed to provide thorough academic preparation for students joining with non-standard entry qualifications. In English, you will develop your skills in reading, analysis, and interpretation across periods, traditions, and genres, learning to situate literary works in their historical and cultural contexts and to engage with major critical debates. In philosophy, you will learn to construct and evaluate arguments, to engage with texts from Plato to contemporary analytic philosophy, and to think clearly about questions that do not have obvious answers. The two subjects reinforce each other in distinctive ways: philosophy of language and philosophy of literature ask questions that illuminate literary study, while the close attention to language and meaning that English develops sharpens your philosophical analysis. The year abroad broadens your intellectual and cultural perspective, and Sheffield's research environment in both subjects provides strong academic support. English and philosophy graduates develop a combination of intellectual capabilities that is widely valued: precise analytical thinking, sensitivity to language and argument, broad cultural knowledge, and the ability to engage with complex and contested questions honestly and rigorously. These skills serve well in law, the civil service, journalism, publishing, teaching, management consultancy, the arts, and public policy. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in philosophy, literary studies, law, or related disciplines. Some pursue academic careers in one or both subjects. The breadth and depth of what the combination develops makes it one of the strongest humanities degrees available for students who want to engage seriously with both the literary and the philosophical traditions.
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