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BA English Literature and Language with Foundation
About this course
English literature and language together offer two complementary perspectives on the same fundamental subject: how written and spoken language works, what the finest works of English writing achieve, and how the relationship between texts and their readers has evolved over time. Literature study develops the capacity for close, attentive reading and the ability to construct and sustain critical arguments about meaning, form, and context. Language study provides systematic frameworks for understanding how English is structured and used, from phonology and grammar to discourse and sociolinguistics. The combination trains you to move between these perspectives, reading literary texts as linguistic artefacts and understanding language variation and change in its cultural and historical context. At the University of Westminster, this four-year full-time programme opens with a foundation year, providing a structured transition into higher education that prepares you for the demands of advanced study before you move onto the full honours degree. Across the programme, you will read widely in English literature from the medieval period to the contemporary, examining prose fiction, poetry, and drama across a range of historical and cultural contexts. Alongside this, your language studies will develop skills in linguistic analysis, introducing the major sub-disciplines of the field and developing your ability to describe and interpret real language use with rigour and precision. Westminster's location in London means you have access to exceptional literary and cultural resources, and the programme takes full advantage of the city as a context for study. The programme includes a sandwich year, a year abroad, and a work placement, providing significant professional and international experience embedded within your degree. The placement and sandwich year allow you to develop professional skills in a working context, while the year abroad enriches your linguistic and cultural understanding through direct experience of a different educational environment. Graduates from English literature and language programmes pursue careers across education, publishing, journalism, communications, public relations, the civil service, creative writing, digital content production, and heritage and cultural organisations. The ability to write clearly and analytically and to engage critically with complex texts is valued across a very wide range of professions. Postgraduate study in English, creative writing, linguistics, or education is a common progression.
Syllabus & Modules
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