

BA English Literature
About this course
English literature is the disciplined study of writing in the English language across its full historical span and geographical range, from Old English poetry and medieval romances through the Renaissance, Romanticism, and Victorian novel to modernism, postcolonial writing, and the literature of the present day. Studying it at degree level means developing close reading skills of considerable precision, the capacity to construct and sustain well-reasoned arguments about texts, and a broad cultural and historical understanding of the societies that produced the works you study. Literature is not merely a record of the past; it is a living engagement with how language shapes experience, and the best literary criticism illuminates both the text and the world. At the University of Manchester, one of the UK's leading research universities with genuine strength across periods from medieval to contemporary literature, this three-year full-time programme offers a broad and rigorous curriculum. You will study texts in their historical and cultural contexts, engage with the major critical and theoretical debates that have shaped literary scholarship, and develop the independent judgement that comes from sustained engagement with difficult and rewarding writing. Manchester's programme takes advantage of the university's research culture, and students benefit from teaching that connects directly to active scholarship across the range of the department's specialisms. English literature graduates move into a wide range of careers. Publishing, journalism, broadcasting, copywriting, and content creation are natural destinations for graduates who have developed strong writing and communication skills. Teaching at secondary school level is one of the most important pathways, and many graduates pursue a postgraduate teaching qualification before entering the profession. The civil service, law, charities, arts organisations, and general management training schemes all recruit English graduates for the analytical and communication capabilities their degree develops. Further study in English literature, creative writing, publishing, or journalism provides deeper expertise for those who wish to specialise.
Syllabus & Modules
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