English optional modules
You must take two of the following English modules – and can opt to take a third:
- Studying Language
- Drama, Theatre, Performance
- Studying Literature
- Beginnings of English
University Park Campus, Nottingham, UK
We're busy updating our undergraduate prospectus for the 2026/27 academic year. The information here might change, so keep an eye out for updates by the end of April 2025.
Qualification | Entry Requirements | Start Date | UCAS code | Duration | Fees |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BA Jt Hons | ABB | September 2026 | QV33 | 3 Years full-time | £9,535* |
Qualification | Entry Requirements | Start Date | UCAS code | Duration | Fees |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
BA Jt Hons | ABB | September 2026 | QV33 | 3 Years full-time | £9,535* |
Higher Level English grade 5
6.5 overall (with no less than 6.0 in any element)
As well as IELTS (listed above), we also accept other English language qualifications. This includes TOEFL iBT, Pearson PTE, GCSE, IB and O level English. Check our English language policies and equivalencies for further details.
For presessional English or one-year foundation courses, you must take IELTS for UKVI to meet visa regulations.
If you need support to meet the required level, you may be able to attend a Presessional English for Academic Purposes (PEAP) course. Our Centre for English Language Education is accredited by the British Council for the teaching of English in the UK.
If you successfully complete your presessional course to the required level, you can then progress to your degree course. This means that you won't need to retake IELTS or equivalent.
Check our country-specific information for guidance on qualifications from your country |
A level
B in English
GCSE
English grade 4 (C)
All candidates are considered on an individual basis and we accept a broad range of qualifications. The entrance requirements below apply to 2026 entry.
Please note: Applicants whose backgrounds or personal circumstances have impacted their academic performance may receive a reduced offer. Please see our contextual admissions policy for more information.
We recognise that applicants have a wealth of different experiences and follow a variety of pathways into higher education.
Consequently we treat all applicants with alternative qualifications (besides A-levels and the International Baccalaureate) on an individual basis, and we gladly accept students with a whole range of less conventional qualifications including:
This list is not exhaustive. The entry requirements for alternative qualifications can be quite specific; for example you may need to take certain modules and achieve a specified grade in those modules. Please contact us to discuss the transferability of your qualification. Please see the alternative qualifications page for more information.
RQF BTEC Nationals
Access to HE Diploma
At the University of Nottingham, we have a valuable community of mature students and we appreciate their contribution to the wider student population. You can find lots of useful information on the mature students webpage.
International students must have valid UK immigration permissions for any courses or study period where teaching takes place in the UK. Student route visas can be issued for eligible students studying full-time courses. The University of Nottingham does not sponsor a student visa for students studying part-time courses. The Standard Visitor visa route is not appropriate in all cases. Please contact the university’s Visa and Immigration team if you need advice about your visa options.
NA
NA
A level
B in English
GCSE
English grade 4 (C)
Higher Level English grade 5
All candidates are considered on an individual basis and we accept a broad range of qualifications. The entrance requirements below apply to 2026 entry.
Please note: Applicants whose backgrounds or personal circumstances have impacted their academic performance may receive a reduced offer. Please see our contextual admissions policy for more information.
We recognise that applicants have a wealth of different experiences and follow a variety of pathways into higher education.
Consequently we treat all applicants with alternative qualifications (besides A-levels and the International Baccalaureate) on an individual basis, and we gladly accept students with a whole range of less conventional qualifications including:
This list is not exhaustive. The entry requirements for alternative qualifications can be quite specific; for example you may need to take certain modules and achieve a specified grade in those modules. Please contact us to discuss the transferability of your qualification. Please see the alternative qualifications page for more information.
RQF BTEC Nationals
Access to HE Diploma
We make contextual offers to students who may have experienced barriers that have restricted progress at school or college. Our standard contextual offer is usually one grade lower than the advertised entry requirements, and our enhanced contextual offer is usually two grades lower than the advertised entry requirements. To qualify for a contextual offer, you must have Home/UK fee status and meet specific criteria – check if you’re eligible.
You can also access this course through a Foundation Year. This may be suitable if you have faced educational barriers and are predicted BCC at A Level.
If you have already achieved your EPQ at Grade A you will automatically be offered one grade lower in a non-mandatory A level subject.
If you are still studying for your EPQ you will receive the standard course offer, with a condition of one grade lower in a non-mandatory A level subject if you achieve an A grade in your EPQ.
At the University of Nottingham, we have a valuable community of mature students and we appreciate their contribution to the wider student population. You can find lots of useful information on the mature students webpage.
NA
NA
On this course, you can apply to study abroad at one of our partner institutions or at University of Nottingham China or University of Nottingham Malaysia.
If you are successful in applying to study abroad, you will get the opportunity to broaden your horizons and enhance your CV by experiencing another culture. Teaching is typically in English, but there may be opportunities to study in another language if you are sufficiently fluent.
You can choose to study similar modules to your counterparts in the UK or expand your knowledge by taking other options.
The school you are joining may also have additional study abroad options available. Please visit the school website for more information.
Please note:
In order to study abroad you will need to achieve the relevant academic requirements as set by the university and meet the selection criteria of both the university and the partner institution. The partner institution is under no obligation to accept you even if you do meet the relevant criteria.
If your course does not have a compulsory placement, integrated year in industry or compulsory year abroad where there is already an opportunity to undertake a work placement as part of that experience, you may be able to apply to undertake an optional placement year. While it is the student’s responsibility to find and secure a placement, our Careers and Employability Service will support you throughout this process. Contact placements@nottingham.ac.uk to find out more.
The school/faculty you are joining may also have additional placement opportunities. Please visit the School of Cultural, Media and Visual Studies and the School of English for more information.
Please note:
In order to undertake an optional placement year, you will need to achieve the relevant academic requirements as set by the university and meet any requirements specified by the placement host. There is no guarantee that you will be able to undertake an optional placement as part of your course.
Please be aware that study abroad, compulsory year abroad, optional placements/internships and integrated year in industry opportunities may change at any time for a number of reasons, including curriculum developments, changes to arrangements with partner universities or placement/industry hosts, travel restrictions or other circumstances outside of the university’s control. Every effort will be made to update this information as quickly as possible should a change occur.
On this course, you can apply to study abroad at one of our partner institutions or at University of Nottingham China or University of Nottingham Malaysia.
If you are successful in applying to study abroad, you will get the opportunity to broaden your horizons and enhance your CV by experiencing another culture. Teaching is typically in English, but there may be opportunities to study in another language if you are sufficiently fluent.
You can choose to study similar modules to your counterparts in the UK or expand your knowledge by taking other options.
The school you are joining may also have additional study abroad options available. Please visit the school website for more information.
Please note:
In order to study abroad you will need to achieve the relevant academic requirements as set by the university and meet the selection criteria of both the university and the partner institution. The partner institution is under no obligation to accept you even if you do meet the relevant criteria.
If your course does not have a compulsory placement, integrated year in industry or compulsory year abroad where there is already an opportunity to undertake a work placement as part of that experience, you may be able to apply to undertake an optional placement year. While it is the student’s responsibility to find and secure a placement, our Careers and Employability Service will support you throughout this process. Contact placements@nottingham.ac.uk to find out more.
The school/faculty you are joining may also have additional placement opportunities. Please visit the School of Cultural, Media and Visual Studies and the School of English for more information.
Please note:
In order to undertake an optional placement year, you will need to achieve the relevant academic requirements as set by the university and meet any requirements specified by the placement host. There is no guarantee that you will be able to undertake an optional placement as part of your course.
Please be aware that study abroad, compulsory year abroad, optional placements/internships and integrated year in industry opportunities may change at any time for a number of reasons, including curriculum developments, changes to arrangements with partner universities or placement/industry hosts, travel restrictions or other circumstances outside of the university’s control. Every effort will be made to update this information as quickly as possible should a change occur.
All students will need at least one device to approve security access requests via Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA). We also recommend students have a suitable laptop to work both on and off-campus. For more information, please check the equipment advice.
Essential course materials are supplied.
Books
You'll be able to access most of the books you’ll need through our libraries, though you may wish to buy your own copies of core texts.
A limited number of modules may have compulsory texts which you are required to buy. We recommend that you budget £100 per year for books, but this figure will vary according to which modules you take.
The Blackwell's bookshop on campus offers a year-round price match against any of the main retailers (for example Amazon, Waterstones, WH Smith). They also offer second-hand books, as students from previous years sell their copies back to the bookshop.
Optional field trips
Field trips allow you to engage with source materials on a personal level and to develop different perspectives. They are optional and costs to you vary according to the trip; some require you to arrange your own travel, refreshments and entry fees, while some are some are wholly subsidised.
For volunteering and placements, such as work experience and teaching in schools, you will need to pay for transport and refreshments.
Faculty of Arts Alumni Scholarships
Our Alumni Scholarships provide support with essential living costs to eligible students. Find out more about eligibility and how to apply.
University of Nottingham bursaries and scholarships
The University offers a wide range of funds that can provide you with an additional source of non-repayable financial help. See our bursaries and scholarships page for what's available.
International students
We offer a range of international undergraduate scholarships for high-achieving international scholars who can put their Nottingham degree to great use in their careers.
This is the UK undergraduate tuition fee for the academic year 25/26. It may increase for the academic year 26/27 and we will update our information once we have received confirmation of the fee from the UK Government.
All students will need at least one device to approve security access requests via Multi-Factor Authentication (MFA). We also recommend students have a suitable laptop to work both on and off-campus. For more information, please check the equipment advice.
Essential course materials are supplied.
Books
You'll be able to access most of the books you’ll need through our libraries, though you may wish to buy your own copies of core texts.
A limited number of modules may have compulsory texts which you are required to buy. We recommend that you budget £100 per year for books, but this figure will vary according to which modules you take.
The Blackwell's bookshop on campus offers a year-round price match against any of the main retailers (for example Amazon, Waterstones, WH Smith). They also offer second-hand books, as students from previous years sell their copies back to the bookshop.
Optional field trips
Field trips allow you to engage with source materials on a personal level and to develop different perspectives. They are optional and costs to you vary according to the trip; some require you to arrange your own travel, refreshments and entry fees, while some are some are wholly subsidised.
For volunteering and placements, such as work experience and teaching in schools, you will need to pay for transport and refreshments.
Faculty of Arts Alumni Scholarships
Our Alumni Scholarships provide support with essential living costs to eligible students. Find out more about eligibility and how to apply.
University of Nottingham bursaries and scholarships
The University offers a wide range of funds that can provide you with an additional source of non-repayable financial help. See our bursaries and scholarships page for what's available.
Home students*
Over one third of our UK students receive our means-tested core bursary, worth up to £1,000 a year. Full details can be found on our financial support pages.
* A 'home' student is one who meets certain UK residence criteria. These are the same criteria as apply to eligibility for home funding from Student Finance.
Art and literature help us to make sense of the world around us.
On this degree, you'll explore the social, historical, and geographical forces that shape art and literature. You'll study written, visual and spoken works across different centuries and cultures - covering everything from fine art and photography to digital media, fiction, poetry and theatre.
Along the way, you'll develop essential skills in research, critical thinking, and creative problem solving.
Curious about how art and literature shape society? With this course, you’ll tap into the expertise of the Department of Cultural, Media and Visual Studies and the School of English.
It’s a unique blend of the study of the written and visual arts and culture putting together insights from cultural studies, history of art, visual culture, modern literature and linguistics. Through your studies, you’ll:
Although studied separately you will gain a thorough interdisciplinary perspective and understanding of art in society. You'll be able to choose modules that complement each other, allowing you to look at the same topic in different ways.
All students within the Faculty of Arts can select ‘Engaged Arts’ modules where you’ll approach real world challenges across contemporary themes such as sustainability or equity and justice. These modules have been newly designed to help you gain the skills and analytical abilities that employers are looking for.
You may also progress to this course from our Arts and Humanities Foundation Year, subject to eligibility.
Answering the big questions through Art History and Visual Culture
A day in the life of a History of Art student
A day in the life of an English Student
Top Tips for studying English at Nottingham
Medieval studies at Nottingham
Find out more about what it’s like to study in the:
Important information
This online prospectus has been drafted in advance of the academic year to which it applies. Every effort has been made to ensure that the information is accurate at the time of publishing, but changes (for example to course content) are likely to occur given the interval between publishing and commencement of the course. It is therefore very important to check this website for any updates before you apply for the course where there has been an interval between you reading this website and applying.
Mandatory
Year 1
Studio project 1A
Mandatory
Year 1
Studio project 1B
Mandatory
Year 1
History of Art: Renaissance to Contemporary
Optional
Year 1
Global Media and Cultural Flows
Optional
Year 1
Institutions and Practices
Optional
Year 1
Studying Language
Optional
Year 1
Studying Literature
Optional
Year 1
Drama, Theatre, Performance
Optional
Year 1
Beginnings of English
Optional
Year 1
Professional Communication
Optional
Year 1
Shakespeare's Histories: Critical Approaches
Optional
Year 1
The Viking World
Optional
Year 1
Writing and Place
Optional
Year 1
Arts Engaged in Health (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Data, Culture and Society (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Digital Projects: Data and Text (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Digital Projects: Sound and Vision (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Disease and Society (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Exploring Digital Arts (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Exploring Sustainability (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Sustainability Action (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
The Critical Citizen: Modes of Thinking in Contemporary Society (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 1
Writing and Being: Academic, Activist, Professional, Creative and Personal (Engaged Arts)
Mandatory
Year 2
Studio project 2A
Mandatory
Year 2
Studio project 2B
Mandatory
Year 2
Revivals: Art in Dialogue with the Past
Optional
Year 2
Cultures of Collecting and Collections
Optional
Year 2
Emotions, Affect and the Senses
Optional
Year 2
International Study: Art and Place
Optional
Year 2
Objects and Technologies
Optional
Year 2
From Stanislavski to Contemporary Performance: Practice and Theory
Optional
Year 2
Literature and Modernity 1910-1950
Optional
Year 2
Contemporary British Fiction
Optional
Year 2
Dreaming the Middle Ages: Visionary Poetry in Scotland and England
Optional
Year 2
Shakespeare and His Contemporaries: Page and Stage
Optional
Year 2
Ice and Fire: Myths and Heroes of the North
Optional
Year 2
Language Development
Optional
Year 2
Language in Society
Optional
Year 2
Literary Linguistics
Optional
Year 2
Names and Identities
Optional
Year 2
The Psychology of Bilingualism and Language Learning
Optional
Year 2
Twentieth-Century Plays
Optional
Year 2
Victorian and Fin de Siècle Literature: 1830-1910
Optional
Year 2
From Talking Horses to Romantic Revolutionaries: Literature 1700-1830
Optional
Year 2
Applying the Digital Humanities (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 2
Arts Work Placement Module (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 2
Community Engagement and Social Impact (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 2
Decolonisation and Justice (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 2
Employing the Arts (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 2
Issues in the Health Humanities (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 2
Living and Working in a Multi-Lingual World (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 2
Made in Nottingham (Engaged Arts)
Optional
Year 3
Advanced Stylistics
Optional
Year 3
Changing Stages: Theatre Industry and Theatre Art
Optional
Year 3
English Place-Names
Optional
Year 3
Language and Feminism
Optional
Year 3
Language and the Mind
Optional
Year 3
Making Something Happen: Poetry and Politics
Optional
Year 3
Songs and Sonnets: Lyric poetry from Medieval Manuscript to Shakespeare and Donne
Optional
Year 3
Teaching English as a Foreign Language
Optional
Year 3
The Gothic Tradition
Optional
Year 3
The Viking Mind
Optional
Year 3
English Dissertation: Full Year
Optional
Year 3
Creatures and Myths
Optional
Year 3
Discourse and Power: Health and Business Communication
Optional
Year 3
Modern Irish Literature and Drama
Optional
Year 3
Modernisms
Optional
Year 3
Old English: Inventing a Nation
Optional
Year 3
One and Unequal: World Literatures in English
Optional
Year 3
Theatre Making
Optional
Year 3
Women and Writing in Early Modern Britain and Ireland 1550-1650
Optional
Year 3
Studio Project 3
Optional
Year 3
African and Afro-Diasporic Visual Cultures: 1900s to the present
Optional
Year 3
Censoring Stories
Optional
Year 3
Exhibition Histories and Practices
Optional
Year 3
Playful Experiences
Optional
Year 3
Professional Practice: Festivals
Optional
Year 3
Protest, Dissent and Civil Society
Optional
Year 3
Ruptures: Art Breaking with the Past
Optional
Year 3
Sound and Everyday Life
Optional
Year 3
The Cultural Sector Now
Optional
Year 3
The Outmoded
The above is a sample of the typical modules we offer, but is not intended to be construed or relied on as a definitive list of what might be available in any given year. This content was last updated on Tuesday 1 April 2025. Due to timetabling availability, there may be restrictions on some module combinations.
English optional modules
You must take two of the following English modules – and can opt to take a third:
The studio project strand runs through all CMVS UG programmes at levels one, two and three, and across semesters 1 and 2. The strand helps students to recognise their status as trainee researchers and provides space to foreground the development of vital skills in ethical academic study and research, as well as to foster curiosity, enthusiasm and a sense of community. At level 1 this training comes in two parts: Studio Project Level 1A and 1B. As the first module in the strand, ‘1A’ provides a key space for managing the transition from 16+ education to undergraduate study. It is dedicated to skills training in core transdisciplinary tasks, with an emphasis on critical activity and personal reflection. Tasks, issues and competencies would typically include (but may not be limited to): enthusiasm, critical reading, discovering and working with primary and secondary sources, addressing procrastination, cheating and academic misconduct, processes of writing, conventions of different writing formats, and referencing. Students will also gain a sense of the importance of the discipline(s) and field(s) relevant to their degree programme in order to help them understand appropriate choice of secondary sources for essays and other coursework. Having completed this module, students will be better prepared to transition from being consumers of knowledge to producers of knowledge, as they work together through the second semester Studio Project 1B.
This module builds on the skills introduced in 1A with a greater emphasis on applying and practicing these skills through a small group project on the theme of ‘cultures of everyday life’.
You will be introduced to a range of theories, approaches and techniques for understanding the dense fabric of our own lives and lived experiences, including aspects which often go unquestioned and taken for granted.
You will be able to draw on your own observations and explore your own interests across the discipline, whilst at the same time gaining a solid foundation in research methodology in preparation for the next stage of the Studio Project in year 2.
This module introduces students to the discipline of history of art as a way of studying history. It explores global histories of modernity from the fifteenth century to the contemporary era through works of art, architecture and visual culture. These may include histories of colonialism, conflict, environmentalism, geopolitics, global trade, industrialisation, labour, migration, persecution, power, protest, religion, science, social justice, technology, and travel.
Spanning a period of over five centuries, these changing histories will in turn illuminate developments in the history of art. Classes will consider how these histories intersect with art, architecture and visual culture by examining the form, content and materials of artworks, buildings and objects, as well as the contexts in which they were produced and displayed.
By examining how artworks, buildings and objects have mediated and shaped global histories, this module asks how studying works of art, architecture and visual culture can deepen our understanding of historical events and help us to navigate our contemporary world.
This module will introduce students to the production, ownership, circulation and consumption of media, art and screen culture beyond White, Anglophone and Western contexts. As part of its engagement with the notion of cultural imperialism it will look at how cultures intersect, and explore ways in which these intersections can help us understand the nature of national, regional and global media, art, screen cultures, and cultural and creative industries. Conceptually, the module will engage with issues such as cultural convergence and homogenization, hybridity and differentiation. It will focus on the flow of ideas, art, media, ownership, etc., across national borders and between cultural contexts, including diverse linguistic contexts.
How is media produced and distributed? What enables and constrains an individual’s agency during the processes of labour and production?
In this module you will explore the production, distribution, and exhibition of media, art, screen, and creative texts.
You will examine the political economy of the media and cultural and creative industries, in terms of access, ownership and power.
You will explore established hierarchies and practices of institutions, markets, and organisations, as well as the tensions between individual norms, values and experiences, and those structure in which creative labour takes place.
Through this module you will gain an understanding of the role of power and social inequality in media, creative and cultural labour, and will be given an introduction to the practical workings of these sectors.
This module is worth 20 credits.
On this module you will learn about the nature of language, and how to analyse it for a broad range of purposes. It aims to prepare you for conducting your own language research across your degree.
The accompanying weekly workshops will explore levels of language analysis and description – from the sounds and structure of language, through to meaning and discourse. These can be applied to all areas of English study, and will prepare you for your future modules.
In your lectures, you will see how our staff put these skills of analysis and description to use in their own research. This covers the study of language in relation to the mind, literature, culture, society, and more. Your seminars then give you a chance to think about and discuss these topics further.
This module is worth 20 credits.
This module introduces the core skills for literary studies, including skills in reading, writing, researching and presentation. Topics covered include:
You will put these new skills into practice through reading specific literary texts. These are focused on poetry and prose selected from the full range of the modern literary period (1500 to the present).
Across the year, you will learn about different interpretive approaches and concepts, and will examine literary-historical movements and transitions.
This module is worth 20 credits.
Who makes theatre? Where does performance happen, and who is in the audience? How is society represented on stage?
These questions are at the heart of this module, and we will explore the extraordinary variety of drama in the Western dramatic tradition. You will examine dramatic texts in relation to their historical context, spanning:
Alongside texts, you'll also consider the extra-textual features of drama, including the performance styles of actors, the significance of performance space and place, and the composition of various audiences.
You will study selected plays in workshops, seminars and lectures, where we will explore adaptation and interpretation of the texts through different media resources. You can also take part in practical theatre-making, exploring extracts from the selected play-texts in short, student-directed scenes in response to key questions about performance.
This module is worth 20 credits.
What was the earliest literature in English like? Where does English come from? What does ‘English’ really mean, anyway?
On this module, we’ll explore a range of English and Scandinavian literature from the medieval period. You'll also meet themes and characters who are at once familiar and strange: heroes and heroines, monster-slayers, saints, exiles, tricksters, lovers, a bear, and more.
From Tolkien to Marvel, the medieval past has been an inspiration for fantasy fiction and modern myth. As well as introducing you to stories and poetry which is exciting, inspiring and sometimes plain weird, we’ll also be looking at some of the challenges of the modern world.
Thinking about the past, means thinking about how it is used in the present day. The idea of a 'beginning' of English language and literature often gets incorporated into modern beliefs about national, ethnic and racial identity. On this module, we’ll begin the necessary work of challenging these ideas and building a better understanding of the medieval past and why it still matters.
This module is worth 20 credits.
How do we change our language for the workplace? What is the effect of the digital workplace on language? This module provides comprehensive knowledge of professional communication applied to a series of different workplace contexts. You will engage with a range of innovative approaches to analysing talk at work, including discourse analysis and sociolinguistics. You will respond to and critically engage with contemporary real-world workplace communication to be able to identify effective communication and troubleshoot miscommunication and conflict.
Topics may include:
digital workplace communication
language and the law
health communication
corporate communication
political communication and intercultural communication across continents.
This module offers an introduction to Shakespeare through a close focus on one particular genre of drama – the history play – which was hugely popular in England’s commercial playhouses in the late-sixteenth and early-seventeenth centuries. Looking in detail at plays which may include Richard II, 1 Henry IV, 2 Henry IV and Henry V, the module will explore the structure, form and content of Shakespeare’s histories, considering their interest in national and regional identities, their interest in kingship, power and authority, and their exploration of sexual politics, war and identity.Working across several areas of research in the School of English, the module explores how the plays reflected and contested the ideologies of their own moment. Through consideration of the plays’ history of adaptation and performance on stage and screen, the module also considers how the plays have been repeatedly remade to speak to the concerns of later eras and cultures up to the present day.
Module description to be confirmed.
This module introduces you to a range of texts, including those associated with Nottingham and Nottinghamshire, but also those from much farther afield. It asks you to consider how they engage with landscape, with the literary and socio-political heritage of their area, and how they employ other distinctive cultural elements such as dialect. The module will allow you to reflect on recent theoretical developments in the field of literary geography, while also equipping you to read and appreciate literary works through a focus on their construction and exploration of place, employing methods from across the sub-disciplines of English studies.
How can the arts help us think about health and cope with illness? What can the arts contribute to healthcare practice and policy?
You will explore big questions like these, looking at how the arts can engage with the crucial issues in health today and build a better vision of health for the future.
We will cover major themes including:
From treatment, information, care, and outreach, understanding the health humanities provides career opportunities for the next century.
This module is worth 10 credits.
We live in a data-driven society. Information is used for everything from predicting our shopping habits, to understanding global weather patterns, and has radically changed our world.
From the development of Artificial Intelligence to robotics and the use of ‘big data’, the capture and use of information is essential in modern society. To make sure these developments help solve problems, and are not used for harm, we need the arts and humanities to set boundaries and ask questions.
You will:
This module is worth 10 credits.
The digitisation of records and texts has revolutionised academic study. The ability to efficiently and confidently use data is a valuable skill for both your course and future career.
On this module, you will:
We will use examples and case studies from across the faculty, where data and text analysis have been used by arts and humanities researchers within their work.
This module is worth 10 credits.
Learn the basics of creating and editing audio and visual material.
From podcasting, photo editing, photography, video editing and sound editing, you can work on how your digital skills can be used to communicate and inspire.
You will be guided through a series of tutorials and examples where you can develop your skills and produce your own content.
This work will be developed through examples and case studies from across the faculty, where audio and visual materials have been used by researchers within their work.
Examples include:
This module is worth 10 credits.
Epidemics and infectious illnesses have shaped our world. Most recently, the Coronavirus pandemic dramatically changed the way we work and socialise, with lasting effect.
We will explore the past and present of infectious disease, including how cultures, religions, literature and art have been shaped by the interaction between humans and disease.
You will learn about:
This module is worth 10 credits.
Our digital revolution has been led by the arts and humanities.
From mobile apps to learn languages, to video tutorials on how to play an instrument, the use of digital platforms has transformed our disciplines.
In an age defined by ecological issues, technological change and political upheaval across the world, it is the arts and humanities which provide vital links between the past, present and future. It is now more important than ever that we connect communities, challenge structures of power and address inequality.
You will examine how the digital arts changed the world, using examples from a range of mediums from across the globe. This could be a community walking app, that has brought hidden histories to light, a crowd-sourced projects that have given a platform to new voices, or social media forums that link music, philosophy and literature to contemporary debates.
This module is worth 10 credits.
We are in a state of climate emergency. Sustainability and climate change is on both political and personal agendas like never before.
On this module, you will:
The arts and humanities do not offer quick fixes to our problems, but ways of thinking that can change the world. We do this through understanding context, process and change.
We show how the arts and humanities sheds light on the history of the present and directs us towards the future.
This module is worth 10 credits.
Explore how the arts and humanities contribute to sustainability.
From stories, to images and representation, the ways we understand the world also shape how we understand sustainability.
With a focus on globalisation, and the accelerating pace of climate change in the 20th and 21st centuries, we will think about the problems raised by the climate crisis.
You will:
By considering how everyday life choices are linked to the environment, the module offers an imaginative way to explore the challenges of sustainable living. You will gain the tools to challenge opinion and identify how local ideas can offer a solution to global problems.
This module is worth 10 credits.
From filters to fake news, we are exposed to a huge amount of information in our day-to-day lives.
Whether through advertising, promotion, policies or the media, the (mis)information we are exposed to is intended to influence us, change our minds, or maybe even censor and withhold information about important issues.
To challenge this, we need to think critically about data. This module will give you the skills to do just that.
You’ll gain the critical skills to observe, question, and act when the facts do not support what’s being represented. We will also introduce approaches you can use to question visual, textual, quantitative and qualitative information. This could include:
Critical analysis is an important skill, not only so we can preserve our freedoms and protect from harm caused by misinformation, but in the workplace too. The ability to make judgements that are based on logic is a key transferable skill.
This module is worth 10 credits.
Writing inspires change. From the academic textbook that demonstrates a new concept, to a blog post that influences habits, writing can change the world.
On this module, you will learn to think critically about yourself and society, through reflecting on how you write.
Writing lets us occupy different spaces and identities. You can write to develop your sense of self, to enlighten others, or to build connections. Writing skills are more than just how to write an academic essay. Writing can give you an insight into who you are, your values and future direction.
During your studies, you will use writing to develop analytical approaches which can enhance your work and prepare you for your future career. Focusing on the diversity of experiences and backgrounds, interests and motivations, we show how meaningful writing can lead, inspire and transform.
This module is worth 10 credits.
This module aims to further your understanding of research processes and practices with specific focus on the process of developing a research question and design.
You will practice identifying appropriate and operable research questions, reflecting critically on published research to understand its processes. Through encounters with guest researches, you will be shown research in a variety of contexts as an embedded practice and the importance of research skills in your future careers.
This module is worth 10 credits.
In this module you will carry out a small group project which will give you further insight into the principles and processes of research as practice in your chosen discipline.
You will be instructed in a range of academic and transferable project leadership and management skills, preparing you for life after your degree. By the end of this module you will have practiced the process of going from a research topic to a question, to a methodology, to practical research design, to a completed project.
Through tasks such as writing research proposals, project documentation, effective communication, and ethical conduct, you will have gained a grounding in project management, setting you up for success in the working world.
This module is worth 10 credits.
This module introduces students to revivalism as a fundamental aspect of the history of art and visual culture and explores the enduring phenomenon of cultural historical revivals from the Renaissance to the contemporary era, examining their wide-ranging political, ideological and conceptual motives and meanings.
Through case studies drawn and by examining revivalism as a creative and innovative practice, the module considers a variety of attitudes to the past, such as anachronism, nostalgia, utopianism and romanticism.
This module invites students to consider the histories, cultures, and politics of collecting and collections, cutting across art, audio-visual media, memorabilia and fan objects, animals and specimens, archives, museums, galleries, zoos, and public and private cultures of display. It will examine the processes of curation, both institutional and personal, and link these to the social, cultural, and political contexts that shape these practices.
The module will examine the history of collecting and collections and will account for both professional practices of collecting and amateur, private cultures of collecting.
Students will gain an insight into issues of conservation relating to art, object, and media collections. Students will also gain a sense of the contemporary politics of collections management and custodianship.
This module tackles the politics of emotion, affect and the senses within art, media, and culture, concepts which have not always been taken seriously within analytical, intellectual contexts.
Emotions and feelings are experienced individually, but are shaped and impacted by cultural norms, linguistic formulation, and social organisation. The module involves questions of how emotions and affect have been captured, represented and expressed in art and across media forms. It asks what role art, audio, visual, and haptic media play in shaping our sensing bodies and private emotional selves. It addresses the methodological challenges posed by researching affect, emotions and the senses, as well as engaging with how we might study emotion, affect and the senses in a rigorous fashion.
This module explores histories and critical theories of monuments, cities and urbanism. There is normally an extensive fieldwork element in which students study art, architecture, monuments, and museums in situ, both locally studying sites in Nottingham and then through a guided visit to a European city.
A key objective of this module is for students to research, describe, and analyse a site that they have visited, explored and read about. This module allows students to engage with the material properties of our objects of study and introduces them to key terms and a range of critical and theoretical approaches to describing and analysing cities and historical sites. Structuring themes may include the city as site of memory; material and cultural heritage; alternative sites of display of art.
This module explores the historical development of the technologies and objects through which media, art, communications, screen content and cultural experiences are created, distributed and/or experienced.
Students will directly engage with academic debates concerning the nature of technological change, the role of technology in shaping media, art and screen experiences and the material impacts of technologies and objects on the environment and global communities.
The module will explore a range of case studies of technologies and objects used across media, art, screen content and culture.
Develop your understanding of some of the most influential performance theories and practice, from the beginning of the 20th century to the present.
Building on the ‘Drama, Theatre, Performance’ module, you will deepen your understanding of Stanislavski and Brecht in practice, as well as exploring the work of other influential theorists and practitioners.
Possible material includes:
For this module, you’ll have a mix of lectures and practical workshops, totalling three hours a week.
Workshops offer the opportunity for practical drama. You will explore theory in practice, through work with excerpts from canonical theatrical scripts and other performance scripts.
This module is worth 20 credits.
‘On or about December 1910 human character changed’: so wrote Virginia Woolf in 1924. ‘And when human relations change there is at the same time a change in religion, conduct, politics and literature.’ This module will familiarize students with relevant aesthetic, generic, and literary-historical strategies for tracing formal and thematic transformations in twentieth- and twenty-first-century literature. Moving between genres, the module will unfold chronologically from modernism, through the inter-war years, and into the ‘contemporary scene’ (as notionally defined for literature since 1970) up to the present day. Lectures and seminars will address some key phases of creative transition, while also particularizing the work of representative novelists, essayists, short-story writers and poets. This combination of overview and textual scrutiny will encourage students to explore influences and affinities between writers working in different modes and periods. Weekly topics will primarily be concerned with mapping literary formations and innovations within the artistic and cultural contexts from which they emerge, while also addressing the wider aesthetic and ideological significances of issues such as class, gender, sexuality and race.
Explore the novel from the late twentieth century onwards, in Britain and beyond.
We will concentrate on the formal operations and innovations of selected novelists, considering how the contemporary socio-historical context influences these questions of form. Topics considered include:
Contemporary fiction is focused on writing emerging from Britain and closely-related contexts in the post-war period. This module offers strands structured around a number of political, social and cultural frameworks in Britain. These include:
This module particularly explores the network of relationships between context, content and form, supported by related literary and cultural theory and philosophy.
This module is worth 20 credits.
The genre of dream-vision inspired work by all the major poets of the Middle Ages, including William Langland, the Pearl-Poet, and Geoffrey Chaucer. The course will aim to give you a detailed knowledge of a number of canonical texts in this genre, as well as ranging widely into the alliterative revival, and chronologically into the work of John Skelton in the early sixteenth century. The course will depend upon close, detailed reading of medieval literary texts, as well as focusing on the variety and urgency of issues with which dream poetry is concerned: literary, intellectual, social, religious and political.
This module offers an in-depth exploration of the historical and theatrical contexts of early modern drama. Drawing on the most innovative and experimental works by Shakespeare and key contemporaries, this module invites you to explore the three-dimensional stagecraft of these writers. You will reflect on issues such as genre, rhetoric, transmission and audience, and how they affect reception, both among contemporaries and in modern responses. You will study:
The gods, heroes and events of Norse mythology are well-known: Odin the one-eyed god of poetry and war, Thor who protects both gods and humans by crushing giants with his hammer, Freya the goddess of beauty who drives a chariot pulled by cats, the final destruction of the world in the ice and fire of Ragnarök; and human heroes like Sigurd the Serpent-Slayer. In this module you will study and analyse the key texts of Old Norse myth and legend from which these familiar stories come, alongside other media, such as depictions in art. The module will explore the development of Norse myth and legend from the Viking Age to medieval Christian Iceland where these texts were recorded.
You’ll explore how English is learnt from making sounds as an infant through to adulthood. Topics relating to early speech development include: the biological foundations of language development, the stages of language acquisition and the influence of environment on development. Further topics which take into account later stages of development include humour and joke telling abilities, story-telling and conversational skills and bilingualism.
When we study language, we learn about how society works. Why do some people have more noticeable accents than others? Why are some people taken seriously when they talk, while others aren’t? How do those with power use language to manipulate us into thinking a certain way?
On this module, these are the sorts of questions you’ll be thinking about. We focus on how people use language, how language varies between different speakers, and how language is used to represent different social groups. We consider:
You’ll learn how to conduct a sociolinguistic study which explores topics such as these. You will also spend time each week analysing original language data.
The module is worth 20 credits.
All literature is written in language, so understanding how language and the mind work will make us better readers and critics of literary works.
This module brings together the literary and linguistic parts of your degree. It gives you the power to explore any text from any period by any author.
You will study how:
This module is worth 20 credits.
What can given names, surnames and nicknames tell us about people in the past? What determines the choice of a name for a child? Where does our hereditary surname system come from? How have place, class and gender impacted upon naming through time? This module will help you answer all these questions and more. Interactive lectures and seminars, and a project based on primary material tailored to each participant, will introduce you to the many and varied, fascinating and extraordinary types of personal name and their origins.
Are you interested in languages and the multilingual world? Have you ever wondered how our brains process learning a second language? Would you like to teach English overseas one day? If so, this module could be for you.
Drawing on current theories of second language acquisition, we will consider:
You will spend three hours per week on this module, split equally between a lecture and follow-up seminar.
This module is worth 20 credits.
Theatre makers in the long 20th century have been dealing with a series of pressing artistic and social issues, many of which still concern us today.
These issues include:
In order to answer such questions, this module gives an overview of key plays and performances from the 1890s to the present. You will study these key texts in their original political, social, and cultural contexts. You will also:
This module is worth 20 credits.
This module will enable students to explore the wide variety of Victorian and fin-de-siècle literature, with examples from fiction (novels, novellas and short stories), poetry (long poems and sonnets) and critical essays. It will examine changes in literary forms and genres over this period, paying some attention to the contested transition between Victorianism and Modernism. The module is organised in terms of a number of interrelated themes, which may include: empire and race, class and crime, identity and social mobility, politics and social problems, gender and sexuality, aestheticism and consumerism. Students are encouraged to make connections between the ways these themes are represented and explored in specific literary works, and larger changes in nineteenth- and early twentieth-century social, political, intellectual and publishing culture.
This module introduces different kinds of literature, written between 1700-1830. This was a dramatic time in literary history, resulting in the Romantic period. It involved many areas of great contemporary relevance, such as class, poverty, sexuality, and slavery.
We will examine:
As part of this module, you will explore novels, poems, and prose works that bring to life the intellectual, social and cultural contexts of the period.
This module is worth 20 credits.
This module is based around a challenge: how do we use the digital humanities?
You are presented with a series of problems about how we can use the arts and humanities to address some of the major issues we face in technology and society.
For example, the acceleration of technology in both private and public life is immense, but this rapid pace of change should not prevent reflection.
In this module, you consider the major contemporary issues of how technology shapes our present and our future. We respond to these concerns using the specific skillset of the arts and humanities, where we ask: what does it mean to be human?
This module is worth 10 credits.
Stand out in your job search with employability skills and hands-on experience.
Learn key skills, from constructing an outstanding CV to practicing interview technique, before completing a part-time placement in the spring. This will be for one day a week, or equivalent, for up to eight weeks.
You can apply for placements in relevant local organisations. The dedicated faculty placement team have an established list of providers, or you can arrange your own placement, subject to approval.
Our placements include a range of sectors, including:
These are subject to change each year.
You will develop a wide range of transferable skills, including:
Assessment is through an online portfolio of materials, including application materials, reflective writing and a research report.
This module is worth 20 credits.
Community engagement is important in many careers, from politics and social work to marketing and business.
We do not work in a vacuum - our research and activities are linked to individuals and groups across society. By learning to engage with communities, researchers can reach wide audiences, learn from them and collaboratively make a real contribution to overcoming social problems.
We need to understand how engagement works in order to work collaboratively, respectfully and sustainability with communities.
In this module, we will:
This module will prepare you for your future career, by focusing on the key skill of the arts and humanities: our ability to support and engage with those around us.
This module is worth 10 credits.
Explore the histories and legacies of colonisation, alongside the routes to justice through decolonisation.
Using examples from across the globe, we explore the impact of colonisation on society, politics, economics, and culture.
You will consider contemporary examples and a wide range of evidence, sources and perspectives, including from:
You will also explore the debates around reconciliation, restitution and justice.
Together we will build an interdisciplinary analysis, drawing upon the research of the whole faculty to uncover, assess and deconstruct the practices of colonialism and their implications for our contemporary world.
This module is worth 10 credits.
Doing an arts and humanities degree means you’ll gain the skills which are essential for changing the world we live in. Not only that, you are uniquely positioned to understand people, processes and culture.
This module lets you apply that knowledge to solve a real-life problem. The aim is for you to develop your understanding of your degree, and the range of careers open to you.
You will work in an interdisciplinary team on a real project connected to impact, which we define as our ability to ‘make change happen’. These projects have been designed by individuals, groups and organisations that are looking to make a difference to our world. This might be about sustainability, business, equality, culture, politics or society.
Teams will be given a project brief. You will then be guided through how to shape a project, and how to work as a team and deliver results. This will give you the employment skills and experience to show how you can make an impact as an arts and humanities graduate.
This module is worth 20 credits.
Wellbeing, the crisis in mental health care, and clapping for NHS staff during the Covid pandemic are all examples of health humanities. On this module, you will be exploring contemporary challenges in this area.
To build a healthier society, enabling access to healthcare for all, we must consider how people act, behave and build connections.
You will look at:
The major challenges in health provision and healthcare can be influenced and directed by the arts and humanities. This module shows you how this field can be a powerful tool for change.
This module is worth 10 credits.
Discover how our world is experienced through language.
We live in a global society, where different languages build our perceptions, ideas and values. In this module, we respect that difference and participate in it.
You will:
No knowledge of any language is needed, as we focus on understanding what it means to live in our multi-lingual world.
This module is worth 10 credits.
Explore how Nottingham creates ideas, identities, culture and products, alongside how you as a student are also ‘Made in Nottingham’.
This module will help you begin shaping your skills for the career you want, drawing upon the way arts and humanities work has transformed the city.
From the entrepreneurs who have set up businesses or those who have created and enriched charities and social projects, to the writers, artists, musicians and teachers who have all been created in Nottingham. We use their experience, their understanding and their skills to help you define your own path for after university.
You will be able to build your profile through this module, develop your own career narrative to use in your future work as well as engage in the variety of opportunities that are open to you as an arts graduate.
Through this module, we’ll address what it means to be ‘Made in Nottingham’.
This module is worth 10 credits.
This is a course in advanced stylistic analysis, exploring threads of stylistic patterning across literary and cultural history. Building on your prior knowledge of both linguistic and literary scholarship, the module bridges the gap between literary and linguistics aspects of the BA degrees. The course focuses in particular on aspects of style from a formalist, functionalist, cognitive, social and narratological perspective, as well as adding a historical dimension to the study of style. The module provides you with an understanding of how linguistic techniques contribute to the creation of meaning and literary interpretations. There is also an engagement with the emotional response of readers, as well as the practical application of literary linguistic pedagogy, in accordance with the educational and applied linguistic traditions of the discipline. The module represents an engagement with the professional, scholarly and disciplinary practices of literary stylistics.
The twentieth and twenty-first centuries have seen major changes in the way theatre is financed, produced, and presented, on stage and on screen. This module delves into the fascinating world of theatre production, beginning with late nineteenth-century actor-managers and the development of long-running, commercial productions and moving through subsidised theatre, touring and national theatre companies, processes of remediation (particularly through film), and the advent of the mega-musical.
The module utilises case studies including Shakespeare in production, new plays, revivals and international hits such as Les Miserables and Hamilton, to illustrate how theatre responds to changing contexts and audiences. A portfolio assessment allows students to respond to key subjects and types of theatre explored on the module.
The module employs the study of place-names to illustrate the various languages - British, Latin, French, Norse and English - that have been spoken in England over the last 2000 years. You will learn how place-name evidence can be used as a source for these languages, and also for the histories and landscapes of the country. The module coursework can be directed at a geographical area of particular interest to the student.
This module provides comprehensive knowledge of feminist theory, as applied to a series of language and linguistic contexts.
You will explore a range of analytical approaches to language, including conversation analysis, critical discourse analysis, and interactional sociolinguistics. You will also respond to, and critically engage with, contemporary real-world problems associated with gender and sexuality, through the consideration of discourse-based texts.
Topics covered include:
This module is worth 20 credits.
Speaking, listening, reading, and writing are a complex set of behaviours that are a fundamental part of our daily lives. And yet they remain difficult to fully explain.
When you hear ‘FIRE’, you immediately look for an exit and start moving. Yet all that a speaker has done is produce a string of sounds. Your mind distinguishes these from the murmuring of other voices, feet clomping on the floor, and any background music. Your mind matches the sounds f-i-r-e with a word, retrieves the meaning, and relates them to the current circumstances and responds accordingly.
How does the mind do this? And what makes our minds so special that we can do this? On this module, we begin to address these questions.
You will consider:
This module is worth 20 credits.
This module introduces key modern and contemporary poets.
You will build a detailed understanding of how various poetic forms manifest themselves in particular historical moments. Unifying the module is an attention to poets’ responses to the political and ideological upheavals of the 20th century.
The module will include such (primarily) British and Irish poets as:
Some of the forms examined will include: the elegy, the pastoral (and anti-pastoral), the ode, the sonnet (and sonnet sequence), the ekphrastic poem, the version or retelling, the villanelle, the parable and the sestina.
To develop a more complete perspective on each poet’s engagement with 20-century formal and political problems, we also examine these figures’ writings in other modes. This includes critical essays, manifestos, speeches, and primary archival materials such as letters and manuscript drafts.
Grounding each week will be readings on poetry and the category of the ‘political’ from an international group of critics, including such thinkers as Theodor Adorno, Charles Bernstein, Claudia Rankine, Peter McDonald, Angela Leighton, Christopher Ricks and Marjorie Perloff.
This module is worth 20 credits.
Through the exploration of lyric poetry, this module examines cultural and literary change from the fourteenth to the seventeenth century. It will consider the rise of ‘named poet’, the interaction of print and manuscript culture, the representation of love, and the use of the female voice. It will develop further students’ confidence in handling formal poetic terminology and reading poetry from this period. It will also enable students to think pragmatically about the transmission of lyric in modern editions, and about how best to represent the form.
The module is designed to provide students with an understanding of the process of English Language Teaching (ELT) and of the theoretical underpinnings of this practice. In this module students will learn the principles behind the learning and teaching of key aspects and skills of English, including:
Students will also learn how to apply these theoretical principles to the development of teaching materials. This module will therefore be of interest to students who want to pursue a teaching career, and in particular to those interested in teaching English as a second or foreign language.
This module is worth 20 credits.
This module focuses on the connections between literary texts, politics, and relevant historical/cultural contexts in gothic texts. You may cover:
Examples include The Haunting of Hill House (both Shirley Jackson’s novel and the Netflix adaptation), The Gilda Stories by Jewelle Gomez, and Saga of the Swamp Thing by Moore, Bissette and Totleben, and The Visions of the Daughters of Albion by William Blake.
You will explore various critical and theoretical approaches to literature, film, comics, adaptation, and popular culture. The module also seeks to decolonise Gothic Studies, including work by creators from a wide range of backgrounds who identify with a diverse range of subject positions.
This module is worth 20 credits.
The module will explore the unique saga literature of medieval Iceland, with close reference to its historical and cultural contexts, via a selection of set texts. The set texts will be studied in translation but understanding will be enhanced by some study of the Old Norse-Icelandic language. Topics covered may include representations of kinship, gender, health, belief, the supernatural, landscape, emotion, feud and violence within the Old Norse sagas as well as stylistic and literary features of the sagas themselves.
A specialist study of an individual topic in depth. Initial topic or project to be chosen from a range of supervisor research areas, and developed in consultation with the allocated supervisor.
This module explores a recurring series of connected figures, ideas and texts across centuries. Following the publication of John Milton’s Paradise Lost in 1667, you’ll examine the ways in which Milton’s enormously consequential poem is reimagined by later Romantic writers such as Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Mary Shelley. Explore how its mythic archetypes and aspects (the monstrous and Satanic, the Fall, Eve) inspire or recur in later reactions and works such as those by Jane Austen, Oscar Wilde, Bram Stoker, Henry James, J. R. R. Tolkien, and Anthony Burgess. Areas of focus may include the Satanic, the myth of Eve, monsters and the monstrous, doppelgangers, free will, the posthuman, the Edenic in literature, creatures and creators.
This module explores the vital role that discourse plays in various communicative domains in healthcare and workplace settings. Students will explore these domains through a variety of contemporary frameworks for examining discourse and communication, including critical discourse analysis, multi-modal discourse analysis, and interactional sociolinguistics.The module offers the opportunity to analyse and reflect on the discourses of healthcare and the workplace, as two crucially important domains of social and professional life. To this end, professional and healthcare discourses will be investigated through a range of genres and communicative modes, including face-to face communication advertising, media discourse and digital interactions. The module offers a rich resource for discourse-based studies of language in professional and social life and enables students to examine the strategic uses of communicative strategies in specific social settings.
This module will consider Irish literature and drama produced in the twentieth century. Taking the Irish Literary Revival as a starting-point we will consider authors in their Irish and European context, such as W.B. Yeats, J.M. Synge, Lady Gregory, James Joyce, Seán O'Casey, Seamus Heaney, Brian Friel and Marina Carr.
The focus throughout will be upon reading texts in relation to their social, historical, and political contexts, tracking significant literary and cultural responses to Irish experiences of colonial occupation, nationalist uprising and civil war, partition and independence, socio-economic modernisation, and the protracted period of violent conflict in Northern Ireland. Discussion will also seek to highlight a number of recurrent thematic issues, including language, tradition, gender and sexuality, class, place, and memory.
This module encourages you to engage in depth with modern writers and texts from canonical modernism. You will also, on occasion, study rival formations from the same historical period by marginalised writers, as well as proto or post-modernist authors. You will focus on the work of one or more writers, allowing you to examine the development of technique and shifts in thematic, political, and theoretical alignment. Through this, you will gain an understanding of literary culture and the changing relationship between the work of a single author, their forebears, and contemporaries.
This module examines the poetry and prose of Old English: warfare and heroic action, thought and feeling, love and loss, and its place in the invention of national England. You’ll explore this rich and rewarding genre through texts authored by men and women, including poems from the Exeter Book ‘elegies’ like The Wanderer and The Seafarer, or passages from Beowulf in the original language.
World Literature examines the late twentieth and early twenty-first century globe through its correlates in fiction. The primary materials for the course will be post-war Anglophone works drawn from a wide geographical range across the world. After introducing the history of the idea of world literature, these works will be situated within a series of theoretical ‘worlds’: world literary systems; post-colonial criticism; cosmopolitanism; world ecologies; resource culture; literary translation theory. The module will also attend to critiques of 'world literature’ as a concept.
This module focuses on the creative process of making theatre as an ensemble. The first half of the module explores a range of theory-in-practice approaches to performance, such as those of Stanislavski, Lecoq, Laban, Meyerhold, along with approaches to devised, physical theatre influenced by companies such as Frantic Assembly and Gecko. For the second half of the module, students draw on these practical and theoretical models as they develop and rehearse a short, assessed, ensemble piece(s) for public performance. Students are also asked to critically reflect on the process of making performance encountered during workshop, rehearsal and performance on the module.The module builds on the understanding of performance conventions developed through practical workshops begun in the first year 'Drama, Theatre, Performance' module, and the performance theory-through-practice approach of the second year 'From Stanislavski to Contemporary Performance' module.
This module explores writing by, about and for women in the early modern period in the years between the Reformation and Restoration. You'll explore a diverse range of texts, including those written for the stage, within their literary, cultural and political contexts. This will help you understand their textual transmission and reception, as well as the modern critical debates and theories surrounding them, including early modern understandings and presentations of gender. The module may feature texts by male canonical figures such as Shakespeare and Marvell, and more recently recovered and significant women’s voices such as those of Elizabeth Melville, Amelia Lanyer, and Lucy Hutchinson.
You will devise and complete an independent research project of your own choosing, with an appropriate supervisor. You may choose any topic relevant to your area of study and may choose from a range of formats that may include (but are not limited to):
This module will explore a wide range of work by artists, filmmakers, showrunners and curators working in Africa, Europe and the Americas from 1900 to ‘the present’.
This module will examine how practitioners of African heritage have responded to legacies of colonialism and European/American actions, as well as local, national and global issues, in their work.
By encompassing visual art, film and television in its structure, the module will explore diverse visual forms, which may include cultural phenomena like Nollywood and Afrofuturism, genres like Blaxploitation, and formal tendencies like post-Black satire.
Media and culture are key sources of information, narratives and stories, however all of them are subject to restriction and redaction. This module examines how stories are shaped by multiple actors, in various forms and media, and in specific social and cultural contexts.
This module will interrogate the role of both formal and informal regulation in cultural processes, identify multiple factors and stakeholders, examine the histories, traditions and contemporary instances of censorship in a global context, and develop critical vocabulary and analytical tools to analyse narrative inclusion and exclusion.
This module examines the issues and debates that surround curatorial practices in the visual arts.
The module takes a thematic approach, exploring exhibition histories to investigate key questions relating to identity, politics and spectatorship. It will consider the aesthetic, ideological, political and moral effects and motivations of exhibitions, as well as the impact of curatorial agendas on viewing experiences.
Students will be encouraged to reflect critically on the role of exhibitions in shaping histories of art and visual culture through a broad chronological study of how, where and why they are created. In this way, the module will consider questions of institutional responsibility, cultural ownership and appropriation, coloniality and soft power, and the museum as a site of social practice and/or resistance.
This module will explore concepts and experiences of ‘play’ in relation to a number of formats that may include (but not be limited to) videogames, board games, escape rooms and immersive experiences (for example art installations, experiential theatre and performance art).
It will bring together related concepts such as the ludic, immersion, interactivity, gamification, participation and embodiment to explore what it means to create a playful experience, how such experiences are designed, the kinds of outcome they aim to achieve for audiences and the value that gets ascribed to them.
The module will contain a historical consideration of play as well as how it has been deployed to meet political or ideological aims. This will include how ‘play’ is increasingly used within a range of cultural sectors and practices.
Through this module, students will be encouraged to think critically about the cultural impact of festivals with reference to the growing field of festival studies.
The module will introduce students to the histories, contexts and practices of arts festivals in order to provide them with an understanding of the role that arts festivals play within the cultural sector, and will also help students to develop skills to propose and design a festival project. Delivery may include site visits and guest speakers to provide understanding of relevant industry and logistical issues in festival conception, planning and delivery.
Students will be given the opportunity to learn about aspects of festival operations, project management, fundraising, budgeting, marketing, content creation and curation, and how to target relevant audiences. The process will involve identifying local partners and audiences, selecting potential content and producing pitches and supporting documentation.
This module explores the social and political role of organised civil society, with a particular focus on local, national and transnational social movements and labour movements around the world and in historical context.
It will examine the ways in which protest repertoires emerge and develop in different political opportunity structures that facilitate and delimit the ways in which citizens can make their voices heard.
Throughout history, artists have sought to imagine new futures by breaking with the past. This module considers the utopian, experimental, revolutionary impulses that are revealed in significant moments of cultural rupture.
The module explores episodes in which artists, art critics and art historians have attempted to break with the past through new ideas, forms of technology, subjects, styles and materials. In dialogue with the ‘Revivals’ module in the second year, which analyses artistic returns to the past, ‘Ruptures’ explores breaking with the past as a polarised creative tendency.
Through case studies taken from across a range of historical and geographical contexts, the module explores how artists have consciously and deliberately departed from tradition and engaged in wilful and considered rejection of the past.
Sound is everywhere in our daily lives, from the ubiquity of voices and music on screens to the background rumble of cities. Yet these sounds often evade our notice and critical attention. This module sets students to work on a mission to document their everyday listening.
We will examine a range of theories and methods that help us to investigate and explain everyday sound’s role in forming us as sensing subjects, linking us to communities and cultural spaces, mediating our relationship with urban and natural environments, and structuring our daily routines.
This module will involve direct engagement with emerging issues, challenges and opportunities across the media, screen, arts cultural and heritage sectors.
Due to the rapidly changing nature of these sectors as a result of technological, socio-cultural, political and economic dynamics, module content will be responsive and focus on the most timely and urgent issues for the period of the module’s duration.
Staff will lead interdisciplinary and cross-sector conversations around each topic, challenge or opportunity. These discussions will suggest frameworks for considering how issues, challenges and opportunities emerge from specific contexts but are experienced inequitably as a result of different sector-relevant, geographic, socio-cultural, political and economic dynamics.
This module considers histories and theories, and, crucially, objects understood to be 'outmoded,’ by examining the lifecycle of a diverse array of objects and media, beginning with the moment of their declared obsolescence and proceeding to consider their multifaceted cultural afterlives.
Focusing on a wide range of objects and techniques, this module examines how artists, filmmakers, curators, museum conservators and other creative practitioners engage with outmoded objects and ideas, across many forms of cultural production.
By recontextualizing the 'outmoded,' students will gain a deeper understanding of the dynamic nature of cultural tastes and values.
Different ways of exploring art suit different methods of teaching and assessment.
We're interested in using technology to expand the classroom. For example, using Padlet to develop discussions and ideas outside of seminars - you can share and contribute when inspiration strikes, not only at an appointed time.
We make a point of getting out of the lecture theatre and looking at art "in the field". This enables us to think about the commissioning, production and curation of pieces in context.
We are a community built on research and education, where all of our lecturers are active researchers committed to quality teaching.
You will be taught by members of the School of English and Department of
Cultural, Media and Visual Studies. You will benefit from their latest research.
Assessment methods will vary across different modules and lecturers but will always be based on what produces the best learning outcome for you.
A combination of essays and exams are the norm for most modules. Individual modules might also ask you to do a presentation, analyse source material like a guidebook or original script or create a performance.
The minimum scheduled contact time you will have is:
Weekly tutorial support and the accredited Nottingham Advantage Award provide further optional learning activities, on top of these class contact hours.
Your lecturers will also be available outside of these times to discuss issues and develop your understanding. This can be in person and online.
As well as your timetabled sessions you’ll carry out extensive independent study such as:
As a guide, 20 credits (a typical module) is about 200 hours of work (combined teaching and self-study).
Class sizes vary depending on topic and type. A popular lecture may have 200 students attending while a specialised seminar may only contain 15 students.
This joint honours degree creates a unique combination of subject knowledge and professional skills.
The diversity of topics and approaches means you'll develop an extremely wide range of professional skills:
With such a wide range of skills your career will be:
Recent graduate destinations include:
Find out more about career development and opportunities for History of Art and English students.
78.8% of undergraduates from the Faculty of Arts secured graduate level employment or further study within 15 months of graduation. The average annual starting salary for these graduates was £23,974.
HESA Graduate Outcomes (2017 to 2021 cohorts). The Graduate Outcomes % is calculated using The Guardian University Guide methodology. The average annual salary is based on graduates working full-time within the UK.
Studying for a degree at the University of Nottingham will provide you with the type of skills and experiences that will prove invaluable in any career, whichever direction you decide to take.
Throughout your time with us, our Careers and Employability Service can work with you to improve your employability skills even further; assisting with job or course applications, searching for appropriate work experience placements and hosting events to bring you closer to a wide range of prospective employers.
Have a look at our careers page for an overview of all the employability support and opportunities that we provide to current students.
The University of Nottingham is consistently named as one of the most targeted universities by Britain’s leading graduate employers.*
*Ranked in the top ten in The Graduate Market in 2013-2020, High Fliers Research.
University Park Campus covers 300 acres, with green spaces, wildlife, period buildings and modern facilities. It is one of the UK's most beautiful and sustainable campuses, winning a national Green Flag award every year since 2003.
University Park Campus covers 300 acres, with green spaces, wildlife, period buildings and modern facilities. It is one of the UK's most beautiful and sustainable campuses, winning a national Green Flag award every year since 2003.
As a personal tutor, I work with you on your academic progress, but I also have a pastoral role with regards to your well-being. I see how you get on across all your modules, which enables discussions about you as an individual.
Dr Gabriele Neher
Senior Tutor
The opportunity to study such a wide range of modules from various time periods has helped me to further my knowledge in all of the fields I love!
Isabella Hill
BA History of Art and English
History of Art and English at University of Nottingham, the
To see official information about this course and others visit Discover Uni.
Faculty of Arts
Qualification
BA Hons
Entry requirements
ABB
UCAS code
V352
Duration
3 years full-time
Start date
Sep 2026
Faculty of Arts
Qualification
BA Hons
Entry requirements
AAB
UCAS code
Q300
Duration
3 years full-time
Start date
Sep 2026
Faculty of Arts
Qualification
BA Hons
Entry requirements
AAA
UCAS code
Y002
Duration
3 or 4 years full-time depending on language or placement choices
Start date
Sep 2026
Faculty of Arts
Qualification
BA Hons
Entry requirements
BCC
UCAS code
Y14F
Duration
4 years full-time
Start date
Sep 2026
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If you’re looking for more information, please head to our help and support hub, where you can find frequently asked questions or details of how to make an enquiry.
If you’re looking for more information, please head to our help and support hub, where you can find frequently asked questions or details of how to make an enquiry.