Undergraduate students in a tutorial with an academic

English BA

University Park Campus, Nottingham, UK

Course overview

At Nottingham, we go beyond a love of books. Whether you’re charmed by Chaucer, ardent about Austen, or you love the idea of a linguistics laboratory , our wide range of optional modules means you’ll have chance to explore English in ways you’ve never encountered before. 

Consider canon and convention; intersectionality; variation, change and adaptation, and the impact of texts in society. Specialise in authors or genres, or the applications of texts in various settings.  

You’ll build from a starting point in applied linguistics, drama, and literature from medieval times to the present day, exploring what it is to be human through the historical, cultural and social contexts of a text. 

There are options to develop your creative writing in either fiction or poetry, learning from expert staff who are published poets and authors themselves.

You will also develop in-demand  transferable skills in teamwork, presentation, and reflection - qualities highly valued by employers.

Indicative modules

Mandatory

Year 1

Drama, Theatre, Performance

Mandatory

Year 1

Studying Language

Mandatory

Year 1

Beginnings of English

Mandatory

Year 1

Studying Literature

Mandatory

Year 1

Academic Community

Optional

Year 1

Shakespeare's Histories: Critical Approaches

Optional

Year 1

Writing and Place

Optional

Year 1

Creative Writing Practice

Optional

Year 1

The Viking World

Optional

Year 1

Professional Communication

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)

Optional

Year 2

From Talking Horses to Romantic Revolutionaries: Literature 1700-1830

Optional

Year 2

Texts Across Time

Optional

Year 2

Victorian and Fin de Siècle Literature: 1830-1910

Optional

Year 2

Literary Linguistics

Optional

Year 2

The Psychology of Bilingualism and Language Learning

Optional

Year 2

Language Development

Optional

Year 2

Language in Society

Optional

Year 2

Ice and Fire: Myths and Heroes of the North

Optional

Year 2

Names and Identities

Optional

Year 2

From Stanislavski to Contemporary Performance

Optional

Year 2

Twentieth-Century Plays

Optional

Year 2

Fiction: Forms and Conventions

Optional

Year 2

Poetry: Forms and Conventions

Optional

Year 2

Literature and Modernity 1910-1950

Optional

Year 2

Dreaming the Middle Ages: Visionary Poetry in Scotland and England

Optional

Year 2

Contemporary British Fiction

Optional

Year 2

Shakespeare and His Contemporaries: Page and Stage

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

English Dissertation: Full Year

Optional

Year 3

Songs and Sonnets: Lyric poetry from Medieval Manuscript to Shakespeare and Donne

Optional

Year 3

The Gothic Tradition

Optional

Year 3

Making Something Happen: Poetry and Politics

Optional

Year 3

One and Unequal: World Literatures in English

Optional

Year 3

Language and the Mind

Optional

Year 3

Teaching English as a Foreign Language

Optional

Year 3

Language and Feminism

Optional

Year 3

Advanced Stylistics

Optional

Year 3

Discourse and Power: Health and Business Communication

Optional

Year 3

English Place-Names

Optional

Year 3

Theatre Making

Optional

Year 3

Modern Irish Literature and Drama

Optional

Year 3

Changing Stages: Theatre Industry and Theatre Art

Optional

Year 3

The Viking Mind

Optional

Year 3

Advanced Writing Practice: Fiction

Optional

Year 3

Advanced Writing Practice: Poetry

Optional

Year 3

Modernisms

Optional

Year 3

Creatures and Myths

Optional

Year 3

Women and Writing in Early Modern Britain and Ireland 1550-1650

Optional

Year 3

Old English: Inventing a Nation

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About modules

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.

Teaching and learning

Careers

Trent and Highfields lake

From the essays where you learn to write analytically, to the creative side which helps you write for so many different audiences – letters, fiction, poetry – you get such a range. Doing an English degree really sets you up well. It gives you a lot of options. 

Charlotte Emma Jones

English BA

Course data

94%of students say teaching staff have supported their learning well.

Data for English (Full time) at University of Nottingham, the

For more official course information visit Discover Uni

See course data

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Open Day June 2022