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English Language and Literature BA Honours (Q300)

Bachelor's degree

In Newcastle Upon Tyne ()

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

This degree combines elements from our English Language and English Literature degrees in roughly equal proportions, allowing you to immerse yourself in both subjects.     

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This centre's achievements

2018

All courses are up to date

The average rating is higher than 3.7

More than 50 reviews in the last 12 months

This centre has featured on Emagister for 13 years

Subjects

  • IT
  • English
  • English Language
  • Poetry
  • IT Development
  • Writing
  • Syntax
  • Career Development

Course programme

Course Details

Our degrees are divided into Stages. Each Stage lasts for an academic year and you need to complete modules totalling 120 credits by the end of each Stage.

Please be aware that programme modules do change and therefore may differ for your year of entry.

Stage 1 Compulsory modules
  • SEL1003 Introduction to Literary Studies I
  • SEL1004 Introduction to Literary Studies II
  • SEL1007 The Nature of Language
  • SEL1012 Language Through Time
  • SEL1023 Transformations
  • SEL1027 Shaping Sounds and Syntax
  • SEL1029 Language Across Space
Stage 2 Optional modules

You take one module from Group A and Group B and two modules from Group C (subject to prerequisites):

Group A
  • SEL2201 Reading the Renaissance
  • SEL2202 Writing New Worlds, 1660-1800
  • SEL2203 Revolutionary Britain, 1789-1832
  • SEL2216 Poetry, Script and Prose Workshop
  • SEL2219 Monsters, Misery and Miracles: Heroic Life in Old English Poetry
Group B
  • SEL2205 Fictions of Migration
  • SEL2206 Contemporary Cultures
  • SEL2207 Modernisms
  • SEL2217 Popular Performance Here and Now
  • SEL2204 Victorian Passions: Victorian Values
Group C
  • SEL2000 Phonological Theory
  • SEL2084 The Syntax of the World’s Languages
  • SEL2086 Introduction to Language Acquisition
  • SEL2089 Syntactic Theory
  • SEL2091 Sociolinguistics and the Sociology of Language
  • SEL2211 Contexts: Mind, Cognition and Computation
  • SEL2212 Early English: Texts, Patterns and Varieties
  • SEL2219 Monsters, Misery and Miracles
  • SEL2223 Speakers as Wordsmiths: the Creation of New Words in Present-Day English

You choose an additional module from any of the above lists or from the list below:

  • NCL2007 Career Development for Second Year Students
  • NCL2100 Developing Enterprise, Entrepreneurship and Employability
  • NCL2010 Career Management Module

You also select one further module from any of the above lists or take the following:

  • SEL2210 Independent Research Project 2
Stage 3 Optional modules

You take one module from Group D and Group E and two modules from Group F (subject to prerequisites):

Group D
  • SEL3090 Chaucer, Chivalry, and Heresy in the Middle Ages
  • SEL3093 Coming of Age in the Renaissance
  • SEL3303 Writing Rebellion: The Literature of the English Revolution
  • SEL3340 Journeys of the Imagination in Romantic Poetry
  • SEL3373 Women of Virtue and Women of Pleasure
  • SEL3379 Enlightened Romantics
  • SEL3389 Stage and Page: Character and Performance, 1660-1800
Group E
  • SEL3091 Sex and Money: Economies of the Victorian Novel
  • SEL3308 Murder, Mystery, Mayhem
  • SEL3319 Spielberg Generation
  • SEL3323 English Ghost Story: Themes and Forms
  • SEL3338 Home, History, Heritage
  • SEL3346 Contemporary Documentary 1: Theory and Practice
  • SEL3347 Contemporary Documentary 2: Theory and Practice
  • SEL3378 Landscapes of American Modernism
  • SEL3359 Victorian Dream Worlds
  • SEL3370 Writing the Postcolonial Nation: Literature from the Indian Subcontinent
  • SEL3388 Reading Contemporary Cultures
  • SEL3387 The Child: Representations in Literature and Culture
  • SEL3386 Modernist Poetry: Pound to the Beats
  • SEL3390 A New Empire: Fiction and the Rise of Global Capitalism
Group F
  • SEL3005 Language Origins and Evolution
  • SEL3006 Topics in Phonological Theory
  • SEL3094 Accents of English
  • SEL3341 Old English: Texts and Translations
  • SEL3343 Syntactic Puzzles and How to Solve Them
  • SEL3349 History of Linguistic Ideas
  • SEL3352 Language Development: Cross-Disciplinary Approaches
  • SEL3372 Language and Ethnicity in 21st Century Britain
  • SEL3012 Immigrant Second Language and Literacy Acquisition
Group G

You also study one of the following modules:

  • SEL3326 Extended Study: Linguistics and English Language (Semester 1)
  • SEL3327 Extended Study: Linguistics and English Language (Semester 2)
  • SEL3364 Independent Essay I (English Literature)
  • SEL3365 Independent Essay II (English Literature)
Group H

You take another module from any of the above lists or take one of the following:

  • SEL3324 The Cultural Industries (Semester 1)
  • SEL3325 The Cultural Industries (Semester 2)
  • NCL3007 Career Development for Final Year Students
  • NCL3008 Advanced Career Development for Final Year Students
Group I

You may replace one module from Group F with one of the following modules:

  • SEL2000 Phonological Theory
  • SEL2084 Syntax of the World’s Languages
  • SEL2086 Introduction to Language Acquisition
  • SEL2089 Syntactic Theory
  • SEL2091 Sociolinguistics and the Sociology of Language
  • SEL2211 Contexts: Mind, Cognition and Computation
  • SEL2212 Early English: Texts, Patterns and Varieties
  • SEL2223 Speakers as Wordsmiths: the Creation of New Words in Present-Day English

If you wish, you may replace one module from Group G and the extended study/ independent essay and one module from Group H with one of the following:

  • SEL3329 Dissertation: Linguistics and English Language
  • SEL3333 File of Original Literary Work
  • SEL3362 Dissertation in English Literature

Careers English Language and Literature careers

English students acquire a range of valuable skills, which they can transfer to many different employment situations. Your literary and linguistic training can be used in journalism, librarianship, teaching and the highly competitive fields of writing, acting and directing.

You will also gain other skills such as the capacity to analyse and summarise material, to communicate, to work to a deadline, to argue a case, to work independently as well as collaboratively, to think logically and to be able to use computers.

This is excellent preparation for a wide number of professions and as such, our graduates have gone on to a variety of career areas including editorial, marketing, PR and other forms of media. Others have gone to work in law, politics, HR, teaching and supporting specialist learning.

Visit the School of English Literature, Language and Linguistics website to watch video interviews with former students talking about their experiences at Newcastle and their careers since graduating.

Find out more about the career options for English Literature, Language and Linguistics from Prospects: The UK's Official Careers Website..

English Language and Literature BA Honours (Q300)

Price on request