English with Digital Humanities BA (Hons) DIntS / DPS

Bachelor's degree

In Loughborough

Price on request

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    Loughborough

Overview
English with Digital Humanities BA (Hons) is a new and innovative course designed for students who wish to combine elements of a traditional English degree with the acquisition of new digital skills.
Our BA (Hons) English with Digital Humanities degree introduces the new and rapidly evolving field of digital humanities, and focusses, in particular, on the significance of the digital revolution for the reading of literary texts. It will equip you with skills in textual interpretation and analysis as well as applied digital knowledge in web design and blogging, desk top publishing, text encoding, data visualisation and digital editing.
Our academic staff are recognised for their expertise in digital approaches to literature, literary and editorial theory, contemporary publishing, and all the periods of literary history. Their knowledge and enthusiasm for their research and teaching in these areas makes this a vibrant and supportive place for you to study, with top-of-the-range technical facilities available to assist you in developing the digital acumen that will make you stand out in a fast-changing workplace.

Facilities

Location

Start date

Loughborough (Leicestershire)
See map
Loughborough University, LE11 3TU

Start date

On request

Questions & Answers

Add your question

Our advisors and other users will be able to reply to you

Who would you like to address this question to?

Fill in your details to get a reply

We will only publish your name and question

Reviews

This centre's achievements

2019

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 14 years

Subjects

  • Shakespeare
  • Poetry
  • Humanities
  • Media
  • Writing
  • Art
  • Editorial
  • English
  • Philosophy

Course programme

What you'll study

Excited to learn more? For a taster of what you can expect to study on our English with Digital Humanities BA (Hons) degree, take a sneak preview of some of the modules you may have the opportunity to study below.

The information below reflects the currently intended course structure and module details. Updates may be made on an annual basis and revised details will be published through Programme Specifications ahead of each academic year. Please see Terms and Conditions of Study for more information.

  • Year 1
  • Year 2
  • Final year

We introduce your studies with a range of core modules in language, narrative form, poetry and literary theory. The 'Digital Humanities' element is introduced in a core module ('How to Do Things with Digital Texts') in semester 2. You choose one optional module in semester 2 of this year.

Semester 1

Exploring Language and Linguistics Core

Exploring Language and Linguistics

This module will introduce you to some of the most important aspects of Linguistics, including grammar and syntax, and the history and formation of the English language. This will develop your skills in reading, evaluating - and creating - different kinds of written and spoken texts. A fascinating subject area, and highly useful learning.

How to do Things with Digital Texts Core

How to do Things with Digital Texts

This module addresses the ways in which the digital revolution is changing literary studies, and enables you to use digital resources to aid and expand your close reading skills. You’ll also learn how to create your own innovative versions of texts using tools such as Juxta and desktop publishing software.

Narrative Forms and Fiction Core

Narrative Forms and Fiction

Narrative forms and fiction allows you to explore the concept of narrative over a range of genres and time periods, including the study of film as well as short stories, memoir and fiction. Find out how narrative works and, if you wish, try your hand at creating your own stories, screenplays and even graphic novels

Semester 2

Literary and Critical Theories Core

Literary and Critical Theories

The module introduces significant classic and contemporary theoretical approaches and key concepts used in the study of literature today, from which you’ll draw throughout your English degree. Explore themes such as Gender and Sexuality, Fantasy and Dreams, and Power and Protest - and apply them to your own interpretations of literary texts.

Elephants and Engines: An Introduction to Creative Writing Optional

Elephants and Engines: An Introduction to Creative Writing

This module will introduce you to techniques for writing fiction and poetry. These include imagery, character and location - allowing you to write in whatever form or genre you wish, and on any subject matter. Practical workshops and examples from contemporary literature will help you to write, and to develop your writing strengths.

Introduction to Film Optional

Introduction to Film

This module will introduce you to the approaches, skills and vocabularies essential for the analysis of film. We will consider stylistic and formal elements, cinematic authorship and stardom, and issues of race, ethnicity, gender and sexuality, covering films of diverse periods and genres.

Writing in History Optional

Writing in History

This module will provide you with an outline of English literary history from the late medieval period to the early 20th century. You will discover how various ‘timeless’ literary texts reflect the historical context which produced them, often in surprising and complex ways, while also gaining an overview of the dominant movements and periods of English literature.

For English in the second year we survey the major periods of literary history. You will be required to choose one module which covers literature before 1800, and one module which covers literature after 1800. For Digital Humanities, we study contemporary literature and digital literary culture. Students also choose three optional modules.

Semester 1

From Fan Fiction to YouTube: Navigating the Digital Literary Sphere Core

From Fan Fiction to YouTube: Navigating the Digital Literary Sphere

This module surveys the structures of literary culture and shows how they have been transformed by online media and behaviour. It will enable you to engage in the digital literary sphere through the creation of blogs, vlogs, online book reviews, and fan fiction.

Renaissance Writings (pre-1800) Core

Renaissance Writings (pre-1800)

A fascinating insight into the literary forms and texts of the Renaissance. As well as a range of texts from the Elizabethan period to the Civil War, you’ll look at historical and cultural contexts, in order to understand what these writers are doing in this period of transformation - including the controversy and power of their writing.

Victorian Literature (post-1800) Core

Victorian Literature (post-1800)

On this module you will examine in detail some of the important novels and poems of the Victorian period. We will consider these works in relation to the social and cultural contexts of the nineteenth century, including class, gender, sexuality, religion and science.

Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture Optional

Nineteenth Century American Literature and Culture

In this period, the United States developed in terms of culture, economy, population - and ambition. This module will examine how writers of poetry, fiction and theatre depicted the events of this century, including the American Civil War, poverty and gender roles. If you want to understand the United States today, start here.

Introduction to Linguistics Optional

Introduction to Linguistics

How can we use language to describe and explain the structure and functions of language? Learn how to analyse written texts, film and television by examining the theories of language and applying them to contemporary examples.

The Weird Tale Optional

The Weird Tale

The module aims to explore the development of the Weird Tale in Britain and the US from the late nineteenth century onwards, attempting to define the form, to examine its history, and to engage critically with its preoccupations.

Chivalry from Chaucer to Shakespeare Optional

Chivalry from Chaucer to Shakespeare

Discover and explore the codes of chivalry represented in the behaviour of knights in love, justice, and war from the medieval to the early modern period. Authors studied typically include Geoffrey Chaucer, Thomas Malory, Edmund Spenser, and William Shakespeare.

Semester 2

Eighteenth-Century Literature (pre-1800) Core

Eighteenth-Century Literature (pre-1800)

This module will introduce you to a range of texts from the period 1700-1830. We will discuss them within their original cultural and historical contexts, including revolution, Romanticism and the Gothic.

Modernisms (post-1800) Core

Modernisms (post-1800)

This module is an introduction to the diversity of literary movements, ideas, and concepts grouped under the term 'Modernism'. You will study a range of texts, both fiction and poetry, produced in the early twentieth century when a number of writers broke with tradition and sought new ways of depicting the rapidly changing world around them.

America at War Optional

America at War

America has been involved in major military conflicts in the twentieth- and twenty-first centuries: World War 1, World War II, the Korean Conflict, the Vietnam War, and the Iraq War. This module addresses war writing including the novel, poetry, drama, film, music, photo-journalism, and non-fiction. It enables you to develop critical awareness of the myriad ways in which writers and film-makers have responded to and imagined warfare.

Language in Society Optional

Language in Society

This module provides students with the knowledge and skills they need to understand how the relationship between language use and aspects of social identity and the interaction between socio-cultural practices, social identity and language use can be studied.

Women's Writing in the Seventeenth Century Optional

Women's Writing in the Seventeenth Century

On this module you will explore a range of writing by women from England in the seventeenth century. The political events of this century enabled women to publish in unprecedented numbers and ways. The module will equip you with a greater appreciation of the type of writing women undertook, and an ability to situate this work in its historical context.

From Print to Digital: Publishing Revolutions Optional

From Print to Digital: Publishing Revolutions

This module provides multiple perspectives on publishing and the spread of ideas through print and the digital in society, and on key concepts and ideas from the publishing world. It traces significant changes that have taken place in the book trade since the invention of printing to the digital revolution and to explore the challenges and opportunities arising from these changes.

Philosophy, Literature and the Arts Optional

Philosophy, Literature and the Arts

On this module you will read and discuss some of the key ideas in philosophy that are central to literary study and theory, and to the discussion of art and its role in our lives and societies. We will be examining these alongside a selection of literary texts and visual art (sculpture, painting and photography) which pose, incorporate or illustrate philosophical ideas and questions.

African American Culture Optional

African American Culture

On this module you will explore the complex formal and political questions raised by African American cultural expression produced between 1845 and the present. We will study a wide range of forms and media - literary, cinematic and musical - situating these in their shifting historical contexts, from the nineteenth-century American South to the contemporary Black Lives Matter movement.

Introduction to Multimodality Optional

Introduction to Multimodality

How do we communicate through images and what is the relationship between visual and verbal text strategies? The aim of the module is to introduce students to the study of texts that are created not just by using verbal language.

Material Culture Optional

Material Culture

Optional module taught by Communication, Media, Social and Policy Studies, focusing on the concept of physical and virtual objects. The ideas of consumption and possession are explored, including the notion of the body as a material thing and the nature of gift and exchange.

Creative Dissent: Protest, Activism and Art Optional

Creative Dissent: Protest, Activism and Art

This module highlights the social production of art.

In your final year you will take two core modules in Digital Humanities and choose three optional modules.

Semester 1

Building Digital Editions Core

Building Digital Editions

This module looks at digital editions and editorial theory, and requires students to create a digital textual edition of their own.

Cruel and Unusual Optional

Cruel and Unusual

This module will introduce you to fiction and film depicting and exploring the practice of punishment in American history. You will have an opportunity to study these texts in relation to social and historical contexts as well as competing theories of punishment.

Publishers, Authors and Readers Optional

Publishers, Authors and Readers

On this module, you will study the roles of the author, publisher and reader in the field of literary production. You will also learn about the relationships between them and how these have developed since the eighteenth century.

Radicals and Reactionaries: Writing Women in the 1890s Optional

Radicals and Reactionaries: Writing Women in the 1890s

English with Digital Humanities BA (Hons) DIntS / DPS

Price on request