Writing and English Literature
BA (Hons)
Intermediate award(s): CertHE, DipHERichard Conway
Writing and English Literature
“As a mature student I was unsure if I could get back into the 'education system' but found the transition easier thanks to lecturers and admin staff. I enjoy having my experiences expanded, and my limitations challenged by the courses. Having been naïve in some of the aspects of Writing and carrying scars of compulsory taught English, I found the lecturers creative in their execution of studies, making the work enjoyable and entertaining whilst informative and constantly challenging. I found the feedback on my submitted work helpful, insightful and encouraging. I would absolutely recommend this course; it is excellent for any writer who wishes to be challenged and to expand their understanding of the creative world. I have been fortunate to have lecturers who enjoy writing, enjoy literature and enjoy imparting their knowledge upon willing students. Every lecturer has been supportive, willing to meet at any time I have needed to talk to them, or simply replying to an email enquiry. They are guiding lights when everything has turned to darkness. My confidence has been built from nothing to that of a published author. I hope to have a career in writing (novels, plays, radio etc) and so this course has given me opportunities to study these with an insight to the professional, as well as the creative, world.
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Course overview
The combination of Writing and English Literature offers a challenging and stimulating course that seeks to enhance your understanding of a range of texts and cultivate your creative and professional writing skills. Our degree offers you the opportunity to study in a department that has a thriving and internationally recognised research culture.Methods of teaching on the Writing side of the course have a distinctly practical flavour, with the emphasis on interactive workshops and seminar participation, rather than lectures. There is also considerable scope for independently directed work, and we use a virtual learning environment to supplement face-to-face teaching on several modules. During your course, you will perform alongside published writers and have your work performed by professionals for public audiences, as well as being published online and in print.
Reading English Literature enables you to study some of the most interesting and exciting books ever written. The English Literature element strikes a balance between the study of writers such as Shakespeare, Milton, Wordsworth, Dickens, and Woolf, and the exploration of less traditional areas like modern science fiction, children's literature and contemporary women's writing. Study visits to local and national theatres help broaden your outlook and add a further dimension to your studies.
You will take half of your degree from Writing and half from English Literature.
Additional course overview
All Writing and English Literature students are welcome to join the Anglia Ruskin Literary Society, whose members attend local plays and poetry readings, convene workshops, invite guest writers to speak and host performance evenings. The department enjoys strong links with regional networks for poetry, dramatic writing, screenwriting, fiction, music and performance, including Cambridge Wordfest, CB1 Poetry, Writers' Centre Norwich, Menagerie Theatre and WriteOn!. Teaching is delivered by published writers, critics, journalists and professionals from other related disciplines. No undergraduate writing course can promise you a career as a published writer. We do, however, teach you the skills and techniques that publishers will look for in a new writer, and we place a strong emphasis on professional standards of communication throughout the course.Module guide
Year one core modules
Introduction to Imaginative Writing
This module is compulsory for all students studying Writing. It runs across two semesters of the academic year. The module introduces techniques for developing and sustaining creative writing and teaches students how to practice these techniques in their own short fiction, poetry and dramatic writing. Study pack for 'Introduction to Imaginative Writing', on sale at Anglia Ruskin module bookshop during the first week of the semester. Graham, R., Newall, H., Leach, H. and Singleton, J., eds. 2005. The road to somewhere: a creative writing companion. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan; Morley, D. 2007. The Cambridge introduction to creative writing. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.
Language and Criticism for Writers
This module is compulsory for all students studying Writing. The main areas covered are grammar and style; producing critical commentaries for creative and professional writing assignments; performing and presenting work with care and confidence; giving and receiving constructive criticism; maintaining journals and notebooks; making language choices in relation to audience expectations and working with drafts. Set text: Students are requested to work through the Ottawa Hypergrammar (http://www.arts.uottawa.ca/writcent/hypergrammar/).
Introduction to English Literature 1
This module gives students an outline knowledge of the history of English Literature from the Anglo-Saxon period to the end of the eighteenth century. It uses a selection of texts taken from volume 1 of The Norton Anthology of English Literature, supplemented by handouts, to give students examples of different literary forms belonging to every period of English literary history prior to the Romantic movement. The juxtaposition of pieces by well known authors such as Chaucer, Marlowe, Milton and Swift with less familiar texts is intended to encourage reflection upon what constitutes the 'canon'. Students are expected to acquire a basic knowledge of the terms used in English literary history ('Medieval', 'Tudor', 'Renaissance', 'Reformation', 'Early Modern', 'Restoration', 'Augustan', 'NeoClassical', 'Enlightenment', 'Sensibility') and are encouraged to think critically about these terms.During the course of this module (and its sister module in semester 2) we want students not only to acquire a sense of literary history and an outline knowledge of the main literary periods. We also hope they will engage in a direct and pleasurable way with a variety of extremely interesting texts. We have chosen a selection of poems, plays, and works of prose fiction which we ourselves find pleasurable and interesting to read and we hope students will find them equally exciting, even if some of them seem difficult at first. The module complements Ways of Reading by offering a broad overview rather than focusing on specific critical approaches but we hope that some of the close reading skills acquired while taking Ways of Reading can also be put into practice on this module. The core book for the module and an essential purchase is Greenblatt, S. et al, eds (2006) The Norton Anthology of English Literature (8th edition), vol. 1, New York and London: W.W. Norton. It can be usefully supplemented by one of a number of recent histories of English literature. A good and student-friendly one is Alexander, M. (2007) A History of English Literature, 2nd edition Basingstoke: Macmillan. All the texts listed below which will be taught in the first semester are available in the Norton anthology except Etherege, The Man of Mode which will need to be purchased separately. Some references to Anglo-Saxon poetry will be made in the introductory lecture and students are encouraged to look at Seamus Heaney's translation of Beowulf which can be found in the Norton anthology.[Anglo-Saxon poetry] Geoffrey Chaucer, 'The Miller's Tale', Christopher Marlowe, Doctor Faustus; Selected Renaissance lyric poems (including Shakespeare and Donne)' John Milton, Paradise Lost Book 1, John Milton, Paradise Lost Book 2; George, Etherege, The Man of Mode; John Wilmot, Earl of Rochester, selected poems; Aphra Behn, Oroonoko; Jonathan Swift, Gulliver's Travels Book 4; Olaudah Equiano, Interesting Narrative of [his] Life .
Introduction to English Literature 2
The core book for the module and an essential purchase is Greenblatt, S. et al, eds (2006) The Norton Anthology of English Literature (8th edition), vol. 2, New York and London: W.W. Norton. All the texts listed below which will be taught in the second semester are available in the second volume of the Norton anthology except Austen, Northanger Abbey; Ibsen, A Doll?s House; Woolf, Orlando; and Vonnegut, Slaughter-House Five which will need to be purchased separately. William Blake, Songs of Innocence and Experience; Samuel T. Coleridge, 'The Rhyme of the Ancient Mariner'; Jane Austen, Northanger Abbey; Victorian Poetry (the Brownings, Tennyson, Christina Rossetti); Robert Louis Stevenson, Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde; Henrik Ibsen, A Doll's House; Modernist Poetry (Yeats, Eliot, H.D.); Joseph Conrad, Heart of Darkness and Chinua Achebe, 'An Image of Africa: Racism in Conrad's Heart of Darkness'; Virginia Woolf, Orlando and 'Modern Fictio'; Kurt Vonnegut, Slaughter-House Five; Alice Munro, selected short stories
Ways of Reading
This module introduces students to studying English at University and also provides opportunities for students to develop skills such as reading critically and communicating clearly. The first semester offers an overview of the degree structure and an examination of some key critical terms, problems and approaches that concern students of English, including, for example: the literary canon and value; narrative theory; realism and representation; genre; the production of meaning; relationships between literature, history and the world; selected approaches to literature, including formalist, new historicist, feminist, psychoanalytical and postcolonial criticism, and relationships between literature and identity. These topics are explored through a selection of critical texts included in the Module Study Pack and short extracts from plays, novels, short stories and poems (extracts provided). Students attend a one-hour lecture and a one-hour seminar each week; a library induction session is substituted for one session. This part of the module is assessed by a multi-phase assessment package of two essays which allows students to develop their reflective, critical and essay-writing skills; this assessment comprises part of the student's Personal Development Planning (PDP). In the first stage of this assessment, students write a diagnostic essay (1500 words) in which they reflect on their learning experience. This essay is supported by two essay-writing workshops. In the second stage of this assessment, students develop their essay-writing skills through analysis of a critical text and reflection on this process (1500 words). Both essays are marked with particular attention to the quality of their writing, argument, presentation and referencing apparatus. In the second semester students attend a two-hour seminar each week. In these seminars students develop the ideas and skills introduced in the first semester and receive further guidance on writing essays and presenting work. Topics include referencing and bibliographies; appropriate register, tone and vocabulary; work on clarity, the construction of coherent arguments and the substantiation of points by evidence. In the first part of this semester students are also given guidance on oral presentation skills. They practice these skills and develop their knowledge of topics introduced in the first semester by giving an assessed presentation (5 minutes). As part of this assessment, students are required to produce a one-page handout for members of the seminar group. The later part of the second semester develops some of the ideas introduced in the first semester through additional critical reading and detailed application of ideas to selected literary texts covered in English Literature 1 and 2. This work assists students in preparing the final assignment which consists of a critical analysis of a literary text or concept (2500 words).
Year two core modules
Writing Short Fiction
News and Feature Writing
Dialogue and Debate 1: Shakespeare and Renaissance Drama
Writing Drama
Year three core modules
Major Project in Writing or English Literature
Writing Poetry
Contemporary Fiction
Year one optional modules
Writing to Entertain, Inform and Persuade
Anglia Language Programme
Year two optional modules
Creative Writing
History of the Book
Romantic Conflicts
Myth and Medievalism
Postcolonialism
Special Topic 1 (American Literature)
The Victorian Experience: Texts and Contexts
Dialogue and Debate 2: More to Milton
Anglia Language Programme
Year three optional modules
Writing for Radio
Storytelling and Performance
Film Journalism
Modernism and the City
Women's Writing, Gender and Sexuality
Special Topic 2 (Theorising Children's Literature)
Working in English, Communication, Film and Media
Modern Science Fiction
Synoptic Course Review
Anglia Language Programme
Assessment
Assessments include: portfolios of writing, critical commentaries, oral presentation, performance, video and audio recordings, proposals, reading journals, examinations, essays and reviews.Personal Development Planning (PDP) is an integral part of assessment at Anglia Ruskin, encouraging you to reflect and evaluate personal progress in the module and the degree course, and on the skills and abilities acquired in the degree course and their value outside the domain of academic study. On the Writing side this arises naturally out of the critical commentary element in each module, where you are asked to evaluate your portfolio work and reflect on writing processes.
Professor Adam Piette
External examiner, 2012
“The scripts I read this year were testimony to the hard-working department: they showed students being enthused and inspired to develop their own independent line, to work imaginatively with difficult cultural material, and to harness and internalize essential writing and research techniques that become genuine skills. The creative writing that I read was of a very high quality.
The writing programme, which I've seen blossom over the years, is now very much a central plank to ARU's provision, and works so well alongside the academic modules that it really is a marvel, and an envy-making marvel, to see such good work at the different levels.
The paperwork, as I have said previously, is staggeringly good, best in the country, and provides students with a solid foundation of leads, reading lists, technical and conceptual guidelines and frameworks, with a nicely, finely-tuned sequences of seminars/workshops that target real and usefully real aims and outcomes.”
Facilities
Our department organises extra-curricular activities such as a three-day Stratford-upon-Avon theatre study trip; frequent poetry readings; regular literary events organised by the Literary Society; one-day symposia and conferences. The Mumford Theatre, which is situated at the heart of our campus, plays host to a range of professional touring, local community and student theatre. It also presents music events including a series of free lunchtime concerts.Specialist facilities used on the Writing and English literature course include media suites, drama studio and TV studio.
Libraries
Our campus libraries offer a wide range of publications and a variety of study facilities, including open-access computers, areas for quiet or group study and bookable rooms. We also have an extensive Digital Library providing on and off-site access to e-books, e-journals and databases.
We endeavour to make our libraries as accessible as possible for all our students. During Semester time, they open 24 hours a day from Monday to Thursday, until midnight on Friday and Saturday and for 12 hours on Sunday.
IT Resources
Our open access computer facilities provide free access to the internet, email, messaging services and the full Microsoft Office suite. A high speed wireless service is also available in all key areas on campus. If you are away from campus or a distant learner, our student desktop and its many applications can be accessed remotely using the internet. Your personal student email account provides free document storage, calendar facilities and social networking opportunities.
Throughout your studies you will have access to our Virtual Learning Environment (VLE), providing course notes, reading materials and multi-media content to support your learning, while our e-vision system gives you instant access to your academic record and your timetable.
Study abroad options
Our department has exchange agreements with Université de Franche-Comte, Besançon, France; Université de Provence, France; Universidad de Huelva, Spain; Universidad de Sevilla, Spain; Valparaiso University, Indiana, USA. You may apply to spend one semester in Years 2 or 3 studying abroad.Special features
Our department consistently scores highly in The Guardian's subject league tables and is one of the departments at Anglia Ruskin rated 'Excellent' by The Sunday Times University Guide. In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise set up to monitor the quality of research in UK universities, 95% of the work submitted by our department was judged to be of international standard, with 60% judged to be either 'internationally excellent' or 'world-leading'. Several of our staff and students have benefited from the New Writing Partnership Escalator Literature scheme, which develops writing talent in the east of England.Course Leader
Dr Valerie PurtonLinks with industry and professional recognition
You may have opportunity to take part in a work experience placement or field trips in relation to professional and/or creative writing projects.Associated careers
While our BA (Hons) Writing and English Literature course may lead to a career as a published writer, the skills taught are applicable to a wide range of careers.Our graduates go on to a huge variety of careers, including teaching, journalism, television, radio, the music industry, arts administration, gallery work, fundraising, personnel work, publishing, librarianship, marketing, local authority work, publicity, social work, tourism and IT-related industries. Some choose to stay on and complete an MA at Anglia Ruskin University with us in English Literature, Creative Writing or Publishing. The thriving East Anglian Arts environment will give you the opportunity to mix with professional writers, and your course leader will be able to offer practical advice on submitting work for publication.
| UCAS Tariff points: | 240 - 280 |
| Additional Requirements: | Required subject(s): A-level English Literature or English Language at grade C |
We welcome applications from International and EU students. Please select one of the links below for English language and country-specific entry requirement information.
How to apply
UCAS code
WQ83Location
Duration
3 YearsAvailable starts
SeptemberStudent finance
Open Day
Saturday 22 JuneUndergraduate Open Day
Advice & support
EmployabilityFaculty
Arts, Law & Social SciencesDepartment
English, Communication, Film and MediaContact us
UK and EU applicants:- Call 01245 686868
- Complete enquiry form
- Call +44 (0)1245 493131 ext 2609
- Complete enquiry form
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