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Introduction

Introduction

Location

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Course Length

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Why choose this course?

Introduction

Overview

Introduction

Modules

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Entry Criteria

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Assessment

N\A

Career Opportunities

Introduction

Introduction

Location

Headington

Course Length

Full time: 3 years

Why choose this course?

In your first year, you’ll focus on building key skills that will unlock your potential for the rest of the course. As you develop as a writer, your peers and tutors will share feedback in a supportive environment. You’ll discover the rich literary history and culture of Oxford, and you’ll investigate globe-traversing literature of travel and exploration, as well as American literature.

In the following year, you’ll learn what it takes to write across genres, from travel writing to science fiction. You will explore two core themes: literary responses to the environment, and literary transgression and rebellion. You will deepen your knowledge of various literary movements, eras and genres that interest you.

In your final year, you will produce a significant creative writing project of your own. You'll learn about how to submit your written work to publishers, magazines and to literary competitions. We'll help you to become the writer that you want to be. You will be supported in developing your confidence and capabilities, enabling you to become a highly skilled graduate.

Learning and teaching

You’ll learn through a mixture of lectures, seminars, tutorials and independent learning.

In lectures you’ll learn the core themes of each module, giving you a strong understanding of the course and preparing you for assessments.

In seminars, you’ll learn in small, select sessions. These encourage in-depth discussion with your fellow students, allowing you to clarify uncertainties and explore your own ideas.

In tutorials, you’ll meet individually with your seminar tutor. You’ll receive one-to-one feedback and support on your:

 work
 upcoming assessments
 any aspects of the module you may want help with

Independent learning allows you to produce a project or piece of writing on a topic that really grabs your interest. You’ll have the support of our expert lecturers.

Overview

“The only way to find your voice is to use it.” – Austin Kleon

On this course, we’ll help you do just that.

English Literature with Creative Writing at Oxford Brookes will provide you with a solid grounding in literature since the Renaissance, and the space to explore your own creative writing abilities. You’ll experiment with new forms and genres. You’ll push yourself as a writer and a reader. Whether you’re exploring travel writing or screenplays, you’ll discover new strengths, areas of interest and new passions.

You’ll also shape your writing by studying different literary voices and how they’ve been influenced by the issues of their time. And through workshops led by your tutors, you’ll examine some of the most pressing issues of today, thinking about how they impact your own writing style.

Ours is a supportive community. We’ll help you develop the skills you’ll need to succeed not just as a writer but also as an engaged citizen of the world.

Modules

Year 1

Compulsory modules

Creative Writing 1: Voice and Craft in Poetry and Prose

In this module, you’ll enhance your abilities as a creative writer. You’ll participate in workshops where you’ll learn through reading, writing, discussion and feedback. You’ll practise your own writing, explore the interplay of creativity and craft, and analyse how you work as a writer. You’ll join other students in exploring approaches to crafting poetry and prose, through:

 practical writing exercises
 discussing each other’s work
 critically analysing the work of published writers
 exploring key writing practices.

You’ll produce a portfolio of original creative writing, as well as a study of the aims and processes of your creative work. You’ll develop excellent writing habits, and the ability to reflect on your own writing practices. You’ll also understand the literary and cultural contexts of your own writing.

Reading for Meaning

In this module, you’ll develop the tools you need to succeed in university-level literary study. Working through a series of short literary texts and extracts, you’ll develop skills in:

 close reading
 critical analysis
 research
 essay writing

You’ll be taught in small groups, enabling you to get to know your classmates and tutor, and allowing you to explore your ideas and those of others. You’ll also be supported in developing positive study habits and self-management skills.

Reading Wonderland: The Literature of Oxford

In this module, you’ll investigate Oxford’s rich literary life, both past and present. You’ll dive into texts written, performed and set in Oxford, as you think about how the city’s literature is shaped by its geography, population and reputation. You’ll read established texts and writers, as well as literature outside of centres of power and privilege. You’ll think critically about yourself and your own writing and analysis, in relation to the city’s spaces. You'll spend some time getting to know your new home by walking around it, and you'll be asked to create your own guided literary tour of the city.

Shakespeare Now

In this module, you’ll explore Shakespeare’s work not only as a cornerstone of English literary tradition, but as a global phenomenon. You’ll delve into Shakespeare’s language, themes and genres through recent interpretations and adaptations in performance, film and visual art. You’ll enhance your understanding and analytical skills as you explore the cultural context in which Shakespeare wrote. You’ll develop new insight into Shakespeare’s impact in the past and his ongoing relevance across the globe today.

Theory, Writing and Power

In this module, you’ll get to grips with core elements of literary criticism and theory. You’ll debate pressing critical questions, and develop your awareness of issues that are key to understanding literature and society. You’ll build on the knowledge you’ve gained in your other introductory English Literature modules and you'll learn to think carefully about yourself and your place in the world. You’ll develop your knowledge of:

 a range of theoretical and critical concepts
 how these concepts can be applied to literary texts from different periods
 how these theories relate to issues of language, culture, and textuality

You’ll cover one text over two weeks, engaging with a new theory or critical framework each week. You’ll gain skills and insights that you’ll be able to use throughout your whole degree.

Literature of Travel, Exploration and Exile

In this module, you'll engage with representations of travel, exploration and exile across a wide range of genres. You will explore personal and socio-political motivations for journeying, relationships between places, cross-cultural encounters, identity and ideology. Topics will vary from year to year, but may include:

 The ‘quest’ narrative
 Colonial travel
 Voyages of scientific discovery
 Forced displacement, such as deportation, enslavement, and migration/refugee journeys
 Literature of nomadic peoples/travelling communities
 The ‘road trip’
 Fantasy travel and imaginary voyage

You will also explore formal structures and features of travel writing.

Diverse Americas: Modern and Contemporary American Literature

American culture is central to what we read, watch, and buy, but how much of America are we seeing? In this module, you'll engage with a variety of North American literature. You’ll explore work by Latinx, Asian-American, Native American, LGBTQ+ and women writers from the nineteenth, twentieth and twenty-first centuries. You will deepen your awareness of cultural diversity and develop your understanding of the different kinds of values, power, privilege, purposes and cultural capital attributed to different literatures, peoples and literary voices in North America.

Optional modules

Media and Crime

How does the media police our morals as a society, and define our ideas of acceptable behaviour? In this module, you’ll gain the critical skills to analyse popular representations of crime in the media. You’ll examine news reports and other forms of mass-media. And you’ll develop a knowledge of crime as a cultural construct.

Contemporary Societies: Structure and Change

In this module, you’ll investigate the changing face of society. You’ll discover how states, economies and societies interact with each other. You’ll explore how markets and welfare states have transformed over time. You’ll also investigate key questions on politics and power, exploring different political systems. You’ll explore pressing global topics, including:

 international migration patterns
 the formation of ethnic minorities
 religion in modern society
 the challenges of climate change

You’ll study a wide range of social issues arising all over the world, and develop insight into how these issues impact individuals and groups.


Year 2

Compulsory modules
Creative Writing 2: Exploring Genre, Form and Style

In this module, you’ll develop your talent and range as a creative writer. You’ll build on the skills you gained in your Creative Writing 1: Voice and Craft in Poetry and Prose module in Year 1. You’ll experiment with a number of forms and prose styles, including:

 crime writing
 travel writing
 science fiction
 historical fiction

You’ll also explore techniques of writing poetry through forms such as the ballad and the sonnet. You’ll enhance your creativity, and reflect on your creative choices, as you critically examine what you and your fellow students write.

Literature and Environments: Pastoral to Climate Fiction

Students will develop an understanding of the way humans and non-humans shape and are shaped by their environment, and how this is reflected and explored in literature. You’ll study a variety of genres and kinds of writing across different eras and cultures. This may include:

 classical pastoral
 eco-poetry
 climate fiction
 non-fiction nature writing
 speculative fiction

You will explore the historical, social and political issues that influence written representations of relationships with the environment, and consider the formal and stylistic features of this writing. You’ll apply and extend this learning through a community engagement project involving literature and environments.

Transgressive Texts: 400 years of breaking the rules

In this module you’ll consider what it means for texts to break the rules. You’ll learn the ways that literature has transgressed social, cultural and formal literary boundaries and conventions. This may include topics such as:

 Censored and banned texts
 Gender, sexuality and transgression
 Literature and protest
 Modernist and avant-garde transgression
 Genre blending and subversion

You’ll examine shifting ideas of transgression in different historical periods, and will explore how these ideas are shaped and altered by cultural, aesthetic, legislative and scientific factors. Through these investigations, you will explore the power of literature to challenge authority and influence today's world.

Optional modules

Research Methods in Literature and the Digital Humanities

In this module, you’ll learn how to use leading and transferable tools and techniques within textual studies and digital humanities. You’ll explore, experiment with, and develop expertise in using different digital archives, tools and software for literary study. You’ll develop skills in:

 research
 creative thinking
 project planning
 digital literacy
 information handling

You’ll apply and extend these skills by designing and undertaking innovative, small-scale research investigations into literature and other cultural artefacts.

Future Visions

In this module, you will study literary and media expressions of future visions of the world. You will examine fictional and theoretical versions of the future from the nineteenth century onwards. You will explore:

 dystopias and utopias
 relationships between humans and technology
 human and nonhuman futures
 diverse and divergent futures

You’ll enhance your capacity to conceptualise different futures. You’ll also develop your understanding of the issues influencing how and why we project different visions of what our world may become.

Angels & Demons in Romantic and Victorian Literature (1789-1901)

This module will introduce you to the Romantic and Victorian periods through the theme of the supernatural. You’ll investigate the radical technological, social and scientific changes during these periods, and the new uncertainties which arose from these changes. You will discover how writers and artists explored the resultant challenges to established certainties and distinctions between faith and doubt, good and evil, and right and wrong, through their portrayal of metaphorical angels and demons. You’ll study a range of novels, short stories, plays and poems, and different kinds of writing, such as Gothic novels and poems and Sensation novels.

American Literature: Origins and Legacies

In this module, you will study a range of American literary texts from the nineteenth century to the present day, and consider their historical and cultural contexts. You will develop detailed knowledge of the literature and culture of America, exploring key topics such as:

 race and ethnicity, especially in Black and Native American writing
 slavery and its legacies
 American self-mythologising and national identity
 the effect of the Cold War on American writing
 the Harlem Renaissance

Fairy Tales and Children’s Literature: Archetypes, adaptations and effects.

This module enables you to develop your critical understanding of fairy tales, and of young children’s literature more broadly from its first Golden age in the Victorian period to the present day. You will also explore the formal workings of these stories, with a focus on elements such as:

 retellings and adaptations
 illustrations
 narrative techniques
 formal experimentation

You’ll also consider the ideological and socio-political influences upon how such stories are revised and adapted as they travel across different eras and cultures.

Professional Practice

In this module, you will develop your insight into the working world by undertaking work-related learning, such as a work placement or project. You can experience and engage with employment environments and enterprise-related opportunities. This module enables you to undertake personal and professional development challenges beyond the conventional academic setting, and to develop your graduate skills and competencies. Previous placements and projects have been provided by Oxford University Press, Oxfam, the Oxford Literary Festival, and the Story Museum. Students have also worked for magazines, video games companies, schools, and well-known commercial brands.

Independent Project

This module gives you the chance to do independent research on a literary topic that fascinates you. With the supervision and support of a lecturer, you will design your own project, choosing your own topic and approach. You will study your selected topic in depth, and will demonstrate your new critical understanding through an assessment method of your choosing, such as a blog, a video documentary, a long essay, a performance, or a report. You will develop skills in project planning, self-motivation, critical and creative thinking and research.

Year 3

Compulsory modules

Creative Writing 3: Towards Professionalism and Publication

In this module, you’ll meet literary agents and editors as you explore the submissions process for publication. You will produce a 6000 word piece of writing on a theme or idea that interests you, refining your writing practices. You’ll consider how this piece could work as part of a larger published work, for example as chapters of a novel or memoir, or poems, short stories or essays within an anthology, developing your understanding of how a book works as a whole.

Major Project in Creative Writing

In this module, you’ll produce a writing project, born of your passions, extended research and creative decision-making. You’ll enhance your creativity and craft as you edit and revise your piece, reflecting on constructive feedback from your supervisor. You’ll also produce a commentary on the challenges and choices you faced in your writing process, helping you become more critically aware of your creative practice.

Optional modules

Critical Citizenship

In this module, you will explore how literature relates to broader concerns of what it means to be an active citizen in local and global communities. You will explore relationships between literature and citizenship in a range of social, political, cultural and located senses. You will consider:

 what we understand by the term ‘citizenship’
 how literature can forge new social and cultural ways of thinking
 how knowledge of literature might allow us to be more critical citizens

Through this module, you will explore the value of literature in understanding and addressing the global challenges of the 21st century.

Advanced Independent Project

This module is similar to the Independent Project Module available in Year 2 but requires a higher level of knowledge and more extensive study. This module gives you the chance to do independent research on a literary topic that interests you. With the supervision and support of a lecturer, you will design your own project, choosing your own topic and approach. You will study your selected topic in depth and will demonstrate your new critical understanding through an assessment method of your choosing. You will develop skills in project planning, self-motivation, critical and creative thinking and research. Unlike the Major Research Project, which is also available in Year 3, this module takes place over the course of just one semester.

Advanced Options 1

This module gives you the chance to study specialist areas of literature in depth. The topics available are drawn from the research expertise of your tutors, enabling you to engage with leading insights and approaches in the field.
Available topics may alter from year to year, but recent topics have included:

 Windrush Stories: British Black and Asian Voices 1948 to the Present
 The American Civil War in Literature, Memory and Myth
 Literature and the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals

Advanced Options 2

This module gives you the chance to study specialist areas of literature in depth. The topics available are drawn from the research expertise of your tutors, enabling you to engage with leading insights and approaches in the field. Available topics may alter from year to year, but recent topics have included:

 Urban Jungle: the American City in Modern and Postmodern Literature and Culture
 Utopias
 Witchcraft and Madness in Literature

Advanced Options 3

This module gives you the chance to study specialist areas of literature in depth. The topics available are drawn from the research expertise of your tutors, enabling you to engage with leading insights and approaches in the field. Available topics may alter from year to year, but recent topics have included:

 The Victorian Supernatural
 The Theatrical City
 Video Games, Digital Narratives and Interactive Texts

Entry Criteria

Wherever possible we make our conditional offers using the UCAS Tariff. The combination of A-level grades listed here would be just one way of achieving the UCAS Tariff points for this course.

Standard offer

UCAS Tariff Points: 104
A Level: BCC
IB Points: 29
BTEC: DMM

Contextual offer

UCAS Tariff Points: 96
A Level: CCC
IB Points: 28
BTEC: MMM

Further offer details

Applications are also welcomed for consideration from applicants with European qualifications, international qualifications or recognised foundation courses.

ENTRY REQUIRED DOCUMENTS
Home Office Share Code
For EU students only.

IF no Qualification
Please provide CV with at least 2 years of work experience, and employee reference letter.
Entry requirements

Specific entry requirements

Our standard entry requirement is three A-levels or equivalent qualifications. In some cases, courses have specific required subjects and additional GCSE requirements. In addition to A-levels, we accept a wide range of other qualifications including:

 the Welsh Baccalaureate
 the Access to Higher Education Diploma
 a BTEC National Certificate, Diploma or Extended Diploma at a good standard and in a relevant subject
 the International Baccalaureate Diploma
 the European Baccalaureate Diploma
 Scottish qualifications – five subjects in SCE with two at Higher level or one at Advanced Higher level, or three subjects in Scottish Highers or two at Advanced Higher level
 a recognised foundation course
 T-levels*.
 * T-levels are a relatively new qualification but are already included in the UCAS tariff. We welcome prospective students who are taking this qualification to apply. For some programmes with specific required subjects, particular subject areas or occupational specialisms may be required.

English language requirements

If English is not your first language then you will need to show that your English language skills are at a high enough level to succeed in your studies.

The entry requirement for your course will be expressed as an IELTS level and refers to the IELTS Academic version of this test. We are now also accepting the IELTS Indicator test, you can find out more about the test on the IELTS Indication site. The University however does accept a wide range of additional English language qualifications, which can be found below.

The university’s English language requirements in IELTS levels are as follows:

Course IELTS level
All other undergraduate courses 6.0 overall with 6.0 in reading and writing, 5.5 in listening and speaking
Law, Architecture, Interior Architecture, English Literature (including combined honours), English Literature and Creative Writing 6.5 overall with 6.0 in reading and writing, 5.5 in listening and speaking
Health and Social Care courses 6.5 or 7.0 overall with 6.5 or 7.0 in all components (see individual entries for course details)
Nutrition BSc (Hons) 6.5 overall with a minimum of 6.0 in each component
Built Environment Foundation,
Computing Foundation,
Engineering Foundation 6.0 with 6.0 in reading and writing, 5.5 in listening and speaking
International Foundation Business and Technology,
International Foundation Arts, Humanities and Law 5.5 overall with 5.5 in all skills
International Foundation Diploma 5.0 overall with 5.0 in all skills
If you need a student visa you must take an IELTS for UKVI test.
International Foundation Diploma (Extended pathway) 4.5 overall with 4.5 in all skills
If you need a student visa you must take an IELTS for UKVI test.



Assessment

ASSESSMENT METHODS

1. INTERNAL ENGLISH TEST if you don't have an English accredited certificate
2. Academic Interview
Your assessments will be creative and collaborative. They’ll really make the most of your skills - wherever your strengths lie and whatever your learning style.

You’ll develop and submit pieces of creative writing each semester, refining your skill as a writer. These can be in any format you choose - from poetry, to screenplays, to flash fiction, to memoir.

You might also do literary projects that relate to key societal movements or issues - like climate change, Black Lives Matter or the Hillsborough disaster.

Assessments will also involve independent written work such as essays, literature reviews and blogs. You will also have opportunities to produce short presentations, your own literary tour, and creative visual assessments such as craftwork, posters and games.

The assessments are designed to help you develop your confidence in using a wide range of skills, preparing you well for your future career.

Career Opportunities

The skills you’ll developp on the BA (Hons) English Literature with Creative Writing degree are highly transferable and are prized by employers across many sectors. While some graduates go on to become published writers, many others go into other industries such as:

 publishing
 PR, marketing and communications
 NGOs and charities
 research
 teaching
 higher education
 media and journalism.

Recent graduates have gone on to work for employers such as Oxford University Press, the British Museum, Duckegg Theatre and Blue-Zoo Animation Studio.

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