BA English Literature and Creative Writing
Cardiff, United Kingdom
DURATION
3 Years
LANGUAGES
English
PACE
Full time
APPLICATION DEADLINE
Request application deadline
EARLIEST START DATE
Sep 2025
TUITION FEES
GBP 22,700 / per year *
STUDY FORMAT
On-Campus
* for overseas | for home(year two and three): £9,250 / year one: £9,000
Introduction
Our BA English Literature and Creative Writing programme allows you to study all periods of literature in English, from the Anglo-Saxon period to the twenty-first century, together with training in Creative Writing. We cover all genres, from contemporary and historical fiction to poetry, drama, film and music.
The Creative Writing element of the programme provides you with the opportunity to progress from introductory modules on reading and writing creatively to specialised work within specific forms and genres such as fiction, poetry, creative non-fiction and scriptwriting, culminating in the production of an extended collection of creative work.
Throughout the programme, you will be encouraged to stretch yourself intellectually and imaginatively by exploring literature as both a practitioner and a critic. Our approach will help you develop an understanding of the creative process, as well as enhance your knowledge of genre, literary history, and the varied and dynamic academic field which is English Literature.
You will focus on becoming a careful, attentive, and informed reader and writer, sensitive to the nuances of language and style and able to produce polished and sophisticated creative work, as well as to articulate your responses to texts in writing which are precise, stylish, and effective.
You join a friendly and supportive environment with an international reputation for both teaching and research. Our talented Creative Writing team regularly scoop national and international awards and collectively share experience in theatre, television and film. Our public platforms Cardiff BookTalk and Cardiff Poetry Experiment are popular and hugely engaging.
Why Study this Course
Leading the Way
Put yourself at the forefront of Journalism and Communications in an internationally recognised and high-ranking school.
Capital Connections
Cardiff is thriving; take advantage of growing media and creative industries plus links to BBC Wales and Media Wales, situated next door.
State-of-the-art Facilities
Including a specialised onsite library, bright study spaces and six newsrooms.
Multimedia and Multisector Insight
Beyond media industries and journalism, delve into areas like film, television, social/digital platforms and marketing and PR.
Placement Opportunities
Develop the skills, confidence and connections to accelerate your career.
Admissions
Scholarships and Funding
Loans and Grants
Financial support information for students.
Bursaries
We wish to ensure that financial circumstances are not a barrier to your undergraduate study opportunities.
Scholarships
We wish to recruit the very best students and to help us achieve this, we offer several scholarships.
Part-time Undergraduate Funding
Information about funding for part-time students.
Financial Support for Asylum Seekers
Information for asylum seekers about the financial support we offer undergraduates and options for funding from outside the University.
Curriculum
This is a full-time undergraduate degree that takes three years to complete. You will study modules worth a total of 360 credits split evenly over the three years.
You must pass each academic year before proceeding to the next stage of your studies.
The modules shown are an example of the typical curriculum and will be reviewed before the 2024/2025 academic year. The final modules will be published by September 2024.
Year One
Year one is a foundation year, designed to equip you with the skills and practice for advanced study and to give you an overview that will enable you to make informed choices from the modules available in years two and three while laying down the foundations of your engagement with Creative Writing.
You will take three core modules and three optional modules. These will provide you with a solid base for the next two years of your degree by offering the opportunity to develop your critical and creative skills through reading, analysing and producing imaginative work across a wide array of different genres.
Core Modules for Year One
- Creative Reading
- Creative Writing
- Critical Reading and Critical Writing
Optional Modules for Year One
- Drama: Stage and Page
- Star-cross Lovers: the Politics of Desire
- Transforming Visions: Text and Image
- Transgressive Bodies in Medieval Literature
- Ways of Reading
Year Two
In year two you select from a range of period-, genre- or theme-based modules in which you will build on the foundation year, reading a selection of texts in their historical and cultural contexts.
You also continue your studies of Creative Writing within a variety of forms and genres, including fiction, poetry and scriptwriting.
Optional Modules for Year Two
- Style and Genre
- Medieval Arthurian Literature
- Modernist Fictions
- Children's Literature: Form and Function
- Introduction to Romantic Poetry
- African-American Literature
- Imaginary Journeys: More to Huxley
- Modernism and the City
- Gothic Fiction: The Romantic Age
- Seventeenth and Eighteenth Century Women Writers
- Girls
- Creative Writing: Experiments in Fiction
- Creative Writing: Poetry l
- Creative Writing: Screenwriting
- Creative Writing: Poetry II
- Creative Writing: The Short Story
- Object Women in Literature and Film
- Epic and Saga
- Creative Writing: Stories from the Real World -- Narrative
- Creative Writing: Playwriting
- Second-generation Romantic Poets
- Gothic Fiction: The Victorians
- Contemporary British Fictions
- Philosophy and Literature
- Shakespeare's Worlds
- Victorian Worlds: Revolution, Disease, Deviance
- International Study Abroad (60 credits) Spring
Year Three
In your final year, you will choose from a range of more specialised modules, allowing you to pursue interests developed in the previous two years. You will engage with current issues in research and scholarship, enabling you further to develop analytical and presentation skills that employers will value, as well as equipping you for postgraduate study.
You also undertake a portfolio dissertation in Creative Writing that complements your work in the English Literature modules and allows you to produce an extended piece of writing in a specialist genre. The dissertation also allows you to develop research and project management skills.
Core Modules for Year Three
- Creative Writing Project
Optional Modules for Year Three
- The Illustrated Book
- Gender and Monstrosity: Late/Neo-Victorian
- Writing Caribbean Slavery
- Utopia: Suffrage to Cyberpunk
- Postcolonial Theory
- Military Masculinities in the Long Nineteenth Century
- Medieval Romance: Monsters and Magic
- American Poetry after Modernism
- John Milton
- The American Short Story
- Apocalypse Then and Now
- Representing Race in Contemporary America
- Experimental Early Modern Drama
- Visuality, Culture and Technology
- Activist Poetry: Protest, Dissent, Resistance
- Contemporary British Political Drama
- Visions of the Future: Climate Change & Fiction
- Encounters With Oil in Literature and Film
- Romantic Circles: Collaboration, Radicalism and Creativity
- Medieval Misfits
- Shakespeare's Fractured Britain
How will I be Assessed?
All English Literature modules offer you the opportunity to undertake unassessed formative work appropriate to the module. Most modules are assessed by essay and/or examination, but some include other forms of assessment such as journal entries, a portfolio, or presentations.
Creative Writing modules are assessed by short portfolios of creative work that include a critical commentary. The assessment strategy is structured to lead you from formative thinking throughout the module towards the production of an informed critical/creative response.
Your final year project consists of a substantial, independently-researched and original portfolio of creative work, produced under the guidance of a member of staff, in the field of fiction, creative non-fiction, poetry, playwriting, or screenwriting. The portfolio includes a critical commentary on the work produced.
Program Outcome
What Skills Will I Practise and Develop?
Knowledge and Understanding
- Awareness of different literary periods, movements and genres and the variety of English literature
- Understanding of the importance of historical and cultural contexts
- Ability to sustain a critical argument that is responsive to the workings of language and literary styles
- Awareness of the bibliographic conventions of the discipline and their role in communicating information
- Knowledge of the critical issues and/or debates surrounding or raised by texts
- Understanding of the shaping effects of historical and cultural circumstances on the production and meaning of texts
- Knowledge of appropriate critical vocabulary and terminology
- An awareness of editorial approaches and processes
- Understanding, through reading and your practice, of the key elements of different forms of writing.
- Ability to produce original literary work in a variety of forms and genres
- An awareness of tone, register, structure, genre and audience in your writing
Intellectual Skills
- Ability to handle complex ideas with clarity
- Ability to analyse and interpret material drawn from a diversity of literary periods
- Ability to apply high-level critical skills of close analysis to literary texts
- Ability to select and organise material purposefully and cogently
- Ability to use the views of others in the development and enhancement of practice; formulate considered practical responses to the critical judgements of others, while developing a generous yet rigorous critical scrutiny in peer review and workshop activities
Professional Practical Skills
- Advanced communication skills (written and oral)
- Ability to give an efficient critical evaluation of documents in various styles
- Ability to give oral and written feedback on others’ work
- Ability to access, use and evaluate electronic data
- Ability to interact effectively with others, in team or group work situations
Transferable Skills
- Ability to handle complex ideas with clarity
- Ability to select and organise material purposefully and cogently
- Plan, organize, and deliver work to a deadline
- Initiate and take responsibility for independent projects
- Respond creatively and imaginatively to research tasks
Program Tuition Fee
Career Opportunities
Our graduates commonly go on to pursue careers in freelance writing, academia, teaching, publishing, arts management and administration, public relations and journalism.
Many employers welcome graduates with high-level literacy skills. Together with such skills, our students develop the kind of insights into the creative process that are valued by business, from design to sales.
Imaginative writing transfers readily into advertising and tourism as well as advertising companies. As a graduate of our School, you will have a portfolio of creative writing to demonstrate to potential employers.
Our graduates find employment in HR, the book trade, and professional areas such as librarianship but also local government and other areas of public life concerned with communication.