Our BA English and Creative Writing degree will introduce you to practical techniques and concepts in contemporary writing, foster independent creative writing skills and reflection on individual creative practice.
Compulsory modules
Introduction to Drama
This module offers you an opportunity to explore a range of dramatic forms, modes, and theories. Focusing on primary materials covering a range of periods from the Renaissance to the present day, the module is designed to help you develop a critical awareness of how drama produces meaning on both the page and stage, with a focus on both text and performance. The module will also consider what is involved in analysing live performance, and may include a theatre trip; you will have the opportunity to write creatively, participate in rehearsed readings, and contribute to group presentations.
Narrative Forms
Writers tell stories in many different forms and many different media. On this module you’ll examine a wide range of forms and media, from period fiction to film and the graphic novel. In doing so, you’ll discuss the features, functions and effects of different types of narrative. The assessment for this module offers you the choice to work creatively using what you’ve learned, or to focus on literary criticism. After this module, you’ll have the skills to continue studying different types of narrative across the rest of your degree.
Elephants and Engines: An Introduction to Creative Writing
A creative title for a creative module. Here you’ll be introduced to techniques for writing poetry and fiction, and be given lots of techniques to try out for yourself. The module is based on the assumption that everyone is starting out as a writer, so you don’t have to have had any experience. You’ll also learn how to give and receive feedback, meaning that you can develop your work and that of your fellow students. By the end of the module you’ll be confident in writing your own material, using skills in plot, imagery, character and a lot more.
Analysing Poetry: Metre, Form and Meaning
This module aims to give you the necessary analytical skills to read poetry more closely and critically, in order to understand how it achieves its effects. As well as gaining knowledge of core metrical principles and awareness of their various effects and implications, you will develop an understanding of the principal kinds and forms of poetry in English from the Renaissance to the present day. Working in small groups for the workshops and seminars, you’ll have a chance to study a range of poems in depth, analysing both their forms and their contexts.
Theory Matters: Critiquing Inequalities
This module will introduce you to significant classic and contemporary theoretical approaches and key concepts used in the study of literature today, typically covering topics including gender and sexuality, race and postcoloniality, ideology and capitalism, eco-criticism, and power and protest. Through learning about these influential ideas and debates, you’ll be able to demonstrate how these theories can be used to interpret literary texts.
Optional modules
Writing in History
This module will provide you with an outline of English literary history from the late medieval period to the modern day, introducing you to significant writers and genres and their place within a broad contextual framework. How are ideas of the literary canon formed and perpetuated, and what are the implications of such processes? You’ll have the opportunity to engage in these debates while studying key literary works in their original contexts.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Compulsory modules
Maps and Motors: The Writing Portfolio
The next step on your writing journey is this module, which introduces more skills and techniques (epistolary, ekphrasis, observation…) and challenges you to develop further as a writer. You’ll be asked to respond creatively to the work of another writer (some of whom are Loughborough graduates) and to create a portfolio of work that best represents your strengths and passions as a writer. As always, what you write about, and how you do it, is up to you.
Optional modules
Victorian Literature
On this module, you will be introduced to a range of Victorian texts, including poetry, novels, and short prose works, in order to assess the aesthetic, intellectual and social questions that informed Victorian writing. You will read Victorian literature in relation to the social and cultural history of the period, allowing you to explore ideas from the period in depth, considering such topics as the growth of industrialisation, scientific developments, the beginnings of the women’s movement, modernity, and evolving concepts of the city and the urban experience. In the weekly seminars, you will be encouraged to work with others as part of a learning community.
Love and Life in Stuart-Era Literature (1603-1714)
This module focuses on the theme of love in the lives of people from the Stuart era (1603-1714), and the importance of this period for the development of English literature. You’ll learn how ‘love’ of various kinds – marital, erotic, filial, and patriotic – holds as much social and cultural relevance as it does personal significance, which is illustrated through the diversity of representations in tragic, sceptical, pragmatic, comedic, and romantic narratives, including plays, poems, and pioneering early prose works.
Strange Fascination: Queer Desires and Identities in Literature, 1886-1952
This module aims to introduce students to the range and diversity of queer literature from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. The module will consider how authors engaged with, and helped to shape, contemporary understandings of gender and sexuality, considering how these concepts shifted over time and across different contexts.
Your Future Career: Preparing for the World of Work
What do you know? What are skills? Where are they going to take you? This module will help you to answer those questions by building on transferrable skills and encouraging you to reflect on your learning. In addition, you’ll learn about the UK job market, and how to negotiate a range of recruitment tasks including decoding job specifications, writing an application, interviews, psychometric tests and the use of AI. Combine these with your degree and graduate with confidence.
Modernisms
This module is an introduction to the diversity of literary and artistic movements, ideas, and concepts grouped under the term ‘Modernism’. On the module, you will learn how twentieth-century writers developed new methods of responding to an increasingly mechanised and urban world, while also pioneering new ways of writing about the self. The module will show how modernists such as T. S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf and James Joyce reacted against many Victorian conventions to produce challenging and radical art. The focus of the module will be on short fiction, the novel, and poetry, as well as on different modernist ‘voices’.
Literature from 1990
This module is very diverse, in that it covers a range of forms (including fiction, poetry and drama), in a range of genres (including verbatim, crime and weird) from a range of writers, including work in translation. Whatever your interests, you’ll discover writing that is new to you. What all these texts have in common is their concern with global concerns about identity, race, place, and belonging that undermine national literary and cultural identities as well as colonising cultural centres.
Screen Cultures
This module introduces influential and acclaimed films from the 20th and 21st-century and explores how they earned their reputation by analysing their interface with, and impact on, wider social, political and historical developments in histories of media.
Bleeding Red, White and Blue: The American Way of War
This module takes an interdisciplinary approach to the study of America at war, offering you the opportunity to learn about American wars and their related cultural production in a plurality of contexts. Close attention will be paid to how literary responses, visual cultural responses, and popular cultural responses intersect with the political and social history of those wars. There will be an emphasis on those whose contributions to American wars have typically been marginalised, especially African American and women veterans.
Weird Fiction
If you are fascinated by the gothic, delighted by the strange and tempted by the unexplained, then this module will be up your – dark, shadowy – street. The Weird as a genre is over a century old, but is still the chosen form for many contemporary writers. This module will introduce you to a range of examples, dealing in different types of the Weird. You may wish to write a critical essay trying to make sense of it all, but you may also wish to try your hand as a Weird writer yourself. You may see a shadow in the corner of the room; hear the voice of an old gentleman in the Church Hall. Or maybe you imagined it.
Animal Tales: Non-human Animals in Fiction, Film and Philosophy
From the animals in Franz Kafka’s short stories to BoJack Horseman, from nature documentaries to viral clips of cats and dogs online, contemporary culture is saturated with narratives and representations of non-human animals. On this module, you’ll be introduced to new ways of critically interrogating these narratives and representations, drawn from a variety of media, analysing them in relation to recent ethical, political, cultural, and philosophical debates concerning our lives with (and even as) animals.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
Compulsory modules
Dissertation
On this year-long module, you will build on your organisational skills in planning, researching, preparing and revising a substantial piece of written work, developing high-level research and writing skills. It is also possible to add a Creative or Practice-based element: if you choose to develop your work in these directions you will, in addition to the traditional academic component of the Dissertation, include original creative material as an element of your final assessed work.
Examples of a Creative element might include a series of linked poems or monologues, short fiction, the opening of a novel, a short script for stage, TV or radio, or a portfolio of work around a theme or topic. In such cases, the traditional academic component of the Dissertation will consist of the same kinds of critical and analytical work which characterise conventional academic Dissertations.
Driving On: Writing Towards Publication
The final core creative writing module combines developing your writing with professional development about publishing and other career opportunities. Instead of workshops, you’ll take part in four day-long writing retreats, each with a specific theme, discussions, exercises and time to write. Alongside these, professional development sessions will help you to discover how writers - including you – get their work published, and how writers earn a living. You assessments will be a long portfolio of writing, and a presentation about how you are going to make use of your knowledge of writing and the writing sector in future.
Optional modules
Cruel and Unusual: Punishment on trial in American Culture
This module aims to introduce you to a range of texts that represent the practice of punishment in American history from the nineteenth century to the present day. You will have the opportunity to examine the representation of punishment in American fiction and film in relation to three critical questions: Who is punished? How are they punished? Why are they punished? Studying novels, films, and documentaries, you will have the opportunity to analyse these texts in relation to social and historical contexts as well as competing theories of punishment.
Textual Editing in the Digital Age
On this module, you will have the opportunity to produce a scholarly edition of a literary work or historical text of your own choosing and to publish it in digital form. To prepare you for this task, you will develop an understanding of the theoretical and methodological concepts of scholarly editing. Through a series of weekly workshops, where you will learn some of the requisite coding, you will be supervised through the process of producing your own digital scholarly edition.
Love, Poetry and War: The Modern Poet from Eliot to Plath
This module introduces you to a variety of British and Anglo-American poets of the twentieth century, giving you an opportunity to explore how these poets reinvented the notion of what poetry could be in the modern era as they questioned or rejected older notions of the ‘poetic’. How did war transform the idea of war poetry, and even the love poem? How did poets promote revolutionary movements such as Futurism and Imagism through influential manifestos and small publications? Reading a combination of canonical poets alongside those who have typically been more marginalised in discussions of the period, you will be able to explore the innovative strategies utilised by modern poets in order to find a new voice in a fast-moving world of urbanisation, world war, and socio-political change.
Maladies and Medicines
Writers have long been concerned with all sorts of aspects of health, mental or physical; they have written about cures, about characters – or entire societies – who are ill, and about how illness affects their own perceptions of the world, and their writing. On this team-taught module, you’ll discover a range of this writing, from an early modern account of depression or advice on diet, to poetry addressing male mental health in the twenty-first century. It’s a deep dive into issues that have been discussed for a long time, and which are still with us, and still affecting us.
Radicals and Reactionaries: Writing Women in 1890s
This module introduces you to a range of writings from the late nineteenth century, including poems, short stories, and novels, considering the relationship between writing of the period to broader cultural, social, and literary concerns. The module will invite you to consider issues such as the campaigns for female suffrage and the Social Purity movement, as well as contemporary debates on marriage, motherhood, female education, ‘free love’, class, race, and eugenics.
Neo-Victorianism
This module is designed to introduce you to a representative range of Neo-Victorian fiction, exploring how a re-imagining and re-writing of Victorian literature and culture has led to the emergence of an exciting and dynamic new field of study. You will be encouraged to consider novels as well as related developments such as film and TV adaptations, Mash-ups, and themes including race, identity, disability, and biography.
Adapting Shakespeare
This module is designed to enable you, through working with other students as part of a learning community, to discover and explore the ways in which Shakespeare adapted his source materials to produce the scripts we know, and how those scripts are in turn adapted in modern performance. This will involve closely studying Shakespeare’s scripts, his sources, and a range of relevant critical views.
University-wide Language Programme
One 10-credit module from a list supplied by the Language Centre, levels dependent on candidates’ previous qualifications. Languages offered are: French, German, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish.
The information above is intended as an example only, featuring module details for the current year of study. Modules are reviewed on an annual basis and may be subject to future changes – revised details will be published through Programme Specifications ahead of each academic year. Please also see Terms and Conditions of Study for more information.