2024/25 Undergraduate Programme Catalogue

BA English Literature with Creative Writing (Industrial)

Programme overview

Programme code
BA-ENGL/LCW4
UCAS code
Q3W8
Duration
4 Years
Method of Attendance
Full Time
Programme manager
Dr Caitlin Stobie
Contact address
c.e.stobie@leeds.ac.uk
Total credits
480
School/Unit responsible for the parenting of students and programme
School of English
Examination board through which the programme will be considered
Relevant QAA Subject Benchmark Groups
English Studies:
https://www.qaa.ac.uk/docs/qaa/subject-benchmark-statements/subject-benchmark-statement-english.pdf
Creative Writing:
https://www.qaa.ac.uk/docs/qaa/subject-benchmark-statements/subject-benchmark-statement-creative-writing.pdf?sfvrsn=2fe2cb81_4

Entry requirements

Entry Requirements are available on the Course Search entry

Programme specification

Course Overview

The University of Leeds has an impressive and longstanding reputation in supporting Creative Writing. Throughout this course, you’ll explore richly diverse literary texts across different genres, including fiction, poetry and creative non-fiction, and will see these in the context of a variety of historical periods, places and cultures. You’ll consider how and why these texts are produced, read, and understood and analyse the impact of their creativity and power. You’ll develop your skills as a critical reader, a clear thinker, and a creative writer.  Our modules explore themes relevant to how we live today, including race and ethnicity, gender, climate change and nature, social class, disability and wellbeing.  The School of English supports a vibrant community of researchers and creative practitioners. It is home to the Leeds Poetry Centre, and we regularly host readings and talks by well-known and emerging contemporary writers.  The School also produces a literary magazine, Stand, and publishes the best in new creative writing.

Course Details

This degree programme is designed to allow you to follow a balanced path in which your core literature and creative writing modules progress in tandem and in dialogue with each other. You will take core creative writing modules composed exclusively from the programme’s cohort of students. At the same time, you will enrol in our English Literature core modules. Intellectual and creative currents flowing between Creative Writing and English Literature core modules are further complemented by optional modules in English Language, English Literature, and Theatre Studies, as well as Discovery modules in Creative Writing offered in the Lifelong Learning Centre (LLC).

In addition to your creating writing modules at Level 1, you will take Reading Between the Lines and Writing Matters, introducing you to university-level study, equipping you to read critically and write with rigour and persuasion. You are also presented with a choice of optional modules focusing on Race, Writing and Decolonisation, poetry, fiction and drama. This allows you to meet undergraduates from our other degree programmes, discussing with them materials from a critical and literary tradition which will foster greater awareness of contexts in which your own creative work sits.

In addition to your creative writing core at Level 2, you will take two English Literature core modules, Writing Environments and Body Language. These modules explore two urgent contemporary challenges, the climate crisis and personal wellbeing, and will examine how these issues can be understood and expressed through literary texts. You will also select two further modules from a choice of several options, ranging historically and geographically from Medieval to Contemporary, and from Postcolonial to American.

Level 2 will deepen and enrich subject knowledge and intellectual skills, preparing you for more independent learning at Level 3, where you can select from a range of specialist research modules. A final year Creative Writing Project further enhances active research skills, enabling you to define, plan and produce work on a literary subject of your choosing.

After your second year of study, you may apply for transfer to an International Degree at one of a wide range of universities with which the University of Leeds has established links. You may also spend a year in industry on a work placement as an optional third year of your degree programme.

Year 1

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]
View Timetable

Compulsory Modules

At Level 1, candidates will be required to study the following compulsory modules: 

CodeTitleCreditsSemesterPass for Progression
ENGL1012Writing Creatively20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1055Writing Matters20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL1065Reading Between the Lines20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Optional Modules



Candidates are required to study between 40-60 credits from the following optional modules:

CodeTitleCreditsSemesterPass for Progression
ENGL1016English Structure, Style, Genre20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1017English Variation, Creativity and Use20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL1070Drama: Text and Performance20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL1221Modern Fictions in English: Conflict, Liminality, Translation20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1261Poetry: Reading and Interpretation20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL1855Race, Writing and Decolonization20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Discovery Modules

Candidates may take up to 20 credits of Discovery modules. They are encouraged to consider the following Discovery modules in Creative Writing:

CodeTitleCreditsSemesterPass for Progression
LLLC1040Creative Writing Workshop20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan), Semester 1 (Sep to Jan), Semester 2 (Jan to Jun), Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
LLLC1433Writing Science-fiction, Fantasy & Horror20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Year 2

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]
View Timetable

Year 3

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]
View Timetable

Compulsory Modules

Those accepted onto the Work Placement Programme spend their third year in industry, between Levels 2 and 3. Students must follow an approved programme of study during their year in industry which is monitored by the placement tutor(s) responsible within the Careers Centre. In order to be awarded the Work Placement Degree, students must have fulfilled the requirement that they undertake a full 1200 hours of work placement, in which they must perform satisfactorily. Candidates will be required to take the following compulsory module:

CodeTitleCreditsSemesterPass for Progression
FOAH8001Work Placement Year120Semesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)PFP

Year 4

[Learning Outcomes, Transferable (Key) Skills, Assessment]
View Timetable

Compulsory Modules

At Level 3, candidates will be required to study the following compulsory modules: 

CodeTitleCreditsSemesterPass for Progression
ENGL3065Page, Publication and Audience20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3800Creative Writing Project40Semesters 1 & 2 (Sep to Jun)PFP

Optional Modules

Candidates will be required to study 40 credits of modules from Basket 1 and 20 credits from Basket 2. They will take at least 40 credits in English Literature modules. The list below is indicative of subject to change depending on staff availability:

Basket 1:

CodeTitleCreditsSemesterPass for Progression
ENGL3031Sex and Suffering in the Eighteenth-Century Novel20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3033Writing and Gender in Seventeenth-Century England20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3034Romantic Lyric Poetry20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3046Parts, Periodicals, Newspapers: Literature and the Nineteenth-Century Press20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3063Haunted Hinterlands: Wyrd Works and Folk Horror Fictions20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3067Visual and Concrete Poetry (Creative Writing)20Not running in 202425
ENGL3114Forming Victorian Fiction20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32154Prose Fiction Stylistics and the Mind20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3233Forensic Approaches to Language20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3268Transformations20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL32997Keywords: The Words We Use and The Ways We Use Them20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3321Angry Young Men and Women: Literature of the Mid-Twentieth Century20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3365Theatricalities: Beckett, Pinter, Kane20Not running in 202425
ENGL3386Telling Lives: Reading and Writing Family Memoir20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3406Home Bodies: Companion Animals in Contemporary Literature20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3407Shakespeare and Global Cinema20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)
ENGL3680Postcolonial London20Semester 1 (Sep to Jan)

Basket 2:

CodeTitleCreditsSemesterPass for Progression
ENGL3004The Writings of Graham Greene20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3008Writing Modern Sexualities20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3027Shakespeare20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3036Speech Acts: Contemporary Approaches to Text and Performance20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3061Heart Disease in Contemporary Literature20Not running in 202425
ENGL3062Charles Dickens Then & Now20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3065Page, Publication and Audience20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3066The Public Poet (Creative Writing)20Not running in 202425
ENGL3153Refugee Narratives20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3163Milton20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32111Gender, Culture and Politics: Readings of Jane Austen20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32155Crime Fiction Stylistics: Crossing Languages, Cultures, Media20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32763Children, Talk and Learning20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3284Trial Discourse - The Proceedings of the Old Bailey 1674 - 191320Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3294The Politics of Language20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL32941‘Global English’: Colonialism, Postcolonialism, and Decolonisation20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3314Imagining Posthuman Futures20Not running in 202425
ENGL3391September 11 in Fact and Fiction20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3396Fictions of the End: Apocalypse and After20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3408Digital Discourse: language and social media20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3461Imagining the United States: Citizenship, Domesticity and Slavery20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)
ENGL3579Law and Literature: Transgression, Justice, and Interpretation20Semester 2 (Jan to Jun)

Discovery Modules

Last updated: 08/05/2024 17:06:48

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