BA (Hons) History and English Literature
3-Year Bachelor's Degree
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ABOUT
Why choose this course?
- Join our award-winning Oral History Team (featured on BBC R4)
- Focus on your interests – All History modules optional after 1st year
- Specialise in the literature genre and period of your choice
We give you:
- A flexible programme of study, allowing you to concentrate on areas you find especially interesting
- Exceptional academic teams, conducting world-leading research
- Stimulating, innovative courses that allow you to make rewarding connections between two disciplines
- CV-building potential through work placements and extra-curricular activities
- Teaching rated excellent by 92.14% of our English students in the 2018 National Student Survey, with our History students reporting almost 94% overall satisfaction with their course
- History was ranked in the top 25% of UK universities for research impact. (Research Excellence Framework, 2021).
What’s the course about?
Our BA History and English Literature gives you the opportunity to study two subjects that speak closely to each other.
Just as poems, plays and novels can offer historians different ways to look at the past, historical documents can also be read as texts to be interpreted as works of narrative.
For both English Literature and History we have modernized and diversified our curriculum to reflect our changing world. Within our research-led courses you’ll study canonical texts and periods of history familiar to a traditional English or History degree but also voices and histories that reflect our modern, globalized 21 st century experiences.
You’ll start this joint degree with a core module that will teach you the skills of close analysis of literary texts. Reflecting on poetry by Danez Smith and Sylvia Plath, Caryl Churchill’s play Cloud 9 as well as work by Shakespeare and Zadie Smith, you’ll discover new ways of thinking about what literature is, and how to read it.
Also in your first year you’ll work through the Historian’s Toolkit, which helps you make the transition from school to university-level study. You will be introduced to an array of primary sources. You’ll also gain insights into historiography, to understand what influences historians, why they write the way they do and how they interact with one another.
Throughout your course, the common link between the two disciplines will be your analysis and interpretation of texts. The skills you’ve learned in your close reading of fiction are in many respects the same as those you will apply to your analysis of historical documents.
One of your second-year core English Literature modules is period-based, focusing on the 18th century, and offers a good example of how English and History are complementary. Your study of 18th century print culture and the emergence of the novel will be enhanced by your understanding of the politics of the day.
Work placement/study abroad option: Between your second and final year, you’ll have the option to study abroad or do a work placement for up to a year. Not only will this give you an amazing experience to talk about but will also give your CV a boost. If you’d rather go straight to your final year, that’s absolutely fine too.
In your final year your courses will cover themes aligned to our academics’ research interests. You’ll have the chance to follow your interests and shape your studies, which could include African American literature, young adult fiction, or literary adaptations. Your History modules may focus on a particular region, such as Europe, or period, such as the 20th century.
Your main campus is de Havilland
You’ll share this campus with students from business, law, sport, education, and humanities subjects. The student housing is close to our Sports Village which includes a gym, swimming pool and climbing wall. You can get breakfast, lunch, or dinner in our on-campus restaurant or bar (in the newly built Enterprise Hub) on days you don’t feel like cooking. You can also use the common room to play pool, video games or just to hang out with friends. Our Learning Resources Centres are open 24/7, which means you can study whenever suits you best. Want to pop over to the other campus? You can take the free shuttle bus or walk there in just 15 minutes.
What will I study?
Our history students benefit from being part of a diverse and active academic community. Our interactive seminars and workshops help you find your feet in the academic environment, and establish ways of working confidently, creatively and collaboratively. We see our students as fellow researchers, and we place a great deal of importance on sharing and developing skills.
As one of our students, you will have the opportunity to get involved in activities that will complement your studies. Not only do these enhance your experience, they also make for a more impressive CV. Our renowned staff-student Oral History team has taken students to Australia and produced a BBC Radio 4 documentary, which was commended at the 2018 Royal Historical Society Public History Awards.
Level 4
Module | Credits | Compulsory/optional |
---|---|---|
Texts Up Close: Reading and Interpretation | 15 Credits | Compulsory |
Historians’ Toolkit | 15 Credits | Compulsory |
Belief and Disbelief: Faith, Magic and Medicine, 1500 – 1800 | 15 Credits | Optional |
Cashing In: Traders and Consumers, 1600 – 2001 | 15 Credits | Optional |
Make it New: Literary Tradition and Experimentation | 15 Credits | Optional |
Journeys and Quests: Adventures in Literature | 15 Credits | Optional |
Border Crossings: Modern Literature from around the World | 15 Credits | Optional |
Shakespeare Reframed | 15 Credits | Optional |
Identity and Contemporary Writing | 15 Credits | Optional |
American Voices: Introduction to US Literature and Culture | 15 Credits | Optional |
Romantic Origins & Gothic Afterlives | 15 Credits | Optional |
The Fight for Rights: Freedom and Oppression, 1790s-1990s | 15 Credits | Optional |
Introduction to Public History | 15 Credits | Optional |
The Heritage Industry in Britain | 15 Credits | Optional |
Leisure and Lifestyle: 20th Century American Music, Sport and Entertainment | 15 Credits | Optional |
Africa and the World, 1450-1850 | 15 Credits | Optional |
Fees 2022
UK Students
Full time
- £9250 for the 2022/2023 academic year
EU Students
Full time
- £14000 for the 2022/2023 academic year
International Students
Full time
- £14000 for the 2022/2023 academic year
*Tuition fees are charged annually. The fees quoted above are for the specified year(s) only. Fees may be higher in future years, for both new and continuing students. Please see the University’s Fees and Finance Policy (and in particular the section headed “When tuition fees change”), for further information about when and by how much the University may increase its fees for future years.
Living costs / accommodation
The University of Hertfordshire offers a great choice of student accommodation, on campus or nearby in the local area, to suit every student budget.
- Entry requirements
Clearing entry requirements
We’re committed to welcoming students with a wide range of qualifications and levels of experience. Over Clearing, we’ll be taking a flexible approach so if you don’t have the advertised grades, please submit a clearing application via our online application form or by calling our Clearing hotline on 0300 303 6300, and we’ll review and consider your application on an individual basis.
Standard entry requirements
UCAS points A Level BTEC IB 112-120 BBC-BBB DMM-DDM 112-120 Additional requirements
GCSE: Grade 4/C in English Language and 4/D Mathematics
Access course tariff: An overall merit profile in 45 credits at Level 3.
All students from non-majority English speaking countries require proof of English language proficiency, equivalent to an overall IELTS score of 6.5 with a minimum of 5.5 in each band.
If you do not have the required IELTS or equivalent for direct entry on to your degree programme, our Pre-sessional English and International Foundation courses can help you to achieve this level.
The University of Hertfordshire is committed to welcoming students with a wide range of qualifications and levels of experience. The entry requirements listed on the course pages provide a guide to the minimum level of qualifications needed to study each course. However, we have a flexible approach to admissions and each application will be considered on an individual basis.
Deadlines
15 January
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Expenses (GBP)
14000
Application Fee
0
Program expenses
University & General Expenses
accommodation
After Graduation