The degree is structured around a combination of period study, thematic study, and modules inculcating theoretical and practical skills. Victorian literature modules cover prose from Dickens to Gaskell, and poetry from Browning to Hardy; twentieth-century literature topics range from Rhys, Hurston, Woolf, and Plath to Hemingway, Forster, Larkin, and Beckett. Shakespeare is one central focus. Other earlier writers who are studied include Marlowe, Donne, Webster, Herbert, Milton, Dryden, Centlivre, Swift, Pope, Blake, Wordsworth, Austen, Keats, and Shelley. You can explore some of the modules on this website. Thematic study encourages students to analyse contextually based on sociological variations, gender, contemporary politics, and psychological influences. We encourage the understanding of contemporary literary and cultural theory while never losing sight of the values of liberal/aesthetic education.
There are a wide variety of options in Psychology, including theoretical modules on personality, cognition, perception, social and developmental psychology and applied modules such as clinical psychology, counselling and psychotherapy, the psychology of crime and psychology of language. The range of psychology modules on offer allows the student to select the modules that best fit their needs and interests. The degree develops a portfolio of transferrable skills of great value to employers including lateral thinking, professional-level writing, rhetoric, presentation and knowledge of psychological theory and research. |