English Literature: Modernities - Literature, Culture, Theory MLitt
Course Overview - English Literature: Modernities - Literature, Culture, Theory MLitt
Guided by a team of internationally recognised experts, you will investigate the key texts and concepts which shape our understanding of literature and culture across a period of radical change from 1880 to the present. You will relate the literary texts you study to developments in other cultural practices, such as film, theatre and the visual arts.
WHY THIS PROGRAMME
• The programme has an international reputation for delivering outstanding research-led teaching, with a particular focus on interdisciplinary and theoretically informed approac...
Guided by a team of internationally recognised experts, you will investigate the key texts and concepts which shape our understanding of literature and culture across a period of radical change from 1880 to the present. You will relate the literary texts you study to developments in other cultural practices, such as film, theatre and the visual arts.<br/><br/><strong>WHY THIS PROGRAMME</strong><br/><br/><br/>• The programme has an international reputation for delivering outstanding research-led teaching, with a particular focus on interdisciplinary and theoretically informed approaches to this literary period.<br/><br/><br/><br/>• You will have access to world class libraries and museums, as well as the extraordinary diversity of cultural, literary and artistic events that make Glasgow such an enriching place for postgraduate study.<br/><br/><br/><br/>• The programme includes tailored workshops with the University’s archives and Special Collections as well as a bespoke field trip to the archives of the National Library of Scotland and the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art.<br/><br/><br/><br/><strong>PROGRAMME STRUCTURE</strong><br/><br/><strong>Full-time Students:</strong><br/><br/><strong>Semester 1 - September to December</strong><br/>English Literature Research Training Course<br/>Modernities I:1880-1945<br/>One optional course<br/><br/><strong>Semester 2 - January to March</strong><br/>Modernities 2: 1945 to the present<br/>Two optional courses<br/><br/><strong>Summer - April to September</strong><br/>Modernities Dissertation<br/><br/><strong>Part-time Students:</strong><br/><br/><strong>First Year</strong><br/>Research Training Course<br/>Both compulsory Modernities courses<br/>One optional course<br/><br/><strong>Second Year</strong><br/>Two optional courses<br/>Dissertation<br/><br/><strong>OPTIONAL COURSES</strong><br/><br/>We have affiliated option courses, and students may also choose from courses in the subject, School, and College of Arts & Humanities (by arrangement with conveners and subject to agreement and availability of places). Not all options will be available in any given year, depending on staff availability. A number of option courses have been devised with the needs of the Modernities programme particularly in mind including, but not limited to:<br/><br/>African Modernities: Colonialism and Postcolonialism in the Novel<br/>Decadence And The Modern<br/>The American Counterculture, 1945-75<br/>Contemporary Realisms<br/>Fantasies of Energy (PGT)<br/>Modern Everyday<br/>The Mind of the Contemporary American Novel<br/>Virginia Woolf Writes Modernity<br/>F. Scott Fitzgerald, Edith Wharton and Dialogues of American Literary Modernism<br/>Futures: Unbundling the Now<br/>The Tomorrow People: Speculative Bodies and Minds in Contemporary Culture<br/>Psychoanalysis and Empire<br/>Raw Material: Literature, Empires, Commodities (PGT)<br/><br/><strong>DELIVERY</strong><br/><br/>All taught courses are 20 credits and are delivered in weekly 2 hour seminars or similar.<br/>Students are taught in seminars and proceed through a planned sequence of reading and discussion. The working style however is exploratory rather than didactic; students are expected to engage fully with primary sources, to develop, express and take responsibility for their own opinions and to work towards independent argument and expression in their resulting coursework and dissertation.
Course Information
2 options available
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Course Details
Information
Study Mode
Full-time
Duration
12 Months
Start Date
09/2026
Campus
Gilmorehill (Main) Campus
Application Details
Varied
Application deadline
Provider Details
Codes/info
Course Code
Unknown
Institution Code
G28
Points of Entry
Unknown
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