The award | How you will study | Study duration | Course start | Domestic course fees | International course fees |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
MA | Full-time, Part-time | 12 month | September | find out | find out |
The School of English Studies at Nottingham has long been in the forefront of research and teaching in the interface between language, literature and culture.
The MA in Literary Linguistics provides an exciting integration of English language in literary studies. You will work with several leading world figures in the course of discovering your own position in language and literature: the programme covers a wide range of material, with options to develop your own thinking and pursue your own interests and research.
The principle of language study that we have established at Nottingham combines theoretical and ideological dimensions with practical applications; we aim to be rigorous and principled while offering an approach to literary language study that is fundamentally humane.
We will explore the discourses of literary texts and literary reading, from the most focused study of the texture of language right up to the ideological and cultural practices of world literatures.
We believe that linguistics and literary study cannot be separated, and we aim to turn you into a creative-thinking interdisciplinary expert in literary linguistics.
Key facts
Course Content
The course explores the ways in which language and literary studies can be integrated. It draws on different contemporary approaches to language and discourse from the fields of modern linguistics, cognitive science and related fields. It covers a diverse range of poetry, prose and drama, and also offers contrastive study of non-literary discourse, including spoken language.
Full details about the content of the MA in Literary Linguistics is available on the School of English Studies website.
Course Structure
This course can be taken over 1 year, full-time (September to September) and part-time over 2 to 3 years.
Many of the modules on this course are optional but you need to take 120 credits worth of modules before completing the dissertation.
If you wish to fulfill AHRC funding requirements, you may also opt to take a further 15-credit generic 'Research Training' module.
You will be taught using the latest advances in teaching methods and electronic resources, as well as small group and individual tuition.
Most taught modules are assessed by written work of around 3,000 words or equivalent (for a 15-credit module).
Tutors provide feedback on practice exercises as preparation, and will give detailed comments on assignments. The objective is to provide you with the confidence to work as professional academics, at ease with the conventions of the discipline, and ready to tackle any area of research in literary linguistics.
In the early stages of your dissertation, your supervisor will read through and comment on draft work. The dissertation itself comprises a piece of your own research, assessed by written work of 12,000-15,000 words.
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