English

Apply Print | Share:

Subject overview

Sussex is ranked among the top 20 universities in the UK for English in The Times Good University Guide 2013.

In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE) 95 per cent of our English research was rated as recognised internationally or higher, and over half rated as internationally excellent or higher.

English at Sussex has a well-established international reputation for producing research that develops and extends the boundaries of the subject.

English runs a wide range of innovative MA degrees, taught by faculty working at the forefront of English studies.

We support research centres such as the Centre for Modernist Studies and the Centre for Early Modern Studies, which focus on interdisciplinary research and teaching, and attract high-profile speakers from around the world.

We have a diverse and thriving community of postgraduate students who contribute to an outstanding research culture.

Programmes

  • PhD in English
  • MPhil in English

The English faculty encompasses research strengths and interests that span most periods of English literature and contemporary critical theory.

Particular areas of expertise include Renaissance writing; culture and ideology; the novel from the 18th century to the present; romantic, Victorian and modern poetry; and all aspects of modernism and postmodernism.

There is a strong commitment to the inter-disciplinary study of literature in its historical and discursive context in relation to philosophy, history of art and the history of ideas; to post-colonial and feminist criticism; to gay and lesbian criticism; and to recent developments in psychoanalytic, Marxist, post-structuralist and ‘new historicist’ criticism.

Recent and current thesis titles

Gossip: gender and genre from Pepys to Woolf

Law and form: Joyce, Beckett and philosophy

More intimate than violence: rape, representation and the civic bond

Shakespeare and cyberspace

Temporality in modernist literature

The body in sickness in England 1558-1640

Thomas Hardy’s relations with contemporary readers

TS Eliot, mass culture and the music hall

Virginia Woolf’s essays: a woman writer’s production of literary history

Waking nightmares: a critical study of Ian McEwan’s novels

Entry requirements

All English research degrees

A Masters degree in English or an English-related discipline relevant to your chosen area of research.

English language requirements

IELTS 7.0, with not less than 6.5 in each section. Internet TOEFL with 95 overall, with at least 22 in Listening, 23 in Reading, 23 in Speaking and 24 in Writing.

For more information, refer to English language requirements.

Please refer to Overseas qualifications.

Fees and funding

Fees

For more information, visit Fees, Fees by programme, Living expenses, and Other costs.

MPhil in English
PhD in English

MPhil in English

'Home' UK/EU students: £3,9001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £3,9002
Overseas students: £13,0003

1 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.

PhD in English

'Home' UK/EU students: £3,9001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £3,9002
Overseas students: £13,0003

1 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
2 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.
3 The fee shown is for the academic year 2013.

Funding

The funding sources listed below are for the subject area you are viewing and may not apply to all degrees listed within it. Please check the description of the individual funding source to make sure it is relevant to your chosen degree. For general information, refer to Funding.

Alumni Study Award (2013)

Region: UK, Europe (Non UK), International (Non UK/EU)
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)

Loyalty rewards for Sussex undergraduates and postgraduates who remain at the University to study for a higher degree

Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust for Postgraduate Study (2013)

Region: UK
Level: PG (taught), PG (research)
Application deadline: 1 October 2013

The Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust are offering bursaries to Postgraduate students following any postgraduate degree courses in any subject.

Faculty interests

Faculty research interests are described briefly below. For more detailed information, visit School of English: People and contacts.

The following list includes all the English faculty, and other contributors to English MA degrees.

The journals Renaissance Studies, Textual Practice, The Oxford Literary Review and The Year’s Work in Critical and Cultural Theory are edited within the School of English.

Dr Gavin Ashenden 20th-century myth and metaphysics; psychology, psychoanalysis and belief.

Dr Sara Jane Bailes Contemporary experimental theatre, live art and visual practices, ideology and performance.

Dr David Barnett Post-war European drama and theatre, post-Brechtian political theatre.

Professor Peter Boxall Modern and contemporary fiction and drama.

Dr Sara Crangle Co-Director of the Centre for Modernist Studies. 20th-century literature.

Professor Brian Cummings 16th- and 17th-century literature and history.

Dr Sue Currell American literature and culture 1890-1940, 20th-century mass culture.

Dr Alistair Davies Modernism and postmodernism, 20th-century English and American literature.

Dr Denise DeCaires Narain Postcolonialist writing; feminist cultural theory; contemporary women’s writing in English, especially poetry.

Dr Matthew Dimmock 16th- and 17th-century literature and history, national identity, Islam.

Professor Andrew Hadfield Renaissance literature and politics, Britishness, Shakespeare, Spenser, and national identity.

Dr Doug Haynes European and American modernism, postmodernism.

Dr Margaret Healy Renaissance literature and culture, the political stage, Shakespeare, Dekker, medicine and literature.

Professor Tom Healy Head of School. 16th- and 17th-century writing and cultural history.

Dr Vicky Lebeau The convergence of psychoanalysis, literature and cinema; and feminist theory.

Dr William McEvoy British playwriting and directing; theatre, writing and ethics.

Dr Daniel Kane 20th-century American literature, the avant-garde, poetry since the 1960s.

Dr Maria Lauret American feminist fiction and theory; race and ethnicity.

Professor Stephanie Newell West African literature and popular culture, postcolonial theory.

Dr Rachel O’Connell Late 19th- and early 20th-century British literature; gender, queer, and disability studies.

Dr Catherine Packham 18th-century literature and philosophy; political economy and moral philosophy in the Scottish Enlightenment.

Dr Jason Price Popular theatre histories and practices; politics and performance.

Dr Vincent Quinn Lesbian and gay studies, the history of sexuality, 18th-century studies, Irish studies, and the history and theory of biography.

Dr John David Rhodes Italian cinema, modernist and avant-garde cinemas of Europe and the US, queer art cinema.

Professor Nicholas Royle Modern literature and literary theory, especially deconstruction and psychoanalysis; the uncanny.

Martin Ryle 19th- and 20th-century fiction; the politics of ‘culture’, with especial reference to education; and topographical and travel writing.

Dr Minoli Salgado Postcolonial literature and theory, memory and migrant identity, the short story, Rushdie, and Ondaatje.

Professor Lindsay Smith 19th-century literature and painting; photography in Victorian culture.

Dr Keston Sutherland Contemporary and 20th-century English and American poetry; Marxism and Frankfurt School critical theory.

Professor Jenny Bourne Taylor 19th-century literature and culture; literature and science; illegitimacy and the family.

Dr Pamela Thurschwell Co-Director of the Centre for Modernist Studies. Psychoanalysis, 19th- and 20th-century interest in the supernatural.

Professor Norman Vance 19th-century literature, religion and society; Anglo-Irish literature.

Professor Marcus Wood Satire in the romantic period, the representation of slavery, and colonial and postcolonial literature and theory.

Careers and perspectives

Our graduates have gone on to careers in teaching and education, publishing, website production and marketing, journalism and writing, the charity sector, and NGOs. A significant number of our graduates go on to careers in academia.

School and contacts

School of English

Over the last 30 years, English at Sussex has played a key role in shaping the direction of the discipline in Britain and throughout the world. The School of English offers you exciting potential for engaging with English as a world language and literature.

School of English, PG Admissions,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9QN, UK
T +44 (0)1273 678468
E englishpg@sussex.ac.uk
School of English

For more information about the admissions process at Sussex

For pre-application enquiries:

Student Recruitment Services
T +44 (0)1273 876787
E pg.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk

For post-application enquiries:

Postgraduate Admissions,
University of Sussex,
Sussex House, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 877773
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E pg.applicants@sussex.ac.uk 

Terms and conditions