BA, 3 years, UCAS: LRH9
Typical A level offer: ABB
Subject overview
Why cultural studies?
Culture is everything: it’s the way we dress, the websites we surf, the people we engage with and the words we use. Studying culture is about understanding the often complex way our everyday life is constructed. Cultural studies at Sussex is ideal for you if you wish to develop a critical understanding of the history and theory of culture.

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Why cultural studies at Sussex?
Our high-quality research pushes the boundaries in cultural thinking: cultural studies at Sussex was rated joint 8th in the UK for research in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). 100 per cent of our research was rated as recognised internationally or higher, and 75 per cent rated as internationally excellent or higher.
Our lecturers bring expertise and cutting-edge thinking from departments across the University. You will be taught by the most innovative, as well as the most rigorous, researchers in their fields.
You take Cultural Studies alongside another subject, which will develop your critical thinking, give you a new set of skills in a second area of knowledge and increase your potential in the workplace.
Sussex is distinctive in that we spend as much time examining popular culture as we do high culture and ordinary culture. We combine interdisciplinary frameworks so that you will examine culture from a variety of different perspectives, ranging from the historical to the anthropological to the geographic.
We promote a political approach to cultural issues and put emphasis on developing critical thinking in particular on gender, nation, class and ethnicity.
Why sociology?
We are living in an era of rapid change. Global and technological transformations are reshaping our work and home lives, our cultures, identities and social experiences. New forces within our societies and beyond are leading to new social ties or the disintegration of old ones. Sociology offers a chance to study this exciting and fast-changing social world in all its aspects.

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Why sociology at Sussex?
Sociology at Sussex was ranked 3rd (95 per cent) for overall satisfaction, 5th (88 per cent) for academic support and 8th (90 per cent) for organisation and management in the 2012 National Student Survey (NSS).
Sociology at Sussex was ranked in the top 10 in the UK in The Guardian University Guide 2014, The Complete University Guide 2014 and The Times Good University Guide 2013.
We were rated 16th in the UK for research in the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE). 80 per cent of our research was rated as recognised internationally or higher, with over half rated as internationally excellent or higher and over a quarter rated as world leading.
Our single-honours and joint courses combine a strong grounding in the basics of sociology with the opportunity to specialise in a range of options.
All our lecturers are active researchers in one of three specialisms: health, medicine and science; gender and inequality; or social theory and political sociology.
You will study different theoretical perspectives in sociology and learn to interpret information and evidence on how different societies are structured and how they are changing.
Sussex offers a lively social environment. Our students come from a wide range of ages, ethnic groups and social backgrounds and from countries all over the world.
Our courses are broad, providing practical and theoretical skills, research-methods training, analytical and presentational skills, and experience in working independently and in groups, producing competent sociologists who are attractive to employers.
Programme content
This course provides an opportunity to broaden and deepen your sociological understanding of both ‘high’ and ‘popular’ culture, and to develop skills in analysing cultural products such as the mass media.
During the first two years, you combine the sociology and cultural studies modules, while in the final year you take specialised options from both areas of study.
We continue to develop and update our modules for 2014 entry to ensure you have the best student experience. In addition to the course structure below, you may find it helpful to refer to the 2012 modules tab.
Core content
Year 1
You learn what is distinctive and exciting about cultural studies by engaging in practical activities, attending lectures, participating in seminars and responding to your set reading. Ideas of key theorists are introduced and give insight into the complexity of commonplace aspects of life
Year 2 and final year
You engage with popular culture as an important social phenomenon that alters across time and geographical region. Debates about taste, identity and cultural power are central to the study of popular cultural practices
In the second half of Year 2 and your final year, you will be able to devise your own route through specialist options on topics such as the body • race and ethnicity • cultural belonging • globalisation and culture • technology and everyday life. Your study culminates in completion of a dissertation inspired by one of these topics. This allows you to identify your own area of research, and to demonstrate the depth of your knowledge and the effectiveness of your communication skills
How will I learn?
Learning and teaching are varied and aim for you to be able to develop an enquiring and critical approach to the world around you. You will be encouraged to use scrapbooks as well as written notes to help your learning, and produce photoessays, learning diaries, essays and presentations. You will be assessed individually as well as in groups. In this way you develop a rich portfolio of skills, gain confidence in presenting ideas effectively, and develop ways of working collaboratively and independently, all of which will serve you well in the workplace.
For more information, visit Studying at Sussex.
What will I achieve?
- an understanding of ‘culture’ as a contested term referring to the variety of ways meaning, identity and ideas are formed
- an understanding of historical and cross-cultural perspectives on contemporary issues and the way that power operates in society
- an ability to contribute to critical thinking and debates on culture, and an understanding of the range of interdisciplinary approaches to the study of culture
- intellectual skills in research design and methodology, understanding, summarising, synthesising, criticising and analysing material
- practical skills in IT, oral and written presentation, team work, working independently, and personal and time management.
We continue to develop and update our modules for 2014 entry to ensure you have the best student experience. In addition to the course structure below, you may find it helpful to refer to the 2012 modules tab.
Core content
Year 1
You are introduced to key themes and perspectives in sociology, and to sociological work examining diverse aspects of contemporary life in Britain and beyond, including social diversity and class and gender inequalities
Year 2
You learn to frame sociological questions and apply appropriate methods to find answers. Options give you a chance to explore arguments and evidence in relation to different aspects of life including political institutions and action • sexuality • crime and deviance • education • everyday life • medicine and health
Year 3
You specialise, gaining an understanding of social change in relation to topics such as the body in society • globalisation • madness and society • contemporary sociological theory • identity and interaction. You also take a research project on a topic of your choice
How will I learn?
We use a variety of teaching methods, ranging from lectures to seminar discussion classes, practical workshops, sessions where research work is presented, individual supervision of research projects, and individual consultations with tutors.
Modules are assessed in diverse ways to suit module content, to develop your practical skills, and to respond to the different skills and abilities of students. We use coursework, essays and more in-depth dissertations; exams; and research project reports and presentations of research findings.
For more information, visit Studying at Sussex.
Also refer to Department of Sociology: Resources and facilities.
What will I achieve?
- a broad knowledge of the core areas of sociology, from the nature and development of contemporary capitalism to the relationship between the individual and society; the maintenance of power and social order; and patterns of social change
- knowledge of several specialist areas of your choice, ranging from crime and deviance, education, health and medicine, social thought, and gender and ethnicity studies to political sociology
- knowledge and training in a range of social methods, which will enable you to carry out your own research, assess the research of others and offer relevant skills to the job market experience in self-guided independent study and working in groups
- skills in understanding and assessing ideas and evidence, and presenting your own work and ideas in written and oral forms
Please note that these are the modules running in 2012.
Year 1
Core modules
- A Sociology of 21st Century Britain
- Making the Familiar Strange
- Practising Cultural Studies
- Themes and Perspectives in Sociology I
- Themes and Perspectives in Sociology II
Options
Year 2
Core modules
- Doing Sociological Research: working with qualitative data
- Doing Sociological Research: working with quantitative data
- Theory Taste and Trash A
Options
- Beyond the Vote: Citizenship and Participation in Sociology
- Classical Sociological Theory
- Constructing Sexuality
- Constructing Sexuality
- Culture, Race and Ethnicity
- Gender, Space and Culture
- Race: Conflict and Change
- Sociology of Deviance
- Sociology of Deviance
- Sociology of Education
- Sociology of Education
- Sociology of Globalisation (Aut)
- Sociology of Medicine and Health
- The Allure of Things
Year 3
Options
- Alternative Societies (Spr)
- Class and Popular Culture
- Comedy and Cultural Belonging
- Consuming Passions
- Contemporary Social Theory
- Cultures of Colonialism
- Death of Socialism
- Development, Human Rights and Security (Spr)
- Globalisation: History, Theories, Culture
- Globalisation: Migration, Economy, Politics
- Identity and Interaction
- Landscape, Nature and Representation
- Madness and Society: Healthcare Controversies
- Madness and Society: Theoretical Debates
- Music, Media and Culture
- Sociology of Fun (Spr)
- Sociology Project
- Sociology Research Proposal
- The Cultural Life of Capital Punishment (Aut)
- Transnationalism and Identity
A Sociology of 21st Century Britain
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
This module will use contemporary Britain as an empirical base for exploring wider sociological perspectives. As an introductory degree level sociology module the emphasis is on developing a sociological sensibility to the social world. The questions that will be posed throughout the module are how are sociological explanations derived? how do different people come to different conclusions about similar social phenomena? what is distinct about sociological explanations - as opposed to those from other disciplines?
The relationship between empiricism and theory will be explored using examples from recent sociological research. The topics chosen broadly reflect established key themes in sociology however the exemplar material will be drawn from studies no older than five years. We shall be looking at how sociologists have interrogated a range of issues in 21st century Britain including work and employment, family, sport, intimacy, life online, nationalism, death and wealth.
The first engagement with degree level sociology should be exciting and the module is designed to demonstrate the capacity of sociology to explore the social world in interesting, challenging and critical ways.
Making the Familiar Strange
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
'Making the Familiar Strange' is predicated on the question how do sociologists do sociology? The module introduces you to epistemological and methodological issues in sociology. From an engagement with epistemology, methodological questions arise and these will be addressed - largely demonstrated through examples.
You will be introduced to particular epistemological approaches and then asked to reflect on worked examples of these. This is done by counterpoising a classic sociological studies with a contemporary examples - similarities and differences in epistemological and methodological approaches are critically examined.
It is intended that the examples will open up space for discussion about appropriate ways of understanding social phenomena with particular ontological and epistemological frames
Practising Cultural Studies
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
This module introduces you to the ways in which cultural studies as a theoretical approach can be used to explore aspects of life in the 'globalised world' of the 21st century. The first weeks are devoted to mapping and debating some of the terms cultural studies draws on. In the second half of the term you will try out cultural studies approaches in cross-cultural contexts through the exploration of three selected areas. These may include a social issue (eg migration or 'culture on the move'), a topic engaging with personal experience (eg 'passionate attachments' whether for people, things or ideas), or a topic engaging with cultural objects (eg focusing on the competition in relation to culture – the Turner prize, Booker or Young Musician of the Year on the one hand, Strictly Come Dancing or Master Chef on the other). You will undertake focused cross-disciplinary study through carefully directed research tasks and reading on these topics. Teaching and learning will involve a mix of lectures, seminars, workshops, screenings, individual and group work. Assessment is by submission of an exercise, essay, and group presentation.
Themes and Perspectives in Sociology I
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
Modern sociology developed in the 19th century in tandem with the rise of industrial capitalist society. It had a number of key concerns which reflected changes in, and the structure of, society at the time. These concerns have continued to preoccupy sociologists though in the context of contemporary societies, which have redefined key categories and experiences. This modules looks at such themes and at sociological perspectives on them as they have developed in both classical and contemporary forms of the discipline
Themes and Perspectives in Sociology II
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
Modern sociology developed in the 19th century in tandem with the rise of industrial capitalist society. It had a number of key concerns which reflected changes in, and the structure of, society at the time. These concerns have continued to preoccupy sociologists though in the context of contemporary societies, which have redefined key categories and experiences. This module looks at such themes and at sociological perspectives on them as they have developed in both classical and contemporary forms of the discipline.
Culture Across Space and Time
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
This module examines the relationship of culture to place, difference and identity. Drawing on key theoretical debates and case studies, culture will be explored in the context of social change and crises, incorporating topics such as:
- the impact of globalisation and transnationalism on everyday life
- the impact of consumption on behaviour and life choices
- the changing relations of multiculturalism, racism and marginalisation
- and the representation of culture in public spaces.
Throughout the module cultural issues will be deciphered through the prism of racial, ethnic, class and gender relations at local and global levels.
Culture and the Everyday
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
This module explores 'doing culture' in everyday life. If the 'everyday' refers to the mundane, the unremarkable - to the forms of life routinely taken for granted - it is also through the practices of everyday life that we experience who we are, how our lives are invested with meanings and we engage with change. In the modern world (especially in the developed north), it is difficult to think about cultures of everyday life without also considering the media: its contribution to the structuring of daily life; its varied use in daily life; and its discursive construction and engagement with aspects of everyday life. The module introduces critical approaches to everyday life, including those engaging with media, before concentrating on a series of case studies. Topics are likely to be organised around the twin foci of 'embodiment' and 'mobility' and include, for example: getting dressed, meal times, time for love, driving and shopping. You will have the opportunity to reflect on your own experiences and to consider, where appropriate, media in relation to everyday life. In addition to this the module will also provide historical and cross-cultural material and encourage study of other cultures.
The Meaning of Things
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
This is a module specifically designed to question received opinion: what do 'things' mean, how do they acquire meaning and/or value, and do they mean as much to 'other people' as they do to 'us'. It is arguably only through examination of the ways in which social groups acquire, define and privilege things as part of their material culture that those groups can be explored and understood. Material culture is the physical evidence of human experience. It includes the vast number of objects that people use in every aspect of their lives. The study of 'things' is an expanding area on which art historians and anthropologists as well as economic and social historians are converging. This module is designed to address that interdisciplinary approach to the study of culture.
Doing Sociological Research: working with qualitative data
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
You will be introduced to thinking about how to conduct sociological research using different methods. In this part you will focus on qualitative approaches. You will be introduced to debates in the social sciences related to research design, epistemology and studying sensitive and ethical issues, and will get practical experience in key methods for gathering and analysing qualitative data including interviewing, participant observation and textual analysis. Assessment will include a mini- or 'pilot' project carried out using one method.
Doing Sociological Research: working with quantitative data
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
The aim of this module is to introduce students to different ways of designing and doing social research. In this part we focus on basic features of quantitative survey research, both analysing other people's research (using secondary data) and creating your own. In Part II we focus on different methods of qualitative data collection and analysis. The aim of the module is to give you important skills for life as well as the labour market, and more prosaically to prepare you to carry out project work in the third year. In both halves of this module you build up activities week by week to carry out a kind of 'pilot' or 'mini-project' on a topic of your choice. This is more closely supported than in year 3: you will discuss ideas for the project in your workshops; you will be helped to apply for ethical review; you will have formative feedback on your proposals and your research instruments (in this case surveys) and lots of help in workshops to bring it all together.
Theory Taste and Trash A
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module introduces cultural studies students to theories of good taste and popular culture. It gives a historically-rooted account of how the study of popular culture came to be established in British higher education, and considers the key theoretical approaches that helped to shape those studies. The module explores the meeting of popular culture and 'the academy', and the intriguing questions it continues to pose concerning hierarchies of taste, questions of value, and definitions of educational worth.
A series of lectures will offer you a historical overview and an introduction to the influence of key writers, theorists and approaches, while the module seminars will encourage you to engage critically with significant texts in the field (from writers such as Hall, Bourdieu and Bakhtin). You will test the interpretive frameworks these texts offer by undertaking some case study analyses of contemporary popular cultural texts and practices (in fields such as television, music, the leisure industries and youth culture).
Beyond the Vote: Citizenship and Participation in Sociology
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
Citizenship and participation is a module looking at the sociology of political involvement beyond the vote. It introduces different forms and sites of citizenship in the contemporary state - in relation to welfare, health, work, consumption, family life and the city or urban community - and also considers different expressions of social or civic activism, from volunteering to violent protest. The use and limitations of direct democratic experiments is examined, through analysis of various types of deliberative forum and citizen polling, and we consider the appeal of notions of 'responsibility' and 'choice'. You will learn through examining specific cases each week.
Classical Sociological Theory
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
The aim of this module is to provide a reasonably comprehensive introduction to classical sociological theories and theorists and issues arising from their work. We will cover classical sociological theory from its origins in the Enlightenment period to the post World War II period. The module is concerned with these broad movements of thought with a focus on specific theorists and a close reading of extracts from classic texts. You will acquire an in-depth knowledge of the work of major classical sociological theorists.
Constructing Sexuality
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module will explore and analyse theories of sexuality and sexual politics, both historically and across cultures, and current debates within feminism and postmodernism. Connections will also be made between lived experiences and cultural representations and expectations. The module will explore theories concerning the social construction of gender, biological essentialism, patriarchy, the conceptualisations of the identity 'woman' and 'man', sexuality and sexual practices and the ways these are affected by class, race, disability and age.
You will explore theoretical issues within the following themes: pre-20th century legal, medical and scientific constructions of sexuality; the development of theories since the 1960s; current debates relating to sexuality such as heterosexual/homosexual/lesbian/bisexual identities; femininities and masculinities; love and romance and pornography.
Constructing Sexuality
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module will explore and analyse theories of sexuality and sexual politics, both historically and across cultures, and current debates within feminism and postmodernism. Connections will also be made between lived experiences and cultural representations and expectations. The module will explore theories concerning the social construction of gender, biological essentialism, patriarchy, the conceptualisations of the identity 'woman' and 'man', sexuality and sexual practices and the ways these are affected by class, race, disability and age.
You will explore theoretical issues within the following themes: pre-20th century legal, medical and scientific constructions of sexuality; the development of theories since the 1960s; current debates relating to sexuality such as heterosexual/homosexual/lesbian/bisexual identities; femininities and masculinities; love and romance and pornography.
Culture, Race and Ethnicity
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module explores the relationship between ideas of culture, race and ethnicity both historically and in contemporary society. You will examine a range of empirical examples that demonstrate how the concepts have been used – sometimes separately, sometimes in interlocking ways – in political projects or movements. There will be particular focus on contructions of 'whiteness'. Examples may include the use of race in 19th-century colonial administration, the politics of ethnicity in postwar London or the rise of the new right in contemporary Europe.
Gender, Space and Culture
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
Why is space important to our understanding of communication? How do subjects travel through space in order to construct narratives of identity? How are spaces moralised, sexed and gendered? How do they accrue significance or symbolism?
In the last decade there has been a convergence across many academic disciplines to comprehend spatiality. Social spaces are never empty or static, they are full of the shifting dynamics of power and politics. On this module you will study to what extent gender is articulated in public and private spaces, so that they may be considered to be predominantly feminine, masculine, queer or transgendered. You will also examine how spaces and places are dynamic, unstable and mutable in relation to competing social differences. We will look at a variety of sites of the everyday, from the domestic to the visual, from bodies to landscape and virtual realities using key theoretical concepts such as 'performativity', 'representation' and 'transectionality' to interpret how our culture is thoroughly imbued with gendered and spatialized assumptions.
Topics may include: thinking about gendered journeys such as package holidays or migration; the boundaries and borders of the self; the national and the global; social inclusion and exclusion; and representations of the feminized underclass, or the masculinized professional. We will also consider queer cultural geographies as represented in films; 'freaky bodies' and transexuality online; and the spatial politics of protest on the streets and in the home.
Race: Conflict and Change
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module will examine and explore the issues of race, racism, racial conflict and race relations in contemporary Britain (Please note: although we will mainly refer to Britain, examples from other countries in Europe and the West will be frequently used). Beginning with colonial discourses of the racial 'other', the post-1945 period following the start of mass colonial immigration to Britain, through to the present day this module will examine the various historical, social, political, economic and cultural forces and processes through which the concept of race and the racialised subject have been constructed, shaped and changed over time.
The module will be divided into twelve 1-hour lectures and twelve 1-hour seminars, each focusing on a particular historical, social, political, cultural or theoretical topic, issue and problem related to race in Britain. These range from: the construction and status of race through various dismodules and contexts of colonialism, immigration and multiculturalism, issues of identity, representation, power, equality and difference, the relationship between race and other social-political identifications, categories and divisions such as nationality, class, gender, ethnicity and religion, the relationship between race and the law, crime and civil unrest, the history of racial conflict and the development of anti-racist activism, policies and legislation, forms of cultural politics, expression and resistance and, finally, current issues and debates concerning the status of race in Britain.
Sociology of Deviance
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
The module falls into two parts. In the first part, the concepts of crime, deviance and social control will be considered alongside the exploration of the sociological explanations for the existence of crime and deviance in society. The module will also critically examine the data sources used to support these perspectives. In the second part of the module, these perspectives will be applied to the study of substantive areas of deviance comprising institutions of social control (the police, the courts and prisons); the distribution of crime and the use of official statistics; the mass media; juvenile delinquency; mental illness; and sexuality.
Sociology of Deviance
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
The module falls into two parts. In the first part, the concepts of crime, deviance and social control will be considered alongside the exploration of the sociological explanations for the existence of crime and deviance in society. The module will also critically examine the data sources used to support these perspectives. In the second part of the module, these perspectives will be applied to the study of substantive areas of deviance comprising institutions of social control (the police, the courts and prisons); the distribution of crime and the use of official statistics; the mass media; juvenile delinquency; mental illness; and sexuality.
Sociology of Education
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
The module will first explore historical and current theoretical concepts of education. You will then focus on: the hidden curriculum, the roles and behaviour of the teacher and the student, and higher education, its cultures and customers. We will end the module by looking at key debates related to education: the gender debates, the class debates, and the role of education as a cultural symbol.
Sociology of Education
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
The module will first explore historical and current theoretical concepts of education. You will then focus on: the hidden curriculum, the roles and behaviour of the teacher and the student, and higher education, its cultures and customers. We will end the module by looking at key debates related to education: the gender debates, the class debates, and the role of education as a cultural symbol.
Sociology of Globalisation (Aut)
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
Sociology of Medicine and Health
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
The module begins by considering the relationship between socio-economic inequality and health outcomes industrialiSed countries, especially in Britain. You then examines the role played by the state, and the National Health Service in particular, in the heath of the nation. The position of medical and health professionals is also analysed in order to understand processes of professionalization and medicalization. Attention then turns to medicines themselves, how they are tested for safety and effectiveness by the pharmaceutical industry and how this process in regulated by governments. The implications of pharmaceuticals and drug prescribing for public health will be carefully scrutinised. You will also gain sociological insights into reproductive technologies and some of the health and social implications of the 'new genetics'. Finally, the module discussed lay public and mass media perspectives on medicine.
The Allure of Things
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module explores the circulation of significant objects (material or otherwise) within specific cultural and historical contexts. It analyses the social/cultural/economic relationships which shape and are shaped by the movement of 'things'. You will gain an understanding of theories of exchange, commoditisation and consumption. These will be set against wider cultural and economic transformations as the result of colonialism, capitalist penetration and globalisation.
Alternative Societies (Spr)
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Class and Popular Culture
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
While constructions of gender, sexuality, 'race' and ethnicity in popular media and culture have been subjected to increasing academic scrutiny in the last decade or so, class has been largely left off the agenda. This module attempts to redress this neglect. It centres on theorisations of class in the cultural sphere, and on a series of debates over the representation of class in a range of examples from popular culture.
You will consider both strategies of 'othering' groups such as the working class and underclass, and also representations of the 'invisible', taken for granted norm of middle-class identity. Topics covered may include: emotions and class - shame, hate, and envy; news, television reality shows and television drama; and embodiment, education, aspiration and respectability.
Comedy and Cultural Belonging
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Comedy is, above all, a cultural form that invites its audiences to feel that they belong – to a social community, a class, a locality, a nation, a subculture, a gender, a sexual identity, an ethnic group, a community of interest, or a complex intersection of several of these. This module explores the relationship between comedy and belonging by considering a number of conceptual fields, such as: theories of the comedic; questions of identity formation; notions of representation and stereotyping; structures of power and resistance; the sexual politics of jokes; concepts of carnival and excess; the idea of a 'national sense of humour'; the use of comic strategies by 'minority' groups; the complexities of camp; and the role of class in cultural consumption. The initial focus would be on 20th-century British popular comedy, and the comic texts and practitioners studied might include Alan Bennett, Mike Leigh, Victoria Wood, the music hall tradition, the Ealing comedies, the Carry On films, Morecambe and Wise, The League of Gentlemen and The Royle Family.
Consuming Passions
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module explores consumption practices within specific cultural and historical contexts. It introduces you to processes through which objects are made sense of and appropriated by people in their everyday life. At the same time, the module explores consumption as a basic human activity through which people engage and understand their position in the world. It will locate historical and culture-specific consumption practices within wider processes of identity creation and social differentiation. Finally, consumption will be discussed in the context of the development of consumer cultures and globalisation.
Contemporary Social Theory
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module provides a critical assessment of the some of the most prominent sociological theorists in the late 20th century. This period can be described as post-classical in the sense that the various schools of classical sociological theory associated with Marx, Weber, Durkheim and their later followers gave way to a range of new approaches such as those linked to post-structuralism, such as Foucault - as well as to new interpretations of the classical approaches, such as social constructionism, western Marxism and critical theory. The central aim of the module is to show how contemporary thinkers have understood the major transformations in modern society (ie from industrial to post-industrial society, globalisation, new social movements such as feminism, environmental movements, identity politics). This will involve a consideration of some of the most important debates in sociological theory, such as the debates about modernity versus postmodernity, structure versus agency as well as the influence of psychoanalytic social theory emanating from feminist theory and from post-structuralism.
The weekly topics include: social constructionism; Foucault and govementality; Habermas and critical theory; recognition theory (Honneth); marxism after postmodernism; Bourdieu and recent French sociology; poststructuralism and psychoanalysis: Derrida, Lacan, Deleuze; Bauman's postmodern ethics; network theory: Latour and Castells; theories of modernity; cosmopolitanism and social theory; culture and social theory (performativity, Alexander).
Cultures of Colonialism
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module introduces you to the colonial practices, discourses and cultures across the nineteenth century British Empire and their legacies. It examines the British metropole and its colonies within a single analytical framework, tracking the exchange of people, ideas and objects along the networks that connected them. Initially you will cover the main approaches to the study of British colonialism, including traditional imperial history and postcolonialism. The latter part of the module investigates cultural, social and political impacts of British colonialism at specific sites across the empire, including India, North America and New Zealand.
Death of Socialism
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module looks at the contemporary condition of socialism following the collapse of state socialism in Central and Eastern Europe and elsewhere, the erosion of the central principles of Western social democracy and the prevalence of free market and capitalist ideas at the start of the century. Is socialism a relevant, feasible or desirable idea in contemporary society? Or is it dead, merely a historical relic of the 20th century?
We will start by looking at the two predominant conceptions and experiences of socialism of the twentieth century - Marxist and social democratic socialism. What are the main features of these models of socialism? You will then examine criticisms of socialism from liberals and libertarians such as Hayek and Nozick and from new social movements such as the women's movement and the green movement. What critical points are raised by these perspectives and how telling are they? We will look at reasons for the collapse of state socialism in the late 1980s and at attempts in the West to rethink socialism during an era in which neoliberalism was a predominant force. Do liberal and new social movements' criticisms and the collapse of state socialism suggest that socialism is dead? Do attempts to redefine socialism (as market socialism or radical democratic socialism) escape the criticisms of liberals and the new social movements and the problems experienced under old social democracy and state socialism? Or do they indicate that the era of socialism has well and truly passed?
In the final two topics we shall address this question a little more. We will examine the attempt of New Labour and current European social democrats to respond to the crisis of social democracy and will ask whether there is anything remaining of socialism in such attempts. And we shall examine theses such as that of Fukuyama: that the day of socialism has passed and that capitalism has won the battle.
Development, Human Rights and Security (Spr)
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Globalisation: History, Theories, Culture
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
We live in a fast-moving world where companies and trade are often international and money can be globally mobile in an instant. Media images and cultural products are transported globally, and tourism and migration are important parts of everyday social experience. Politics is often carried out at supranational levels, whether through international organisations or global social movements. Processes such as these make distance over space less important, and interdependency across the globe affects all societies raising questions to do with cultural identity, power, inequality and conflict.
This module looks at different meanings and concepts of globalisation. It analyses the history of globalisation and the extent to which it is a premodern, modern or postmodern phenomenon. The module examines perspectives on globalisation, such as those from globalist, transformationalist and sceptical perspectives. You will examine theories of globalisation from key sociologists. The module goes on to look at technological developments in media and the way they have led to the globalisation of culture, and whether culture has been made more homogeneous or hybrid. The module looks at the way processes of globalisation have intersected in global cities.
Globalisation: Migration, Economy, Politics
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
We live in a fast-moving world where companies and trade are often international and money can be globally mobile in an instant. Media images and cultural products are transported globally and tourism and migration are important parts of everyday social experience. Politics is often carried out at supranational levels, whether through international organisations or global social We live in a fast-moving world where companies and trade are often international, and money can be globally mobile in an instant. Media images and cultural products are transported globally, and tourism and migration are important parts of everyday social movements. Processes such as these make distance over space less important and interdependency across the globe affects all societies.
This module looks at causes, types and effects of global migration, both historically and today. It examines the degree to which world economics have been globalised by factors, such as the growth of transnational corporations, the mobility of money and international economic interdependency. It examines the degree to which global trade helps to include poorer countries or leads to greater inequality. You will examine the extent to which politics has been globalised through factors such as the rise of international organisations and the global nature of social problems, and whether the nation-state is in decline. The module also looks at war and power globally in the 21st century, the nature of the world order, and at the distribution of power among states in the world.
Identity and Interaction
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module explores microsociological theories of the self, social identity and social interaction, drawing particularly on symbolic interactionism and Goffman's dramaturgical theory. The aim is to show how the ostensibly private world of individual selfhood is created and shaped by social processes, culture and interaction order. The first half of the module examines different approaches to understanding identity: from the philosophy of mind and personhood, through theories of group membership and categorisation; narrative and biographical models of the 'storied self'; performativity; and poststructuralist ideas about identity fragmentation, multiplicity and the discursive constitution of subjectivities. The second part of the module looks in detail at two related theories of social interaction - Symbolic Interactionism and Goffman's dramaturgy - and their empirical applications, using illustrative examples from published studies. Topics covered here include: role-making, taking, play and conflict; meanings, gestures and symbols; strangers and outsiders; Goffman's theatrical analogy; behaviour in public places (etiquette, civility and interaction rituals); deviant and stigmatised identities; the negotiated order of institutional life; and secrecy, lies, betrayal and deception. The module will be assessed by a 6000 word essay, in the form of either a critical commentary on the social formation of one type of social identity or a reflexive portfolio of self-identity.
Landscape, Nature and Representation
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module focuses upon the representation of landscapes and nature, and considers the ways in which representations are sites through which ideas, visions and imaginations are set to work. You will assess the production and impact of such representations, critically analysing a range of textual sources from a variety of origins which claim to represent landscape and natures. This will incorporate art, literature, music, the media and cartography.
Madness and Society: Healthcare Controversies
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The central aim of the module is to develop a critical and analytical understanding of key debates in the field of contemporary mental healthcare in relation to the conceptualisation of mental disorder and critiques of the therapeutic claims of psychiatry in relation to its presumed objectivity, scientific status and social neutrality. You are encouraged to develop critical perspectives when evaluating different bodies of knowledge and evidence, and to consider the relative influence of social, psychological, emotional and physical/biological factors in shaping the way mental disorders are experienced and managed. For example, we address the role of the mass media in shaping lay understandings of madness and constructions of the mentally ill, as well as the power they have to reinforce stigma and prejudice; the role of the pharmaceutical industry in creating new disorders, markets and types of patient; and the agency exercised by service user-led movements to resist biomedical power. We also examine case studies of specific medically-defined disorders.
Madness and Society: Theoretical Debates
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module builds on theoretical approaches and research within medical sociology, with a unique focus on the social factors affecting mental health and illness. The central aim of the module is to develop a critical and analytical understanding of key debates in the field, such as the nature of the conceptualisation of mental disorder and whether medical ways of categorizing and dealing with it are the most appropriate; whether mental illness is really a form of social deviance that is medically constructed, amplified and controlled through the psychiatric system; critiques of the therapeutic claims of psychiatry in relation to its presumed objectivity, scientific status and social neutrality; whether psychiatry is ultimately an instrument of social control; processes of social causation and social construction of mental illness, and the tensions between them; and the role of structural divisions such as social class, ethnicity, gender and age in determining patterns of mental illness.
Music, Media and Culture
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module explores the relationship between music and media of all kinds, and questions the ideological structures underpinning the consumption of music in western society. The module focuses on the relationship between musical production and media technologies (the microphone, phonograph, radio and film), the changing role and place of music in society - understood through an analysis of media technologies, the meaning and nature of music and media reception in society, and the political economy of the music industry.
Sociology of Fun (Spr)
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Sociology Project
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The aim of this module is to give you direct experience of carrying out a small scale research project, from the initial stages of design to the final stages of presenting your findings. It is intended to consolidate and build upon the knowledge base gained from the DSR research methods module in the second year, as you will use these skills to research a topic of your choice. You will be assessed on how well you interpret and apply the relevant methodological issues to your research design, manage the practical side of the project, and reflect on the effectiveness of your chosen strategies. You work mainly through independent study, under the guidance of a supervisor. The assessment consists of a research proposal, presentation and 8,000 word written report.
Sociology Research Proposal
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
The aim of this module is to give you direct experience of carrying out a small scale research project, from the initial stages of design to the final stages of presenting your findings. It is intended to consolidate and build upon the knowledge base gained from the DSR research methods module in the second year, as you will use these skills to research a topic of your choice. You will be assessed on how well you interpret and apply the relevant methodological issues to your research design, manage the practical side of the project, and reflect on the effectiveness of your chosen strategies. You work mainly through independent study, under the guidance of a supervisor. The assessment consists of a research proposal, presentation and 8,000 word written report.
The Cultural Life of Capital Punishment (Aut)
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Transnationalism and Identity
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module explores the complex and multiple effects of transnational migration on everyday geographies of home, identification and belonging. The focus will be on the diverse ways in which social and cultural identities are performed in a mobile context. Particular attention will be given to the spatialisation of such identities at a variety of scales (e.g. body, home, community) and the relations between them. Theoretical and empirical research drawn upon in the module will reflect the heterogeneity within and across diasporic groups in terms of class, gender, sexuality, race and ethnicity. You will learn that migrant identities are contingent on historical and geographical context and will situate discussions of the negotiation of belonging within debates on postcolonialism, multiculturalism and cosmopolitanism.
Entry requirements
Sussex welcomes applications from students of all ages who show evidence of the academic maturity and broad educational background that suggests readiness to study at degree level. For most students, this will mean formal public examinations; details of some of the most common qualifications we accept are shown below. If you are an overseas student, refer to Applicants from outside the UK.
All teaching at Sussex is in the English language. If your first language is not English, you will also need to demonstrate that you meet our English language requirements.
- A level
Typical offer: ABB
- International Baccalaureate
Typical offer: 34 points overall
For more information refer to International Baccalaureate.
- Access to HE Diploma
Typical offer: Pass the Access to HE Diploma with at least 45 credits at Level 3, of which 30 credits must be at Distinction and 15 credits at Merit or higher.
Specific entry requirements: The Access to HE Diploma should be in the humanities or social sciences.
For more information refer to Access to HE Diploma.
- Advanced Diploma
Typical offer: Pass with grade B in the Diploma and an A in the Additional and Specialist Learning.
Specific entry requirements: The Additional and Specialist Learning must be an A level (ideally in a humanities or social science subject).
For more information refer to Advanced Diploma.
- BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma
Typical offer: DDM
For more information refer to BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma.
- European Baccalaureate
Typical offer: Overall result of at least 77%
For more information refer to European Baccalaureate.
- Finnish Ylioppilastutkinto
Typical offer: Overall average result in the final matriculation examinations of at least 6.0.
- French Baccalauréat
Typical offer: Overall final result of at least 13/20
- German Abitur
Typical offer: Overall result of 1.8 or better
- Irish Leaving Certificate (Higher level)
Typical offer: AABBBB
- Italian Diploma di Maturità or Diploma Pass di Esame di Stato
Typical offer: Final Diploma mark of at least 90/100
- Scottish Highers and Advanced Highers
Typical offer: AABBB
For more information refer to Scottish Highers and Advanced Highers.
- Spanish Titulo de Bachillerato (LOGSE)
Typical offer: Overall average result of at least 8.0
- Welsh Baccalaureate Advanced Diploma
Typical offer: Pass the Core plus at least AB in two A-levels
For more information refer to Welsh Baccalaureate.
English language requirements
IELTS 6.5 overall, with not less than 6.0 in each section. Internet-based TOEFL with 88 overall, with at least 20 in Listening, 19 in Reading, 21 in Speaking and 23 in Writing.
For more information, refer to alternative English language requirements.
For more information about the admissions process at Sussex:
Undergraduate Admissions,
Sussex House,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RH, UK
T +44 (0)1273 678416
F +44 (0)1273 678545
E ug.enquiries@sussex.ac.uk
Related subjects
Fees and funding
Fees
Home/EU students: £9,0001
Channel Island and Isle of Man students: £9,0002
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.
To find out about your fee status, living expenses and other costs, visit further financial information.
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.
To find out more about funding and part-time work, visit further financial information.
Care Leavers Award (2014)
Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 31 July 2015
For students have been in council care before starting at Sussex.
First-Generation Scholars Scheme (2014)
Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 12 June 2015
The scheme is targeted to help students from relatively low income families – ie those whose family income is up to £42,622.
First-Generation Scholars Scheme EU Student Award (2014)
Region: Europe (Non UK)
Level: UG
Application deadline: 12 June 2015
£3,000 fee waiver for UG Non-UK EU students whose family income is below £25,000
Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust for Undergraduate Study (2014)
Region: UK
Level: UG
Application deadline: 1 March 2014
The Leverhulme Trade Charities Trust are offering bursaries to Undergraduate students following an undergraduate degree courses in any subject.
Careers and profiles
A degree in cultural studies provides an excellent foundation for any career demanding high-level communication skills, creative problem-solving and a questioning attitude. Our graduates have gone on to careers in:
- cultural curating: festival organisation and promotion, heritage and museum industry, arts administration
- cultural research: researching for television and other media, for marketing companies, advertisers and public relations
- cultural policy: non-governmental organisations and community organisations
- postgraduate study in cultural studies and related disciplines.
This course prepares you for employment in fields such as social research, public relations, research, sales and marketing, and for the health, social welfare, housing, charity and education sectors.
Recent graduates have taken up a wide range of posts with employers including: candidate manager at Robert Walters • human relations assistant at Philips • intern at Bloomsbury Auctions • marketing and promotions assistant at We Love Spain • social media monitor at Webyogi • support services assistant at Homeless UK • support worker at Team Brain Injury Support Ltd.
Specific employer destinations listed are taken from recent Destinations of Leavers from Higher Education surveys, which are produced annually by the Higher Education Statistics Agency.
Careers and employability
For employers, it’s not so much what you know, but what you can do with your knowledge that counts. The experience and skills you’ll acquire during and beyond your studies will make you an attractive prospect. Initiatives such as SussexPlus, delivered by the Careers and Employability Centre, help you turn your skills to your career advantage. It’s good to know that 94 per cent of our graduates are in work or further study (Which? University).
For more information on the full range of initiatives that make up our career and employability plan for students, visit Careers and alumni.
Contact our School
School of Law, Politics and Sociology
Engaging with key issues of contemporary concern, the School of Law, Politics and Sociology brings together academic units that are committed to excellence in teaching, and recognised nationally for research.
How do I find out more?
For more information, contact the subject coordinator:
Sociology,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9SP, UK
E ug.admissions@sociology.sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 678890
F +44 (0)1273 873162
Department of Sociology
School of Media, Film and Music
The School of Media, Film and Music combines rigorous critical and historical studies of media, film, music and culture with opportunities for creative practice in a range of musical forms and the media of photography, film, radio, and interactive digital imaging.
How do I find out more?
For more information, contact the admissions tutor:
Cultural Studies,
Silverstone 220,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9RG, UK
E mfm@sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 872621
F +44 (0)1273 877219
Department of Media and Film
Visit us
Sussex Open Day
Saturday 5 October 2013
Open Days offer you the chance to speak one to one with our world-leading academic staff, find out more about our courses, tour specialist facilities, explore campus, visit student accommodation, and much more. Booking is required. Go to Visit us and Open Days to book onto one of our tours.
Campus tours
Not able to attend one of our Open Days? Then book on to one of our weekly guided campus tours.
Mature-student information session
If you are 21 or over, and thinking about starting an undergraduate degree at Sussex, you may want to attend one of our mature student information sessions. Running between October and December, they include guidance on how to approach your application, finance and welfare advice, plus a guided campus tour with one of our current mature students.
Self-guided visits
If you are unable to make any of the visit opportunities listed, drop in Monday to Friday year round and collect a self-guided tour pack from Sussex House reception.
Jonathan's staff perspective
‘Sussex provides world-leading teaching and excellent academic facilities, with a vibrant student life in a fantastic location. All of this meant that I left Sussex with a unique set of experiences and a degree that has prepared me for my future.
‘Joining Student Recruitment Services at the University has enabled me to share my experiences of Sussex with others. Coming to an Open Day gives you the opportunity to meet our research-active academics and our current students, while exploring our beautiful campus. But don’t worry if you can’t make an Open Day, there’s plenty of other opportunities to visit Sussex. Check out our Visit us and Open Days pages or our Facebook page to find out more.
‘I’ve loved every moment of my time at Sussex – these have been the best years of my life.’
Jonathan Bridges
Graduate Intern, Student Recruitment Services
