BA, 3 years, UCAS: WQ43
Typical A level offer: AAB-ABB
Subject overview
Why English?
We live in language. Our experience of the world and of ourselves is formed by the words we use. Why do certain combinations of words move us more than others? How do we understand in language and what do we understand? How is our creative intelligence formed? What is the relation between the verbal and the visual? What role does writing play in shaping a culture?

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Why English at Sussex?
English at Sussex scored 92 per cent in the teaching category of the 2012 National Student Survey (NSS).
Sussex is ranked among the top 20 universities in the UK for English in The Times Good University Guide 2013 and among the top 30 in the UK in The Complete University Guide 2014.
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.
An English degree at Sussex helps you become a critical and imaginative reader and thinker, giving you the opportunity to engage with the huge variety of ways writers use words: from Anglo-Saxon epic to current avant-garde poetry, from Shakespeare and Jane Austen to Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie, from theoretical works on language and culture to developing your own creative writing.
Our emphasis is on teaching you in small seminar groups.
You can develop your creative as well as critical perspective in various modules.
Why drama studies?
Studying drama equips you with a broad range of skills, both practical and theoretical, that are transferable in a variety of cultural spheres and contexts.

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Why drama studies at Sussex?
Drama studies at Sussex was ranked 4th (87 per cent) for organisation and management and also scored 93 per cent in the teaching category of the 2012 National Student Survey (NSS).
Drama at Sussex was ranked in the top 15 in the UK in The Complete University Guide 2014 and in the top 20 in the UK inThe Times Good University Guide 2013 and The Sunday Times University Guide 2012.
In the 2008 Research Assessment Exercise (RAE), 95 per cent of our drama research was rated as recognised internationally or higher, and over half rated as internationally excellent or higher.
Throughout your course, you will explore a range of ideas, issues and questions relating to theatre and performance, in particular how such practices relate to different social, political, aesthetic and cultural arenas. You will address these through a rigorous combination of theory and practice, and develop confidence and ability both as a creative practitioner and thinker.
Specialist teaching from active practitioners and researchers in specific historical periods, as well as in international contemporary theatre practices and performance.
Our curriculum explores the relationship between theory and practice in the seminar room, in studio workshops and with professional visiting artists and practitioners.
Programme of study that moves from the introduction of first principles, via their more sophisticated application, to areas of research-led individual specialism.
Strong relationships with local and national arts organisations (including the Brighton International Festival), and opportunities to work with them during your course. We encourage you to gain valuable professional experience and thus develop your career prospects.
Emphasis on group work and collaboration in teaching and assessment.
Full-scale performance project taught to professional standard (final year) to an invited public.
John David's faculty perspective
‘I was first a student of literature before I turned to specialise in film and visual studies for my doctoral research. While my work often focuses on things that are profoundly non-verbal, literary studies still provides the grounds of so many of the questions I bring to bear on the objects of my research. I find that an account of a problem in one medium helps me understand the status of that same problem in another. This interdisciplinary approach feeds through into my teaching.
‘I ask my students to follow me down the less obvious and often slightly reckless paths of inquiry. Fortunately for me, at Sussex I get to teach the brightest, most original and most inventive students who are more than willing to take up the challenge and who, in turn, challenge my own thinking.’
Dr John David Rhodes
Reader in Literature and Visual Culture,
University of Sussex
Programme content
This course is for students who are keen to focus on drama in a wider literary context. The combination enables you to pursue drama both in relation to other literary genres such as the novel, poetry and non-fiction prose, and in relation to a wide spectrum of theoretical approaches to literature and culture.
The course encourages the study of dramatic texts not simply as literature, but also as the basis for performance. Drama is taught in a variety of ways. You explore practical and performative concepts in the staging and writing of texts, in particular historical and cultural contexts. Drama modules as well as English modules including a wide range of core modules and options provide complementary fields of study that enrich your understanding of both subjects.
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 begin by studying the fundamentals of literature, with modules in literary history, critical interpretation and advanced theory from the Greeks to the present day. You will read a wide range of texts, some of them canonical, some very wild or eccentric
Year 2
You study the history, genealogy and contemporary development of the novel. You choose a period of literature between 1500 and 1945 and read novels, plays, poetry and criticism of that period. You also begin to build your own course from a wide range of options spanning centuries, continents and genres of text
Year 3
You study in depth the complete works of a single author. You choose one from six options comprising our array of modern and contemporary modules, plus one more period from 1500 to 1945. You also choose another option from a long and varied list, from Islam in the Renaissance to contemporary avant-garde cinema. There is a weekly colloquium event for all third-year students featuring prominent guest speakers from around the UK and the world
How will I learn?
The study of English requires you to develop skills in interpretation, critical thinking and communication.
You learn ways of arguing, reading and interpreting through small-group seminars, formal lectures, workshops and readings. Modules are assessed through coursework, portfolios, essays, dissertations and exams.
For more information, visit Studying at Sussex.
What will I achieve?
- knowledge of a range of different kinds of literature from various historical periods and contexts
- insight into the complex role that literature has played in shaping culture in the past and the present
- understanding theoretical approaches and how they influence the study of literature
- a sharp, critical awareness of how words can be used and what they can do
- development of conceptual abilities that enable the study of English in the context of related disciplines
- skills enhanced by independent critical thinking and research.
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 some of the ways theatre is made, significant theories on drama and theatre from the Greeks to the present day and the specific skills required to read and stage theatre texts. Teaching is through academic and practical methods throughout your course
Year 2
You familiarise yourself with developments and debates in contemporary theatre performance and composition • the study of the historical/cultural shift from modern to postmodern drama • writing for theatre • the early modern drama period
Final year
You specialise and choose from topics such as the study of theatre and ethics • approaches to making theatre politically • the body in performance • postdramatic theatre. You also choose from one of two final performance projects in which you undertake technical and performance roles
How will I learn?
You learn through a combination of seminars and practical workshops, where practice enables you to examine theoretical concepts, topics, methods and debates you are researching. Some modules are taught through seminar only. You also spend sustained periods in the studio, rehearsing and preparing performance projects and workshop presentations.
Your work is assessed by various means including seminar presentations, essays and longer dissertations, which train you in the academic disciplines of close reading and analysis, researching, writing, logical thought, critical evaluation of ideas, articulation of complex concepts, succinct expression and meticulous verbal presentation. There is also scope within your course to develop your own writing for theatre, as well as development of specialist production skills (eg devising, lighting, design, sound, directing). Your practical work is assessed through group workshop presentations, productions and critical reflective essays.
For more information, visit Studying at Sussex.
What will I achieve?
- a detailed knowledge of drama, theatre and performance, focusing on the modern and contemporary periods
- exploration of practical and performative concepts in drama, staging and the writing of texts
- an understanding of theatre as a social and political construct and as a form of communication. Performance offers a rich source of information about the way different cultures have developed
- intellectual understanding of the role of drama within society, as well as practical awareness – gained through exercises in writing, devising, acting and performance – of how drama is composed and staged
- by studying drama alongside other related subjects such as film, English or a language, you are able to make interdisciplinary connections
- a wide range of skills relating to analysis of texts, research, constructing bibliographies, presentation and articulation of ideas, collaboration and leadership, and critical and creative thinking
- if your course includes a language, the ability to speak and write the language to a high level, and to read dramatic texts in their original language.
Please note that these are the modules running in 2012.
Year 1
Core modules
Year 2
Core modules
Options
- Creative Writing in the Renaissance
- Early Modern Drama and Contemporary Theatre
- Period of Literature: 1500-1625
- Period of Literature: 1625-1750
- Period of Literature: 1750-1880
- Period of Literature: 1860-1945
- Primitivism at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century
- Representation and the Body
- Sense and Sexuality: Women and Writing in the Eighteenth Century
- Senses of the Self
- Staging the Renaissance: Shakespeare
- The Novel
- Transatlantic Rhetoric: Public Speech and Anglo-American Writing 1750-1900
- Travel, Landscape and the Imagination in Medieval Literature
- Writing for Theatre
Year 3
Core modules
Options
- Capital Culture: Money, Commerce and Writing
- Global Subjects: Caribbean and Diaspora Fictions
- Irish Writing after Joyce
- Islam, Literature and the 'West'
- Performing the Body
- Postdramatic Theatre
- Queer Literatures
- Special Author(s): Jean Rhys, Jamaica Kincaid and the Postcolonial Caribbean
- Special Author: Alfred Hitchcock
- Special Author: Christopher Marlowe
- Special Author: Dickens
- Special Author: Herman Melville
- Special Author: James Joyce
- Special Author: Jane Austen
- Special Author: John Ashbery
- Special Author: Mary Wollstonecraft
- Special Author: Salman Rushdie
- Special Author: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
- Special Author: Virginia Woolf
- Spectacular Imaginings: Renaissance and Restoration Theatre
- Technologies of Capture: Photography and Nineteenth Century Literature
- The Literatures of Africa
- The Uncanny
- Theatre, Performance and Ethics
- Utopias and Dystopias
- Ways of Seeing: Early Modern Drama and Visual Culture
Making Theatre
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
The aim of this module is to introduce you to the processes by which theatre or performance may be created. You will participate in and reflect on group-based approaches to making theatre, be they in the field of devising and/or text-based production. Games and exercises will encourage you to work with other students, creatively and productively with a view to generating material for performance. The module aims to develop ways of making theatre that stress interaction, teamwork and the value of focused workshop practice. The module will culminate in a group presentation in which short pieces that have either been devised or directed will be performed.
Reading Theatre Texts
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
This module introduces you to ways of reading and thinking critically about theatre texts. You will examine a number of texts in relation to dramatic conventions, as well as issues of theatre production and performance. You will look at how plays from different historical periods vary in form and content, focusing on stylistic and structural differences from a comparative perspective. The module aims to introduce you to analytical approaches to reading plays and to key issues in theatre and performance. Texts to be studied may include plays from different periods of theatre history.
Staging Text
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
This module concerns the staging of dramatic text in theatrical space. It will consider the many choices facing the actor or performer when delivering text, and will introduce you to contrasting practitioners' approaches to performing text. In addition, you will encounter approaches to stagecraft, which may include treatment of lighting, design, multimedia or costume, and the ways in which such issues affect the presentation of text.
Texts in Time 1
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 1
What is literature? How has it changed over time? What is the relationship between writing and the historical moment in which it was produced? How can we read texts to understand the ways in which they comment on and intervene in their particular cultural contexts? How do literary and other kinds of cultural artefacts enable us to reinterpret history and culture? How does the study of texts from other historical periods better enable us to understand our own? These are some of the questions which we will be exploring during the module.
Texts in Time 1 will introduce you to the study of many different kinds of texts - poetry, plays, letters, prose fiction, a novel, as well as visual texts - in their historical and cultural contexts. Following an introductory week, the module is divided into two blocks: the first focusing on the early modern period, and the second on the eighteenth century and Romantic period, from 1700-1820. Each week brings a new text or texts into consideration, but all are connected to the overarching theme of the module: 'Citizens and Strangers'.
Texts in Time 2
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
What is literature? How has it changed over time? What is the relationship between writing and the historical moment in which it was produced? How can we read texts to understand the ways in which they comment on and intervene in their particular cultural contexts? How do literary and other kinds of cultural artefacts enable us to reinterpret history and culture? How does the study of texts from other historical periods better enable us to understand our own? These are some of the questions which we will be exploring during the module.
Texts in Time 2 explores many different kinds of writing (poetry, autobiography, essays, novels) as well as visual texts (film, photography, the graphic novel) in their historical and cultural contexts. For those of you who have already taken Texts in Time 1, this module continues the chronological movement already begun on that module, but it can also be taken as a stand-alone module. Texts in Time 2 is divided into three blocks. The first block addresses texts from the nineteenth century, the second block focuses on 1922, a key moment in Modernism. The final block looks at contemporary writing and culture. Each week brings a new text or texts into consideration, but all are connected within each block to an overarching theme.
Theories of Drama
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 1
Theories of Drama will focus on the innovations of major drama theorists relating to the text, the audience, the performer and the performance space. You will study a range of writers that will include Aristotle, Stanislavsky, Brecht, Artaud, Grotowski, Boal, Lecoq and Brook. The module begins with an introductory session on what we understand by drama, theatre and performance. This will be followed by seminars based on the close study of a range of theoretical texts from Aristotle to the present. We focus on the major changes that these theorists have brought to thinking about theatre, as well as exploring their links with other forms of literary and critical theory. Each week, individual students will be asked to give short presentations based on the theme of that week's seminar. The topic will be agreed in consultation with your module tutor.
Approaches to Contemporary Performance
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module will familiarise you with approaches to contemporary performance, which acknowledge the opportunities afforded by theatre and theatricality in a profoundly uncertain world. You will engage with issues in contemporary stagecraft on a practical level, although workshops will necessarily be informed by a range of theoretical positions. Work will focus on the treatment of character but there will be opportunities to explore, for example, issues of signification on stage, non-linear plotting, and comprehensibility.
Modern and Postmodern Drama
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module will be taught as a series of seminars exploring the shift from naturalism to modernist and postmodernist theatre from the late 19th to the 21st century. It examines a number of plays that address important issues of modernity (and postmodernity), both in their form and content. We will look at the contribution and response of drama to social and cultural debates around the role of art, gender and sexuality, the family, the state and the nation. You will study a different play each week, give a short presentation in one of the seminars and engage fully in the discussion of all the texts.
Creative Writing in the Renaissance
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module introduces you to education and writing in early modern England. Not only will you explore the ways in which students were taught at school and university in this period, but we will attempt to recreate life in the early modern classroom, with its emphasis on oral and written argument and the need for students to be able to learn the principles of imitation so that they could then reproduce the style and methods of the works they studied.
You will explore why early modern writers wrote as they did, and what we can learn from understanding how they produced their works. We will also consider how early modern students learned about the law, philosophy, oratory, and history alongside what we think of as literature.
The module will be assessed through a series of short written pieces which will include imitations of letters, speeches and poems, as well as an essay and an oral assessment in the last seminar in which we will attempt to reproduce a Renaissance oral examination.
Early Modern Drama and Contemporary Theatre
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module is designed to allow you to follow your interest in the play texts and performances of the early modern theatre, studying a single play from this period in detail. This play may be chosen from the many plays that do not have modern editions (plays by Goffe, Brome and Davenant for instance), but might instead be a well-known play from the period (Shakespeare's Hamlet, for instance). A facsimile reproduction of an early edition will be used. This will allow you to encounter the text in its original format, unmediated by modern editorial conventions.
The module will be divided into two sections. The first will be based on an exploration of the playing conditions of the early modern theatre, the text itself and/or the context in which the play under consideration was both written and initially performed. The teaching and study will be tailored towards the themes of the play under consideration in any given year. You will work in a group towards producing a basic edited version of the play (with notes where necessary), familiarising yourself with the issues involved in editing such a text - for example questions of punctuation, format, spelling conventions, and textual variations.
The second part of the module will take what you have learned from your intensive focus upon the text, and use the edition you have produced as the basis for a performance that you will devise in a workshop environment. This will be done in conjunction with further study of the play and its performance history, and will aim particularly at using performance to elucidate interesting or contentious areas of the play text that can be identified. The final assessed performance that you produce will not necessarily be a simple performance or reading of the play itself, but will use the play as a starting point.
Period of Literature: 1500-1625
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
In this module you will examine literature from the reigns of Henry VIII to James I. The volume, variety and quality of writing produced in this period are astonishing. The 16th century saw the impact of an unprecedented expansion of England's capital city, which produced a thriving environment for professional writing, prompting the birth of commercial theatre in London and a flourishing book trade.
You will consider how literature came to be produced historically, looking at writing in its cultural setting with the help of visual texts such as paintings and architecture. You will address questions of literary history and theory, form and rhetoric within the network of institutions, practices and beliefs that constitute a culture as a whole. The module does not confine itself to major authors, but involves the consideration of appropriate themes and material drawn from various literary genres - drama, poetry and prose.
Topics explored include the rise of the commercial stage; sexualities and the transvestite stage; writing history; popular pamphlet culture; representations of the body; exploration and early colonialism; the sonnet; erotic writing; devotional writing; the city of London and money; religion; gender; death; representations of monarchy; the political stage; revenge tragedy; witchcraft and the birth of science.
Period of Literature: 1625-1750
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
This module examines the literary production of the period from the autocratic reign of the Stuart king Charles I to the beginnings of the Industrial Revolution. At its centre lies the regicide of Charles I in January 1649 - an event T. S. Eliot argued still divided British political society 300 years later. Even now it is a matter of some controversy to refer to the period between 1642 and 1649 as a rebellion or as the English Revolution, and between 1649 and 1660 as the Commonwealth or else as the Interregnum. However it is described, the extraordinary 125 years covered by this module have some claim to be the decisive period in the creation of what we think of as modern politics.
It is also a period of astonishing literary creativity. This is true both in terms of the volume, variety and quality of writing produced, and in terms of radical innovations in styles, in readerships, and in media. This module will include the study of a wide range of poetry, prose and play-texts. At the same time, it will involve trying to understand how this writing came to be produced historically. In particular, it will be concerned with the social life of texts, placing literary artifacts within the network of institutions, practices and beliefs that constitute a culture as a whole.
Period of Literature: 1750-1880
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
The module, taught in seminars supported by a weekly lecture series, will address a selection of authors and themes prominent between 1750 and 1880. The actual content will vary from year to year depending on the expertise of those available to teach it in any given year.
Authors to be studied will be selected from but not necessarily confined to: Johnson, Gray, Sterne, Goldsmith, Blake, Lewis, Austen, Wollstonecraft, Wordsworth, Shelley, Keats, Carlyle, De Quincey, Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, Ruskin, Dickens, Gaskell, Charlotte and Emily Brontë, W.M. Thackeray, Wilkie Collins, George Eliot, and Thomas Hardy.
Themes to be considered may includ sentimentalism and sensibility; slavery and empire; Romantic aesthetics and Romantic poetry; theories of the sublime and the imagination; the Gothic; responses to the French Revolution and the oppression of women; images of women; the condition of England question; progress and evolution; art and society; mind and spirit: the inner life; and culture in crisis
Period of Literature: 1860-1945
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 2
On this module you will study one of the truly momentous and troubling periods of British and world history. Imperialist conflict, the growth of nationalism, war, migration, feminism and the struggle for women's suffrage, the development of consumerism and of new forms of economic organisation, the emergence of anarchism, socialism, communism and fascism, the creation of the mass press, the radio and cinema: these are some of the contextual forces out of which emerged some of the most challenging, demanding, fascinating, rich and bewildering works of literature in English.
You will examine the links between modernity and modern/modernist literature in a range of texts, genres and authors. You will investigate notions of the avant-garde and the experimental in writing, and explore the ways in which literary texts participated in and responded to the revolutionary intellectual changes that marked this period, from Darwinism to psychoanalysis. Some of the topics we will investigate include: the consequences of science and technology (modernisation, urbanisation, sub-urbanisation); definitions and re-definitions of Englishness; the invention of traditions; the critique of modernity; the fate of liberalism; the impact of photography, the mass media and new forms of communication from the telephone to the motor car.
Primitivism at the Turn of the Nineteenth Century
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
Representation and the Body
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module will explore representations of the body in painting, photography and - in particular - in poetry, from the Renaissance to the modern period. It will focus on the interrelationships between the body and the poetic-text-as-body, the body and the political body, the body and power, the body and violence, the western and the non-western body, the body and disease, the body and gender, the body and the unconscious, the body and social and urban space, and the body and desire.
Topics covered include: the Renaissance body; body and science; the body and the foreign; the migrant body; Victorian poetry and photography; the body and the city; the body and modernism; the body and gender; the body, war, death and remembrance; and the body and fascism. While the focus of the module will be on English and American poetic texts, and European painting, film and photography, the module will have an interdisciplinary range, encouraging discussions about the relationship of the written word to the culture of images, icons and iconography.
Sense and Sexuality: Women and Writing in the Eighteenth Century
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module explores the representation of women and the construction of female sexuality and feeling in a wide range of 18th-century writing. Addressing fictional and non-fictional writing by both women and men in novels, medical works, advice books for women and erotic literature, the module explores contemporary debates about the place of women in society, (including personal conduct), and the place of sexuality (both socially-sanctioned and otherwise). A central concern will be attitudes to female feeling, from sexual passion to sensibility, and the ways in which feeling of various kinds enables conformity to, or critical interrogation of, a larger social and cultural order. Attention will also be paid to the relationship between bodies and passion, the social disciplining of feeling, and the relationship between emotion and gender. Your focus on literary works will be supplemented with a range of additional sources that will enable you to contextualise the novels and poems and link them into contemporary debates and attitudes.
Senses of the Self
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
The module takes as its starting point a common assumption that one of the roots of modern identity lies in a reconfiguration of ideas concerning subjectivity and the self in the 16th and 17th centuries. This assumption has aroused a great deal of debate in recent years. The whole area of study has been renewed and transformed by the application of new theoretical approaches (from feminism, psychoanalysis, or textuality) to the study of the past and the interpenetration of the past in the present.
During the module you will study a broad range of texts (from Chaucer's Canterbury Tales in the 14th century to Swift's Gulliver's Travels in the 18th), in order to investigate changes in the construction of personal and sexual identity through history. The module contains both canonical and non-canonical texts, including some European authors studied in translation. Issues covered will range from philosophy to pornography, mythology to autobiography, and medicine to travel literature.
Staging the Renaissance: Shakespeare
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module considers a range of Shakespeare's plays (comedies, tragedies, tragi-comedies and romances) from different stages of his career, analysing the playwright's stagecraft, his use of language, and his reworking of traditional forms for the
commercial stage. Although you will explore some recent adaptations for stage and screen, you wil focus particularly on the plays as produced in their original historical and cultural contexts.
The module will familiarise you with Renaissance drama's negotiation of contested social and political issues at the turn of the 17th century. You will investigate the social processes of the theatre - notably the playhouses used by Shakespeare's company (the Theatre, the Globe and Blackfriars) - and focus on the interplay of Shakespearean texts and their performance in the production of meaning.
The Novel
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module explores the complex history of the novel as a form, from the 17th century to the modern period. The aim of the module is to describe the development of different traditions of novel writing, examine innovations to the novel as a form made since the 17th century, place the English novel in the context of the European novel, and introduce you to a range of important discussions about the novel as a genre, its audiences, its cultural functions and its relation to the social world. Novelists discussed will include Aphra Behn, Madame de Lafayette, Daniel Defoe, Johann Goethe, Charles Dickens, Gustave Flaubert, Henry James, James Joyce, Virginia Woolf and Marcel Proust. At the end of the module, you will be able to understand and apply the concept of genre in literary analysis; think creatively and critically about the ways in which specific generic conventions have been used in the novels you are reading; and synthesise formal, cultural and historical levels of analysis.
Transatlantic Rhetoric: Public Speech and Anglo-American Writing 1750-1900
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
Travel, Landscape and the Imagination in Medieval Literature
15 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
Writing for Theatre
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 2
This module focuses on writing for the theatre from a critical and creative perspective. You will explore the work of a number of contemporary playwrights, examining the way they approach writing, and the techniques they employ. You will focus on how playwrights have experimented with theatrical form and structure, and investigate the way in which themes and critical issues become manifest in theatrical writing. You will also consider how such writers might provide starting points for your own work. To complement this, a range of creative writing exercises will encourage you to develop your own theatre writing, through the composition of monologues, dialogues and dramatic scenes.
English Research Colloquium
0 credits
Autumn & spring teaching, Year 3
Final Year Performance Project
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The aim of this module is to allow you to engage in depth with processes leading to a full-length production or performance. You will be expected to feed into their work (and into that of the group) the most relevant areas of skill and knowledge which they have gained elsewhere on the programme. In the context of preparing and rehearsing for performance, you will be expected to practice, to extend and to develop the physical, creative, intellectual and practical skills necessary for the work. You will also analyse and reflect on their own and the group's processes. You will be expected to develop their own approaches to researching and studying the text or material which forms the basis for the process and the performance. You will be expected to document and analyse your own work and the group's work effectively, and make suggestions of how it might be developed further.
Capital Culture: Money, Commerce and Writing
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Global Subjects: Caribbean and Diaspora Fictions
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
On this module you explore Caribbean writing in the context of the long and diverse history of travel and migration that has been a defining feature of the region, from Columbus' arrival in the 'New World' in 1492 to the present day. The Caribbean is a region characterized by a violent and turbulent history; as the editors of Caribbean Literature and the Environment: Between Nature and Culture argue, "there is probably no other region in the world that has been so radically altered in terms of human and botanic migration, transplantation, and settlement than the Caribbean."
The module will introduce you to the history that has made the Caribbean such a volatile and tensely-hybrid cultural context, including: white settlement, the decimation of indigenous peoples, enslavement of Africans, indentureship of Indians (and others) through to more recent migrations to Britain and North America. Focusing on a range of genres (poetry, novels, memoir, travel and music), the module will offer comparative readings of narratives of leave-taking, sea-crossings and arrival and the debates about identity, belonging, home and homeland that these generate. You will focus on the global networks, starting with the slave trade, that have connected the Caribbean to Europe, Africa and North America and will explore the cultural and historical continuities of economic exploitation of the region's natural resources (including gold, sugar, cocoa, coffee, sun-sea-sand and labour in the sex, service, culture and tourist industries).
The selected texts allow exploration of the traffic in ideas and culture that have travelled in these circuits of trade and have made Caribbean subjects appear innately cosmopolitan. The texts that this module focuses on suggest a longer history as well as a more fraught idea of the Caribbean subject as the archetypally 'global subject'.
Irish Writing after Joyce
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module follows some developments in anglophone Irish literature during the 20th century, paying particular attention to the influence of James Joyce on his contemporaries and on later writers. It concentrates on the ways in which Irish writing has been central to modernist and postcolonial projects. Topics may include parochialism, regionalism, bilingualism, neutrality, partition, sexuality, violence, commemoration and diaspora. You will discuss the emergence of distinctly Irish responses to the challenges of literary forms to 20th-century experience. You should gain an understanding of the development of literary culture in a small nation whose oral traditions and poetic traditions were established in an apparently vanishing language, while the majority of the people spoke and read English. You should learn enough about Irish history, politics and culture in the 20th century to provide an adequate context for understanding how writers such as Joyce, Bowen, Beckett, Heaney and Muldoon emerged from a culture both vexed and enriched by certain conflicts and heritages.
Islam, Literature and the 'West'
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
In both domestic and international contemporary politics, few issues are more urgent than the widely perceived clash between the ideologies of western European capitalism and Islamic radicalism. This module offers you the opportunity to examine in detail the shifting terms in which the encounter between a Christian west and an Islamic east has been conducted in predominantly English literatures, from the rhetoric of the early crusades to the present day. Covering a broad range of texts and genres, and including some journalism and film, emphasis will be placed upon: concepts of holy war; Islam on the early modern English stage; the emerging study of the ‘orient’ in the 17th century and the first English Qur’an; Enlightenment fantasies of the East and Muhammad; the romantics and the East; the Rushdie affair; and more recent developments of this encounter both before and after 11 September 2001.
Performing the Body
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module considers some of the ways theatre and performance studies documents and theorizes the body in and as performance. In particular, you will focus on the use and representation of the body in performance, from the late 20th century to the present day. We will consider the complex and intriguing ways in which live performance (theatre, dance, performance art, protest marches, exhibitions) positions the body as a fluid and performative site through which historical, cultural and social identities can be located and contested. How do constructions of the body produce hierarchizing and marginalizing effects? How does embodiment both delimit and explode the rhetorics and discourses that frame the body in live performance? You will examine a range of key debates that focus on the body and on notions of subjectivity and identity politics. You will examine specific performance "scenes" and artists in order to develop in-depth discussions that will culminate in a series of performative seminar presentations. The module will foreground some of the critical issues that arise when we consider the body as an event that problematizes the distinction between the live and the mediated, the "real" and the performed, the staged and the everyday.
Postdramatic Theatre
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This course will introduce you to notions of post-dramatic theatre by examining theoretical positions and practical applications. You will consider what might constitute theatre in a post-representation world, and the ways in which the fundamentals of dramatic theatre - character, plot and dialogue - are called into question. You will also examine the aesthetics of the post-dramatic through your own practice and will be invited to develop approaches to performance that seek to bracket or banish representation in the theatre.
Queer Literatures
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
Special Author(s): Jean Rhys, Jamaica Kincaid and the Postcolonial Caribbean
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module introduces you to the literature of the Caribbean and its diaspora and to some key cultural debates in Caribbean, postcolonial and feminist literary discourses through reading the work of Jean Rhys and Jamaica Kincaid, two of the most prominent women writers from the Caribbean. The module addresses issues such as race and literary constructions of the nation; authenticity, orality and questions of voice; gender, sexuality and resistance; home and belonging; servants and madams; life writing; reception and literary reputations; questions of literary belonging and cultural identity; and writing and authorship after colonialism. The selection of texts includes: Jean Rhys's, Wide Sargasso Sea, Voyage in the Dark, Tigers Are Better Looking, and Smile Please and Jamaica Kincaid's Annie John, Autobiography of My Mother, My Brother, Mr Potter, and Talk Story.
Special Author: Alfred Hitchcock
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module will examine the work of one of the most prolific and certainly the most prolifically written-about director in the history of cinema, Alfred Hitchcock, a director whose career spans the history of cinema in the twentieth century, and whose influence can be traced not only in other filmmaking practices, but also in literature, the visual arts, and cultural theory. "Hitchcockian" is a designation that is invoked with as much frequency as "Shakespearean" or "Jamesian"; the term suggests not only the style of a specific body of work, but also of the work it has influenced, in many media. Hitchcock has proved to be not only the most durably engrossing of filmmakers, but also the one through whose work successive waves of critical and theoretical thinking have articulated themselves. Hitchcock and his work are central not only to how we understand the history of cinema, but also the (overlapping and intertwined) histories of authorship and genre, writing, psychoanalysis, narrative theory, feminist theory, and queer theory. Hitchcock is, thus, one of the great organising figures for the intellectual and aesthetic production of the twentieth century: it would be hard to think about the century without him. The module will offer you not only the chance to study, broadly and deeply, the work of one of the twentieth century's central authorial figures, but it will also allow you to deepen and complicate your interests in various critical and theoretical paradigms and methods. The module will move chronologically across Hitchcock's career, but will also be organised conceptually around a sequence of theoretical problems. The module will conclude by looking beyond Hitchcock's work to the problem of the 'Hitchcockian'.
Special Author: Christopher Marlowe
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Variously demonised and celebrated as an atheist, sodomite, spy, poetic innovator and dramatic phenomenon, and violently killed at the age of 29, Christopher Marlowe and his work still have the power in the twenty first century to shock and surprise .
This module offers the opportunity to explore Marlowe's extraordinary poetry and drama, from his remarkable debut on the professional stage with Tamburlaine, through his invention of the English history play with Edward II, to his development of Ovidian narrative verse and the lyric in English (and their erotic possibilities).
You will explore the career of this poet and playwright - this "most enigmatic genius of the English literary Renaissance" - paying particular attention to the contexts, content and form of his work.
Special Author: Dickens
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module will explore a range of Dickens's work from his early writing to his final uncompleted novel, and will include discussion of his journalism and short stories as well as the well-known novels. We will look at the development of his career as the most successful and popular novelist of his generation, who used his writing to investigate and actively participate in a wide range of contemporary issues and debates about society and the self between the 1830s and 1870. These include the nature of modern society - particularly the city - and the relationships between social classes and between the underworld and dominant forms of power; the family as both a social institution and a psychological space; the representation of childhood and femininity; notions of identity, and the relationship between 'normal' and 'abnormal', conscious and unconscious mental states.
We will explore Dickens use and transformation of particular genres and conventions - fairly tales, ghost stories, gothic fiction, detective fiction and grotesque and documentary realism - discussing how his shifting narrative forms and methods relate to the social and psychological themes of his work.
Special Author: Herman Melville
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Special Author: James Joyce
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Special Author: Jane Austen
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module approaches Austen's novels from three distinct perspectives. First, it contextualises them in terms of the 18th-century literature that Austen read, and frequently alludes to. (Likely authors include Cowper, Burney, Edgeworth and Radcliffe.) In addition, the module considers the impact of Austen's fiction on subsequent readers, evident most powerfully in the phenomenon of the Janeites. This module uses literary critical and popular cultural versions of Austen to reflect both on the evolution of Austen's canonical status, and on the part that fantasies of gender, sexuality, ethnicity and class have played in her reception. Finally, since Austen's novels have provided fodder for innumerable film versions, the module will examine the 'Austen' constructed for us by a selection of recent film and TV adaptations. Although Austen's fiction will be at the heart of the module, you will be expected to read a significant body of additional literature.
Special Author: John Ashbery
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Starting with American poet John Ashbery's first book 'Some Trees' and working our way through Ashbery's major experiments in form ('The Tennis Court Oath', collaborative books including 'The Vermont Notebook' and 'A Nest Of Ninnies', and his epic 'Flow Chart'), participants in this module will learn not just a great deal about Ashbery's poetry, but about the post-war American avant-garde more generally speaking. Our understanding of Ashbery's work will be informed by reading into his central role in Abstract Expressionism (as art critic for 'Art News', as collaborator with relevant artists, and as a writer who produced a number of important poetic ekphrases); his friendship and collaborations with Beat Generation figures; his exchanges with Pop Art and the Warhol scene; his engagement with experimental cinema practitioners; and, more recently, his emergence as an important voice in queer writing.
Along the way, module participants will delight in Ashbery's complex blend of dismodules that embrace the narrative, the "personal," the metaphysical, and even mystical. We will focus lovingly on individual lines and stanzas of Ashbery's poetry. We will make measured assessments of the poet's work as generally brilliant if at times problematic. We will refuse (for the most part) to adhere to any one of the 'party lines' we associate with Ashbery criticism, even as we learn from them. By the end of the module, we will understand the historical and literary contexts of Ashbery's work, as we will be motivated to return to his poetry anew, curious, and alert.
Special Author: Mary Wollstonecraft
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Special Author: Salman Rushdie
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Rushdie is a complex and challenging writer whose work not only intersects with, but actively influences and informs, a range of cultural and literary debates. Indeed, because his novels, stories and essays have consistently challenged the boundaries of culture, they have tended to generate polarised and often partisan critical responses. On this module, you will venture into the highly contested field of Rushdie criticism by evaluating his key literary texts using a variety of reading strategies and theoretical methodologies. For example, you will explore postmodernist debates on the construction of history and identity as well as postcolonial concerns with race, hybridity and political power. You will address core issues such as intertextuality, cinematic montage and narrative authority. And you will engage with wider cultural concerns relating to representation, performativity and documentation. These diverse critical perspectives will provide you with a sound knowledge of the social, cultural and political influences informing Rushdie’s work, and give you the analytical tools to develop your own lines of enquiry.
Special Author: Samuel Taylor Coleridge
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
Special Author: Virginia Woolf
30 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module concentrates on the work of one of the best-known and most widely-read women writers of the 20th century, Virginia Woolf. Most students will already have encountered Woolf's work in your Year 2 modules; it is also very likely that you will come to the module with some knowledge of Woolf's life and that of her friends and family. This module will deepen your knowledge and understanding of Woolf's work, both in its historical context and in terms of the kind of conceptual and theoretical questions that her work raises. The module is designed to challenge what you think you already know about Woolf, and the kinds of preconceptions that readers often bring to Woolf and her work, and whether those are positive or negative. You think you may know who Virginia Woolf was, or what she wrote, but what about Virginia Stephen? What would happen if you stopped reading Woolf as a modernist and a woman writer? What other conceptual or historical frames could illuminate her work in new ways? What does Woolf have to do with the development of cinema, or the history of photography and the visual arts?
These are some of the questions that the module will address and encourage you to pursue through independent study. At the end of the module, you will: have read most of Woolf's novels and sampled some of her writing in other genres; have familiarised yourself with the history of the reception of that work; have learnt to challenge your own preconceptions about her work and its historical and conceptual contexts; and have learnt how to devise, structure, pursue and realise an independent research project, following detailed advice from your module tutor.
Spectacular Imaginings: Renaissance and Restoration Theatre
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module studies Renaissance and Restoration drama in its historical and sociocultural contexts. Organised thematically, it considers how political events such as the build up to the English civil wars, the revolution itself and then the restoration of the monarchy, impacted on the late 16th- and 17th-century stage. Among the topics explored will be unruly sexualities; violence and eloquence; political pornography; staging London; the court masque; and domestic tragedy. A selection of drama from the following playwrights will feature on the module: Kyd, Marlowe, Shakespeare, Jonson, Heywood, Ford, Massinger, Webster, Middleton, Dekker, Beaumont, Fletcher, Cary, Wycherley, and Behn.
Technologies of Capture: Photography and Nineteenth Century Literature
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The Literatures of Africa
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module will sample the literary and intellectual work of a range of African authors. Current debates about African identity, postcolonialism, homosexuality, the 'Black Atlantic' and African cultural history are studied alongside the primary texts, and emphasis is placed on the different political and cultural contexts of the material. We look at the ways in which the selected authors construct a locale in their texts to explore geographical and cultural difference, as well as questions of sexual, economic and political power. Other topics to be studied include nationalism and cultural identity; writing the body; oral cultures and art forms; cultural flows; representations of migration, displacement and diaspora; and the literature of post-Apartheid South Africa. Canonical novels from Africa, such as Ngugi wa Thiongo's The River Between and Bessie Head's A Question of Power are studied alongside poems and novels by new African writers and black British writers. Taken together, the authors on this module reveal the multiple, dynamic languages and styles of modern African writers.
The Uncanny
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
The uncanny is difficult to define: it is mysterious, eerie, at once strange and familiar. It offers especially productive possibilities for exploring issues of identity and liminality, boundaries and interdisciplinarity. This module will engage with the uncanny across a wide range of texts and contexts, from literature (novels, short stories, drama and poetry) to film. Discussion focuses on a number of linked topics, including repetition, doubles, strange coincidences, animism, live burial, telepathy, death and laughter. The module aims to develop your engagement with the notion of the uncanny across a broad range of texts; to develop your reading and critical analysis skills; and to enhance your capacity for critical reflection on your experience of the familiar and the strange, the ordinary and the extra-ordinary.
Theatre, Performance and Ethics
15 credits
Autumn teaching, Year 3
This module looks at a series of contemporary plays and theatre productions in relation to the ethics of representation. It will explore the writer's or the director's responsibilities in staging the self and the other in theatre and the strategies they adopt to highlight and problematise this process. By combining theoretical, textual and performance analysis, the module will engage with debates surrounding the representation of violence, trauma, sexuality, alterity and cultural and autobiographical memory in theatre. We will look at concepts such as meta-theatre and the role of the author in the theatre text as well as practices that aim to embody ethical positions in and through performance. In addition to recent thinking about ethics and representation in theatre and performance, the module will cover contemporary British and Irish playwrights and productions by contemporary theatre practitioners from the UK and France.
Utopias and Dystopias
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
This module explores the production of utopian and dystopian fictions from the sixteenth century (Thomas More's publication in 1516 of Utopia) to the present day. It examines the production of utopian images and thought in a number of specific cultural and historical contexts. These include the sixteenth century context in which More originally developed the concept of utopia; the production in the eighteenth century of utopian and dystopian responses to the enlightenment (particularly those of Swift and Voltaire); the nineteenth century utopian tradition in the US (Hawthorne, Thoreau); the explosion of utopian thinking at the end of the nineteenth century (with writers such as Bellamy, Wells and Morris); the relationship between modernism and utopia (particularly in relation to Woolf and Kafka); the growth of dystopian responses to modernity in the nineteen thirties and forties (Orwell, Huxley); the importance of utopian thinking in relation to feminism, from Sarah Scott to Wollstonecraft to Shelley to Atwood; and the shifting role of utopian and dystopian thinking in marshalling the political possibilities of literature from the sixties to the present day (from Beckett to Cormac McCarthy).
Throughout this wide ranging module, we will focus closely on a number of central questions. How far is it possible for literary works to imagine a better or a perfect world? How far is it possible for such imaginings to effect actual social change? Are utopian fantasies politically regressive, an opiate to distract us from material social inequality? What is the role of dystopian thinking? Does dystopian fiction contradict utopian thought forms, or can dystopian writing produce utopian possibilities? What is the relationship between utopian thinking and hope? Is there a theological dimension to utopian thought? What is the relation between science and utopia? In addressing these questions, the module will offer a means of thinking broadly but rigorously about the role of literature in transforming social conditions, and making the world a better place.
Ways of Seeing: Early Modern Drama and Visual Culture
30 credits
Spring teaching, Year 3
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: AAB-ABB
Specific entry requirements: A levels must include English Literature or the combined A level in English Language and Literature, at grade A.
- International Baccalaureate
Typical offer: 34 points overall
Specific entry requirements: Higher Level subjects must include English A1 or A2, with a final grade of 6/7.
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: Access to HE Diploma must contain substantial Level 3 credits in Literature. Alternatively, applicants will need grade A in A level English Literature or the combined English Language & Literature in addition to the Access Diploma.
For more information refer to Access to HE Diploma.
- Advanced Diploma
Typical offer: Pass with grade B in the Diploma and A in the Additional and Specialist Learning
Specific entry requirements: The Additional and Specialist Learning must be A-level English Literature or the combined A-level in English Language & Literature, at grade A.
For more information refer to Advanced Diploma.
- BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma
Typical offer: DDD-DDM
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will also need A level English Literature or the combined A level in English Language and Literature, at grade A, in addition to the BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma.
For more information refer to BTEC Level 3 Extended Diploma.
- European Baccalaureate
Typical offer: Overall result of at least 77%
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need to achieve a final mark of at least 8/10 in English.
For more information refer to European Baccalaureate.
- Finnish Ylioppilastutkinto
Typical offer: Overall average result in the final matriculation examinations of at least 6.0
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need Laudatur in English
- French Baccalauréat
Typical offer: Overall final result of at least 13/20
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need at least 14/20 in English.
- German Abitur
Typical offer: Overall result of 1.8 or better
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need a final result of at least 14/15 in English.
- Irish Leaving Certificate (Higher level)
Typical offer: AAAABB-AABBBB
Specific entry requirements: Higher Level subjects must include English at grade A.
- Italian Diploma di Maturità or Diploma Pass di Esame di Stato
Typical offer: Final Diploma mark of at least 90/100
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need to demonstrate high levels of ability in literature.
- Scottish Highers and Advanced Highers
Typical offer: AAABB-AABBB
Specific entry requirements: Highers must include English at grade A. Successful applicants would normally be expected to offer Advanced Higher English (at grade A) in addition to the Higher.
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
Specific entry requirements: Successful applicants will need at least 9/10 in English.
- Welsh Baccalaureate Advanced Diploma
Typical offer: Pass the Core plus at least AB in two A-levels
Specific entry requirements: Options must include two A levels, one of which must be English Literature or the combined A level in English Language & Literature, at grade A.
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
English is a multidisciplinary and flexible subject, and this course gives you the critical and communication skills to prepare you for employment in fields such as Higher Education, journalism, the arts, teaching and the media.
Recent graduates have taken up a wide range of posts with employers including: associate producer at Opera Up Close • editing assistant at The Folio Society • editorial assistant at Anova Books Group • journalist at Strategy 1 • junior journalist at Surrey Mirror • project developer at I-Bizz • researcher at Bayley Needham Ltd • runner at ITV • search engine optimisation copywriter at Fresh Egg • students’ union president at the University of Sussex • administrative assistant at the Tate • autocue assistant at the BBC • personal assistant to sales director at Hodder & Stoughton • children’s publishing assistant at Mogzilla • intern at the National Portrait Gallery • policy consultant in the Civil Service • publicity assistant at Pan Macmillan • recruitment consultant at Reflex Computer Recruitment • runner at Tigress Productions • teaching assistant at the University of British Columbia.
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.
This course prepares you for employment in fields such as theatre and performing arts, arts administration, further study to Masters and PhD level at professional conservatoires and drama schools, and for the media, film and journalistic professions. Other graduates will use their skills in applied and socially engaged practices, such as drama therapy, community and prison work, and teaching.
Recent graduates have taken up a range of posts with employers including: associate producer at Brand New School • marketing executive at Triniti Marketing • operations executive at Boundary i-Media • senior team leader at IMG • marketing executive at Future Publishing • PA to Head of Business and Legal Affairs at BBC Worldwide • production assistant at the Arcola Theatre.
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.
Also refer to School of English: Career opportunities and School of English: Student perspectives.
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.
Sam's career perspective
'Studying drama at Sussex was challenging, informative and always rewarding, and being able to combine drama studies with another subject really added depth and richness to seminars and workshops.
‘The small-group teaching ensures that you have a good relationship with your tutors, who are keen to help, friendly and approachable.
‘The theoretical side of the course allowed me to choose in which direction to take my studies. Performance projects were enormously challenging but incredibly rewarding as they make you push the boundaries of your knowledge and really hone your practical skills. My final-year project not only gave me great insight into the ground-breaking writer, Samuel Beckett, but completely reshaped the way I thought about theatre.
‘Since graduating, a number of us who studied together have set up a performance group and are currently in the process of making work. Drama at Sussex not only facilitated the knowledge and understanding for us to do this but it instilled in us a lifelong passion and enthusiasm.’
Sam Caseley
Drama Studies and English graduate
Elizabeth's student perspective
‘Drama at Sussex has been an enlightening experience and has allowed me to expand my knowledge and understanding while being able to tailor my module choices to suit my interest. And being part of such a close-knit community, inclusive of both students and lecturers, I’ve always felt supported and valued.
‘The variety of modules open to me on a joint honours course with English is staggering. I’ve studied a myriad of texts across a whole variety of forms from novels and poetry to graphic novels and film. I’ve been able to transfer the knowledge I gained in English to my Drama modules and, aided by the wide resources available from the Library, my theoretical and practical work has flourished.
‘A degree at Sussex isn’t just about learning, but about developing the skills to be successful throughout life. Different modes of assessment, from performance to presentation as well as essays, have led me to develop confidence and creativity. These are necessary in the career of teaching, which I hope to pursue on graduation.’
Elizabeth Fenn-Tye
BA in Drama Studies and English
Esme's student perspective
‘Sussex is renowned for being at the forefront of political, social and cultural debate, and taking drama studies here has definitely challenged my preconceptions of performance.
‘The course has taught me to think independently, and allowed me to pick modules that suit my interests. I’ve formed really strong relationships with my tutors who have supported me throughout the course.
‘The highlight of my degree has been the performance project, an intensive process of collaboration which was so rewarding to perform to the public and gave me the chance to expand my knowledge of the technical side of performance by lighting the piece.
‘Studying drama at Sussex has given me so much confidence in my academic and performative abilities that I feel I could succeed in any career but, having enjoyed it so much, I’ve decided to continue my studies here with a Masters.’
Esme Clemo
BA in Drama Studies and English
Contact our School
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.
How do I find out more?
For more information, contact:
English, Arts B,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9QN, UK
E ug.admissions@english.sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 877303
School of English
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.
How do I find out more?
For more information, contact:
Drama Studies, Arts B,
University of Sussex, Falmer,
Brighton BN1 9QN, UK
E ug.admissions@english.sussex.ac.uk
T +44 (0)1273 877303
School of English
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
