We welcome applications from the United States of America
We've put together information and resources to guide your application journey as a student from the United States of America.
Overview
Top reasons to study with us
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3rd for Creative Writing
The Guardian University Guide (2026)
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6th for Creative Writing
The Complete University Guide (2026)
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7th for English
The Guardian University Guide (2026)
Explore a vast range of literary works, from ancient myth to the contemporary graphic novel, and study a host of historical movements, from the medieval world to the rise of human rights. Through engagement with texts and artefacts crossing continents and centuries, our interdisciplinary programme will immerse you in both literature and history.
Why Lancaster?
Explore a city steeped in history and with the Lake District, home of the Romantic poets, on its doorstep
Be inspired by our rich programme of free literary and historical events on campus, online, and in the city’s historic Castle Quarter
Benefit from internship opportunities, including residential positions at Wordsworth Grasmere in the heart of the English Lake District and placements with local heritage organisations
Enhance your professional skills by getting involved with our student-run literary journals: Cake, Lux, Flash, and Errant
Address the challenges to our world past, present and future, from environmental change, to war, and conflict and human rights
Be taught by critics, writers and historians with international reputations
Past worlds: world literature
You will engage closely with texts and artefacts crossing continents and centuries, exploring the profound question of where literature ends and history begins. In doing so, you will learn how to understand the worlds of others, both on these shores and far beyond. In your first year, you will be given a broad grounding in both literary and historical analysis. This will help you make informed decisions about the particular literary themes and historical periods that really interest you and, indeed, may lead you to your final-year research project, where you work on a literary and/or historical topic or theme of your own choosing. In Literature, this could be anything from, say, Renaissance sermons to filmic representations of World War One; whilst in History, you could choose, for example, a global phenomenon like the Transatlantic Slave Trade or an episode from Lancaster’s own rich history such as the infamous execution of ten people for witchcraft in 1612.
Literary and historical communities
To supplement your studies, we offer an extensive range of literary and/or historical events, some of which take place in the University Suite at Lancaster’s spectacular medieval Priory nearby. These include:
Talks from visiting scholars and well-known authors
Access to our interdisciplinary Research Centres for Regional Heritage, Digital Humanities, and War and Diplomacy
Social events such as our October Evening and May Gathering, both held at the Priory
The city of Lancaster and its surrounds – from the Lake District to the Bay coastline and the Forest of Bowland – are steeped in history. From Bronze Age stone circles to Viking-age graves and medieval abbeys, and from Roman forts to memorials of the Transatlantic Slave Trade, the region is rich in the living remains of past cultures for you to explore. Over ten centuries, the Lancaster’s Norman castle has been a fortress, court and prison, now the heart of a vibrant historic city.
To build on your studies, you can discover the latest research by attending our History seminar series, where guest historians from across the UK come to share their insights and discuss their findings. Connect with fellow student historians in the student-led History Society for organised trips and talks.
Lancaster is also well-known for its a rich cultural life, and events such as Lancaster Litfest give you the opportunity to immerse yourself in Literary Lancaster.This is an excellent way to make valuable professional connections and to establish friendships.
Professional development
You will have a range of opportunities to develop real-world skills that will prepare you for your future career. You might, for example, volunteer at Lancaster LitFest or one of the museums, or apply for one our residential internships at Wordsworth Grasmere, or help manage one of our four student-run literary journals (Cake, Flash, Lux and Errant), giving you invaluable experience in writing, publishing, and marketing.
Throughout your degree you will gain the vital professional skills that all employers value, such as clarity of writing, presenting well-researched arguments, and creative and critical thinking.
Discover a wide expanse of genres and time periods, right up to newly published literature. Our students explain what it’s like to study English Literature at Lancaster University, from our close-knit community and small-group teaching, to the accessibility of our friendly teaching staff.
Be part of Literary Lancaster - a vibrant community of critics and writers. Enjoy our rich programme of free literary events both on campus and in the city’s historic Castle Quarter.
We are always looking to support, encourage, and celebrate our students.
Your year abroad
Study abroad
The study abroad option is an exciting opportunity for anyone who is thinking of working abroad during their career or who simply wants the experience of living and studying overseas as part of their degree.
Often study abroad students describe the year abroad as a “transformative experience”, as it can shape your future career path as well as having a positive impact on your personal development.
On a study abroad course, you'll spend two years at Lancaster before going overseas in your third year to study at one of our international partner universities. This will help you to
develop your global outlook
expand your professional network
increase your cultural awareness
develop your personal skills.
You’ll return to Lancaster for your final year of study in year four.
Host universities
During your year abroad, you will choose specialist modules relating to your degree and potentially other modules offered by the host university that are specialisms of that university and country.
The places available at our overseas partners vary every year. In previous years destinations for students in the Faculty have included Australia, USA, Canada, Europe and Asia.
Alternative option
We will make reasonable endeavours to place students at an approved overseas partner university that offers appropriate modules. Occasionally places overseas may not be available for all students who want to study abroad or the place at the partner university may be withdrawn if core modules are unavailable.
If you are not offered a place to study overseas, you will be able to transfer to the equivalent standard 3-year degree scheme and would complete your studies at Lancaster. Lancaster University cannot accept responsibility for any financial aspects of the year abroad.
Careers
Studying English Literature and History at Lancaster will prepare you for a range of careers in traditional fields such as publishing, education, journalism, writing, heritage and the arts, television, and the media. You could go on to work as a librarian or archivist or take further qualifications to enter the legal profession or social work. Graduates of English Literature and History go on to roles as cabinet ministers, government advisors, intelligence operatives and diplomats, and leaders in the armed forces.
Our recent graduates have gone on to become:
Authors
Journalists
Publishers
Teachers
Computer programmers
Game writers
Copywriters
Advertisers
Lawyers
Financiers
The course also lays a strong foundation for further specialisation. Many of our students go on to postgraduate study at Lancaster and elsewhere.
Careers and employability support
Our degrees open up an extremely wide array of career pathways in businesses and organisations, large and small, in the UK and overseas.
We run a paid internship scheme specifically for our arts, humanities and social sciences students, supported by a specialist Employability Team. The team offer individual consultations and tailored application guidance, as well as careers events, development opportunities, and resources.
Whether you have a clear idea of your potential career path or need some help considering the options, our friendly team is on hand.
Lancaster is unique in that every student is eligible to participate in The Lancaster Award which recognises activities such as work experience, community engagement or volunteering and social development. A valuable addition to your CV!
Find out more about Lancaster’s careers events, extensive resources and personal support for Careers and Employability.
Explore Student Futures
Our graduates go on to a diverse range of careers from academics to celebrated poets, screen-writers and novelists. Others go into a host of other careers closely related to literary study, such as teaching, publishing, copywriting and advertising. A degree in literary studies can, though, lead to other, less obvious futures, such as psychotherapy, emerging markets consultancy, data analysis and finance.
Find out about some of the careers our alumni have entered into after graduation.
Entry requirements
These are the typical grades that you will need to study this course. This section will tell you whether you need qualifications in specific subjects, what our English language requirements are, and if there are any extra requirements such as attending an interview or submitting a portfolio.
Qualifications and typical requirements accordion
AAB
36 Level 3 credits at Distinction plus 9 Level 3 credits at Merit
We accept the Advanced Skills Baccalaureate Wales in place of one A level, or equivalent qualification, as long as any subject requirements are met.
DDD
A level at grade B plus BTEC(s) at DD, or A levels at grade AB plus BTEC at D
35 points overall with 16 points from the best 3 HL subjects
We are happy to admit applicants on the basis of five Highers, but where we require a specific subject at A level, we will typically require an Advanced Higher in that subject. If you do not meet the grade requirement through Highers alone, we will consider a combination of Highers and Advanced Highers in separate subjects. Please contact the Admissions team for more information.
Distinction overall
Help from our Admissions team
If you are thinking of applying to Lancaster and you would like to ask us a question, complete our enquiry form and one of the team will get back to you.
Delivered in partnership with INTO Lancaster University, our one-year tailored foundation pathways are designed to improve your subject knowledge and English language skills to the level required by a range of Lancaster University degrees. Visit the INTO Lancaster University website for more details and a list of eligible degrees you can progress onto.
Contextual admissions
Contextual admissions could help you gain a place at university if you have faced additional challenges during your education which might have impacted your results. Visit our contextual admissions page to find out about how this works and whether you could be eligible.
Course structure
We continually review and enhance our curriculum to ensure we are delivering the best possible learning experience, and to make sure that the subject knowledge and transferable skills you develop will prepare you for your future. The University will make every reasonable effort to offer programmes and modules as advertised. In some cases, changes may be necessary and may result in new modules or some modules and combinations being unavailable, for example as a result of student feedback, timetabling, Professional Statutory and Regulatory Bodies' (PSRB) requirements, staff changes and new research. Not all optional modules are available every year.
Discovery modules
Humanities, arts and social sciences offer important and innovative perspectives on the topics and debates that are shaping our futures. Each year you will take a Discovery module alongside your core subject modules. Discovery modules are designed to empower you to develop your individual voice and skills.
Designed to enhance your personal development, choose one from two Discovery modules in Year 1.
Core
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Why do historians disagree about how to interpret the past? What issues divide them and why do they disagree? Continue your training as a first-year historian and study real-life examples of historical debate introduced by our experts.
If the cornerstone of historical research is handling evidence, why do historians place different values on certain evidence or interpret evidence differently—or miss evidence all together—and how do they build their arguments to come to alternative conclusions?
You’ll develop skills in reading historical arguments, uncovering how historians select and present evidence and engage critically with fellow scholars and how they craft their argument. In the process, you’ll learn from examples how to build an argument to engage, inform and persuade, forging the essential skills of the historian.
We begin your historical training with the cornerstone of historical research: evidence. What counts as evidence? It comes in many forms:
Chronicles and law codes
Letters and diaries written by people in the past
Visual records, from paintings to photographs, film and maps
Aural records such as music and oral histories
The physical remnants of past worlds, from coins to castles and burial places
Each source has a context we need to uncover. Who produced the source and why? Who would have seen or heard it and what was their reaction? From here we can learn what questions to ask of our evidence. How can it illuminate past worlds?
Our expert historians guide you through hands-on training, building your skills in drawing value from historical evidence.
Tracing the evolution of literature over time and in time, you will engage with an array of literary genres including plays, films, short stories, novels, poetry, essays and the graphic novel. You will encounter a wide range of literature - from the Middle Ages to the 21st Century, moving from Chaucer, through Shakespeare and Milton, to Virginia Woolf. You’ll also study contemporary writers such as Alison Bechdel and Paul Muldoon, and many others.
Optional
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This module explores the lived experience of peoples and nations in the modern age through the emergence of new ideas – including nationalism, capitalism, imperialism, racism, feminism - and, in turn, how those ideas were shaped by individuals, political movements, and events in diverse regions such as Europe, Asia, Africa, and the Americas.
We will explore the dramatic changes that took place across the period, such as enslavement and emancipation, dictatorship and democracy, mass suffrage, war, persecution, and transformations in medical practice and legal systems, including the emergence of the idea of the citizen.
We also consider the histories of those who defied and resisted these ideas, regimes and categorisations in the face of industrial, economic and decolonial transformations. Here you will gain an understanding of how individual and group identities have been forged and contested against a backdrop of turbulent social forces in the modern world.
This module explores the role of the arts in building community, identity and confidence. You will engage with a variety of different art forms (such as painting, theatre, fiction, designed artefacts and film) and develop your own voice via collaborative projects such as a podcasts, video essay or presentation. You will also engage in individual critical reflection for example via a blog, journal or research project.
This module fosters co-operation, intellectual experimentation and self-assurance.
What does it mean to think in and about the world? This module will draw on disciplines from across the School of Global Affairs to think about the very different ways in which the world can be imagined.
What are the ideas that have framed or limited our understanding of the world and others in it? How can we challenge existing narratives and explore alternative perspectives?
Look beyond the boundaries of traditional courses in English Literature and explore a wide and exciting range of literatures in English and translation from antiquity to the present day. Discover texts that have influenced the development of literary English, from the Bible and classical figures such as Ovid and Homer, through Medieval and Early Modern authors such as Dante and Rabelais to contemporary world authors in translation such as Kafka and Rushdie.
With a focus on your professional development, choose one from four Discovery modules in year 2.
Core
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Explore the links between humans and their environments around the world from the medieval period to the modern era. Examine how people have understood nature and their place within it over time and across cultures, investigating climate change, environmental disasters and massive landscape transformations.
You’ll situate the natural world as both an agent of change and a system that humans can alter on many scales, developing skills in navigating complex human-environment interactions. You will encounter a range of sources, from texts to images and environmental data, and learn how to analyse them, including through digital methods.
With these skills, you’ll explore regional case studies of environmental impacts on humans and human alterations of the environment, from the impact of warming periods and the Little Ice Age to the transformation of colonial landscapes, the exploitation of forests, minerals, and water and the effects of urbanization.
Explore medieval drama, poetry and prose, paying particular attention to how these texts relate to concepts that still shape our world today.
Examples might include:
Concepts of the environment
Human and non-human identities
Good and evil
Political rights
In our study, you will encounter knights, werewolves and visionary women, and traverse dream-visions, wildernesses and marvel-filled worlds. Although the module will introduce you to Old and Middle English languages, we are happy for students primarily to access such texts in Modern English translation. No prior experience with early languages is necessary.
Who makes History? What drives them to investigate the past? You’ll meet the women and men who have helped shape the discipline of History, delving into their life and works. How did their experiences and opportunities shape their careers and what questions spurred their curiosity? How did they find the sources they would need, and what methods did they use to analyse them?
In exploring their stories, you’ll ask how the place, time and society in which they lived opened opportunities or created obstacles to their careers, how they collaborated with other scholars or carved roles in learned societies or public debate. And you’ll ask why some historians have been heralded as ‘great’ – their names famous, their books widely read – and why others are consigned to the footnotes of the historical profession, their endeavours in the archives unrecognised. What makes a pioneering historian?
Optional
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What we call ‘American Literature’ and how we define America and ‘the American experience’ depends on who is writing and to whom. In this module you will encounter many different voices, many conflicting and contrasting views, a diversity of complex experience and a great range of writing in form and style.
You will explore such questions as: What role do different literary forms play in narrating the self? How does American writing seek to establish a new way of looking at the world? And how and why does literature help shape forms of protest and new critiques of modernity?
Explore the two things that make us human – body and mind. Historians once regarded mind and body as the same across time and place. But more recently, historians have challenged this assumption, showing that changing societies have led people to experience mind and body in radically different ways.
You will explore patterns of continuity and change from the medieval to modern periods by investigating key themes such as:
How ideas about mind and body have impacted gender, race and social class
Violence and injury
Sexuality and gender identity
Changing experiences of disability and transformations in attitudes to healthcare
You’ll build the skills to historicise mind and body through innovative methodologies such as:
Disability studies
Histories of health and medical humanities
Gender and sexuality studies
Histories of clothing and bodily adornment
Interdisciplinary approaches including osteoarchaeology
Recent developments in material culture
The study of lived experience
Not all professional contexts are the same – and within any organisation there are diverse people with varied backgrounds. This module focuses on enhancing your intercultural competency and cultural awareness, with a particular emphasis on ‘place-based’ learning. Considering the cultural dynamics of the North West of England and the broader UK helps us reflect upon intercultural dynamics in very different locations.
Through analysis, discussion and self-reflection you will strengthen your ability to navigate diverse workplace settings and enhance your employability in today’s interconnected world.
What does it mean to die? Is it frightening? Will I see those I love again? What does it mean to kill, whether an enemy, a friend, or myself? Death is a universal human experience but, as you’ll discover, how we confront it has varied across history.You’ll explore varied experiences of death, from end-of-life care to execution, and from battlefields to pandemics.
Religion can shape beliefs and customs, from the theology of the afterlife to funerary rituals and the treatment of the corpse. Yet at the margins have always lain a shadowy world, where the restless dead return, the living seek to summon the departed, and the despairing take their lives.
You’ll discover the different means of investigating death, from the chronicles that describe the walking dead, to the archaeology of burial practice, and from murder trials to palaeogenetics, unlocking the passage of disease.
Hone a strong sense of purpose and gain the satisfaction of applying your skills and knowledge to a community, charity or student-led initiative.
Your challenge will be to take responsibility for arranging and completing a voluntary or fundraising activity—locally, virtually or during vacation periods at home. You will need to show that you have made a positive difference through this activity.
In class, you will be asked to reflect on this experience and explore the wider social impact of the work. In doing so you will build your confidence in your ability to contribute meaningfully to society through your future personal and professional path.
You are invited to collaborate in an interdisciplinary team with other students as you explore major global challenges such as climate change, inequality or emerging technologies.
Throughout the module you will examine how the humanities, arts and social sciences contribute to understanding and addressing complex issues. Classroom discussions and activities focus on the process of identifying problems and considering innovative, ethical responses, while helping you to consider and articulate the relevance of this work to your personal and professional development.
Explore how ideas can be developed into real-world projects with lasting value. Through hands-on collaboration and problem-solving, you will develop innovative projects, learn how to bring ideas to life and explore ways to sustain them.
Whether you are working in a team or individually, you will be encouraged to experiment with different approaches to making a difference in artistic, cultural, social and community spaces.
The years of Queen Victoria’s reign (1837-1901) saw great social, political and cultural transformation. Changing social conditions, extraordinary scientific breakthroughs and the emergence of new technologies all altered the ways in which Victorians thought about themselves and their environment. The literature of the period responded resourcefully to the turbulent circumstances from which it emerged.
In this module, you will examine a wide range of Victorian writing, including novels, short fiction, poetry, drama and non-fictional prose and will explore and interrogate all the complexities of the Victorian age.
Core
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In your third year you will study at one of our international partner universities. This will help you to expand your global outlook and professional network, as well as developing your cultural and personal skills. It is also an opportunity to gain a different perspective on your subject through studying it in another country.
You will choose specialist modules relating to your degree and potentially modules from other subjects offered by the host university that are specific to that university and country.
The availability of places at overseas partners varies each year. In previous years destinations for students in the Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences have included Australia, USA, Canada, Europe and Asia.
Choose one from seven Discovery modules offered in your final year and develop the crucial ability to apply your knowledge and skills to diverse contexts.
Core
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Why does History matter? What does it contribute to our world? Challenge yourself to consider how our discipline is applied.
Beyond working in universities, historians are active in public debate and influence the policies of institutions and governments on matters from the memorialisation of historic figures and institutional links with the Transatlantic Slave Trade to geopolitical threats to UK security. They collaborate with museums, helping visitors engage with material remains of the past, and write books for a wide public readership.
You’ll develop a critical awareness of your discipline and gain confidence in articulating its significance in our world. You’ll also contend with the subjective use of History: how political leaders have co-opted stories of the past to justify war and conquest, and ideologically driven groups claim historical legitimacy. What role should historians play in shaping how our understanding of the past influences the present?
Optional
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Soviet history is often told through the prism of totalitarian oppression, but beneath layers of state control a vibrant dissident movement was active. In this module, you will explore the breadth, depth and complexity of the Soviet dissident movement and critically analyse the impact that they had on the wider world.
You will explore the nature of political life in the Soviet Union, ranging from the labour camps under Joseph Stalin, to the use and abuse of psychiatry under Nikita Khrushchev and the silencing of dissidents under Leonid Brezhnev. You’ll also consider the role dissidents played in the collapse of the Soviet regime and the position of dissidents in contemporary Russia.
By focusing on political dissidents in the Soviet system, you will critically assess how totalitarian governments function, how opposition movements operate and how the international community responds to this persecution.
Explore the history of South Asia from the abolition of sati to the death of India’s first Prime Minister, Jawaharlal Nehru. You will consider the social, cultural and political histories through which the idea of India was expressed and contested.
You will examine the debates and rebellions through which the European colonial project was resisted and South Asian identities were expressed and cohered. You’ll begin by considering how, in the nineteenth century, the translations, interpretations and classifications of subcontinental history, society and language were created.
How were ideas of identity, community and freedom formed in response to and against the incursion of European power in the region? Subsequently, how did the idea of the nation coalesce into something beyond Empire to create not one, but two nations: India and Pakistan?
What happens when radically different forms of art meet? How do these fused forms change our understanding of the world? We will draw on material from different periods and continents, to explore works of art where, for example, film meets history, poetry meets philosophy, fine art meets sociology, religion meets fiction, and theatre meets politics.
Explore the history of Victorian Britain and its global encounters through the prism of the body.
Embodiment was central to the way Victorians thought about themselves and others. From sexology to racial science and from sport to war, Victorians sought to make sense of their complex and globalised world by reading character from the body, ascribing values, both positive and negative, to the bodies of others, be they colonial subjects, the working class or queer men.
By studying the history of the body, you will gain new insights into this fascinating period of British history as an age of both remarkable optimism and profound anxiety. Drawing upon a rich and evolving historiography, you will engage with cutting edge and inclusive scholarship that considers how the body became the locus of profoundly unequal power relations and a vehicle for deep-seated prejudices that continue to shape our world today.
How might we engage with the implications of environmental transformation locally, nationally and globally? Where do we have agency and capacity to intervene?
This module brings together a range of perspectives—historical, political, philosophical and cultural—to explore the nature and severity of the effects of the climate crisis on our world.
Explore postcolonial literature across a wide historical span. Your study will move from the explosion of new national literatures in the era of decolonisation through to contemporary writing that interrogates the legacies of racism and imperialism in our globalised world.
You’ll read exciting major writers who defined the emergence of African, South Asian and Caribbean literature in English in the middle of the twentieth century. You’ll also encounter today’s new voices, grappling with the afterlives of empire.
Cutting through all our thinking will be the question of how literature serves, in Ngugi wa Thiongo’s phrase, as a means of 'decolonising the mind'.
Gain an in-depth understanding of this dark chapter of Spain’s history. On the 17 July 1936, a group of military generals launched a coup against Spain’s democratically elected Second Republic. The following three years witnessed a bitter struggle to determine the future of Spain. The Spanish Civil War has been dubbed a ‘dress rehearsal’ for the Second World War. General Francisco Franco relied on Hitler and Mussolini to defeat his domestic opponents, while the Republic received support from Soviet Russia.
Yet the conflict had important local dimensions. Spanish socialists, communists, anarchists, liberals and feminists fought to the last against Franco’s ‘Nationalists’. Following his victory in 1939, Franco outlived his international fascist allies by decades, the legacies of which remain keenly present within present-day Spain.
Drawing on diverse primary sources—including autobiographies, oral histories, films, songs, and political speeches—on this module you will develop advanced skills of historical analysis.
The final-year Dissertation is your opportunity to devise, research and explore a topic of your own choice through a programme of directed independent study. You will be helped to begin your thinking at the end of your second year and then, through your final year, you will develop your research, thinking and writing, as you build toward a substantial, self-directed project.
Almost anything is possible; for example, you could choose to explore famous literary names or themes, or research obscure figures and unusual topics. You might draw on the University Library’s special collections, or venture way beyond Lancaster to develop your research. Perhaps you will be inspired by the medievalism of historic Lancaster or the Romanticism of nearby Lake District or be drawn to the far textual shores of the digital world.
You can focus your work towards a professional career or build towards postgraduate study at master’s level. Finally, you can opt to write in classic literary critical styles or push the boundaries of literary study in new and startling ways.
With the blurring of the Home and Battle Fronts in Britain in the Second World War, the conventional wartime gender contract — in which men fight to protect the vulnerable at home and women keep the home fires burning — was challenged. In this module you will examine how war was experienced by those who conformed to and those who challenged gender norms, by those included in the war effort and those who stood outside it.
You’ll consider different categorisations of experience (military/civilian; home front/ battle front; male/female) and how historians have grappled with key concepts including the People’s War and hierarchies of service. Through a wide range of primary sources, including autobiographical materials, poems, photographs, films, parliamentary minutes, newspapers, posters and cartoons, you will seek to understand individual and collective experiences of the war and their gendered dimensions.
Examine how cogent issues in crime, justice and punishment have been treated historically from the eighteenth century. Taking advantage of online historical datasets, including Digital Panopticon and Old Bailey Online, you will be introduced to the vast range of historic criminal justice records.
On the module, the classroom becomes the archive. You’ll get hands on with primary sources evidencing the social and cultural history of modern Britain, and act as Digital Detectives to gather evidence to unlock the world of Victorian crime and punishment.
By using digital approaches to this evidence, you will be able to navigate a history from below and explore the impact of crime and injustice on diverse social groups including women, the working classes, migrants and youth. You’ll explore historical experiences of crime, justice and punishment both at scale and at the level of the individual in its fullest evidential context.
Uncover the origins of modern consumer society in Britain. In the century from the abolition of advertising tax in 1853 to the birth of commercial television in the 1950s, advertising became a pervasive feature of modern life, and Britain became a nation of consumers. Through a range of sources, including press reports, social surveys and – of course – advertisements, you’ll investigate the impact of new shopping environments like the department store and the supermarket, and the rise of ethical consumerism.
Advertising is political, and you’ll also examine how it helped Britain win two world wars and market the Empire to its citizens. By the end of the module, you will understand how advertising sells us much more than simply clothes or food, how it shapes the way we view gender and race and how it creates support for a market economy based on the principles of freedom and choice.
The Vikings inspired both fear and fascination in medieval times, and they continue to exercise a powerful hold on the modern imagination. In this module you’ll explore the Viking Age in the Irish Sea region, from the first Viking raids to the emergence of the kingdom of Man and the Isles, a ‘sea-kingdom’.
You’ll have the opportunity to develop an in-depth understanding of compelling texts such as chronicles and sagas, as well as non-textual material including sculpture, coin hoards and placenames. The field is flourishing, and you’ll also have access to plenty of secondary literature. You will learn about political history, the economy, culture, gender and status amongst other themes. There will be some focus on the prolific evidence from north-west England, including artefacts in local museums and impressive stone monuments. You’ll participate in at least one field trip within the region.
What does it mean to imagine a world without borders? Using materials typically derived from case studies, reports, archives, film, television and literature, this module foregrounds interdisciplinary approaches.
You will be encouraged to develop your understanding of migration and displacement, and to envision alternative global migration futures in ways that can impact future policy, political and societal perspectives.
Explore British foreign policy and the country's broader engagement with the wider world throughout the twentieth and early twenty-first centuries. Considering broad debates concerning the decline of British power during this period, you will investigate the central themes that defined Britain's overseas policy in this era, including the impact of the World Wars, the loss of Empire, the 'special relationship' with the United States, and European integration.
In exploring these themes, you will consider how people from a variety of different perspectives (British and foreign, politicians, journalists, novelists, activists) conceived of Britain's world-role since the First World War.
In order to incorporate this variety of perspectives, you will draw on a large range of sources, including newspaper articles, novels, poetry and films, as well as traditional archival sources like official government documents, diaries and memoirs.
Explore the development of the Italian cities across one of the most significant periods of medieval history. Between 1100 and 1350, northern Italy was divided into sixty ‘city-states’ governed by their citizens through assemblies and shared public office. Italian merchant-bankers grew so rich that they lent money to kings and popes, and used their wealth to transform cities into works of art, encouraging a period of cultural flourishing later called the Renaissance. But beyond this splendour lay a darker reality of economic exploitation, political exclusion and violence that eventually proved fatal for this system of self-government.
In this module you will explore themes such as coexistence and violence, participation and exclusion, law and good government. You’ll examine sources ranging from legal documents to frescoes, and from literature to architecture. Meanwhile, you’ll ask a question that remains important today: what does it mean to be citizens in a plural and increasingly unequal society?
How do we experience love and friendship across differing social structures and cultural practices? How do these concepts change across time?
In this module you’ll explore these shifts using historical and social case studies. You will come to understand how these ideas and practices continue to shape human experience.
Today the claim that God designed everything in the universe has given way to the theory of evolution. The usual story of this change is one of conflict between science and religion. But we will challenge the popular narrative.
You will reconsider the rise and fall of the idea that nature was the work of a divine designer, focusing on the period 1450-1800. As well as trying to understand why the design argument became so important in the early modern period, you will seek to understand why it fell out of favour during the 18th century - long before the theory of evolution. But you will not simply be studying the history of ideas. To understand how early modern science changed, you will study a wide range of practices - from intellectual disciplines like philosophy, rhetoric and theology, to material practices including chemistry, architectural design, archaeology, and art.
The thirteenth century brought rebellion against a tyrant, then a revolution: a party seized power from the king to govern England. This period is hailed as the foundation of democracy – but the reality is darker. Religious leaders were empowered to punish kings, rebels fought as crusaders, and people killed and died for a political cause.
You’ll explore events including the making of Magna Carta, the 1258 coup, and the Battle of Evesham that ended England's First Revolution. You’ll meet queens like Eleanor of Provence, leading knight William Marshal, and Pope Innocent III; tyrannical and hapless kings; Simon de Montfort, the revolution's leader; and the low-born people who flocked to his banner.
You’ll investigate their stories through letters, testimonies, and eye-witness accounts, and challenge historical interpretations of this era. What moves women and men, poor and rich, to risk their livelihoods, take life and give their own to decide who rules?
What are the possibilities and pitfalls of community and citizen action, voice and agency? This module uses interdisciplinary case-studies to critically examine collaboration with communities.
You will participate in activities such as a mock citizens' assembly, visit local community groups and hear different points of view from a range of guest speakers on concepts like power, race, gender, class, affect and justice.
What do we understand by queerness? Looking back at earlier interpretations, we imagine how queerness might evolve—how it might be lived, felt and understood in the future.
You will explore queer futures from a range of perspectives and viewpoints, while examining both feminist and queer theory, as well as queer media and cultural texts and material relating to areas such as activism, politics and healthcare.
Study key texts and contexts from a short but remarkably intense period of literary history. Encompassing the work of writers such as Wordsworth, Blake, Keats and Shelley, you will explore the role of nature, the imagination and the sublime. You will also consider the emergence of the Gothic tradition and examine the interactions between literary and politics in a turbulent era of revolution and change.
Ben Jonson claimed of Shakespeare ‘he was not of an age but for all time.’ This module, however, examines Shakespearean drama and poetry in its own time and as a platform in which early modern debates about agency and government, family and national identity, were put into play. The stage was and is a place in which questions of gender, class and race, gain immediacy through the bodies and voices of actors.
By examining texts from across Shakespeare’s career, you will explore their power to shape thoughts and feelings in both their own age and in ours. You will consider how, in the past and in the present, Shakespeare’s texts exploit the emotional and political possibilities of poetry and drama.
The assessment of this module normally concludes with either an essay OR a creative engagement (e.g. reading, performance, artwork) plus critical reflection.
Who does technology benefit or harm, and what should its role in society be? This module examines the social and ethical issues surrounding the development of modern technologies and their use in the modern world, with a vision to shape our future relationship with technology.
Colonisation fundamentally transformed Jamaica’s paradisical environment. In this module, you will gain a detailed understanding of how this process occurred. You’ll begin by studying how the first colonists comprehended the New World environment and the importance of that environment for shaping settlement. You will then study how settlers exploited the Jamaican environment using enslaved African labour.
In the concluding section, you will examine how colonists sought to mitigate the devastating effects of plantation agriculture through nascent environmentalism. You’ll study this fascinating history using a diverse array of primary sources and by reading deeply in environmental history. In the assessment, you will be able to undertake your own research in environmental history. You will emerge from this module with a detailed understanding of Jamaica’s natural history and the field of environmental history more broadly.
How do ideas understand, transform and conserve the world? In this module we will study examples of powerful ideas such as the nation, free speech, liberation, the free market, culture and nature. We will use case studies to help us explore the relationship between analysis, imagination and practice.
The English East India Company (founded 1600) was the most famous corporation in world history: its business connecting the British Isles across the Atlantic, Indian, and Pacific Oceans. It was a protagonist of globalisation.
In this module you’ll discover how historians have debated what the Company represented. It did much to stimulate global trade, but was it a private business in the modern sense? It ruled British territory on behalf of the British state, but was it a state in its own right?
You will gain a broad and systematic understanding of seventeenth-, eighteenth-, and nineteenth-century British, Indian, and global history; and develop expertise in and experience of deploying established techniques of analysis: from cultural, art, political, parliamentary, global, economic, constitutional, gender, and business history. Making use of primary and secondary sources, you will be challenged to digest and critique the latest research in this area.
Fees and funding
Our annual tuition fee is set for a 12-month session, starting at the beginning of each academic year.
You will be able to borrow many books free of charge from the university library, however most students prefer to buy their own copies of at least some of the texts. Costs vary depending on whether these are bought new or second hand.
There may be extra costs related to your course for items such as books, stationery, printing, photocopying, binding and general subsistence on trips and visits. Following graduation, you may need to pay a subscription to a professional body for some chosen careers.
Specific additional costs for studying at Lancaster are listed below.
College fees
Lancaster is proud to be one of only a handful of UK universities to have a collegiate system. Every student belongs to a college, and all students pay a small college membership fee which supports the running of college events and activities. Students on some distance-learning courses are not liable to pay a college fee.
For students starting in 2025, the fee is £40 for undergraduates and research students and £15 for students on one-year courses.
Computer equipment and internet access
To support your studies, you will also require access to a computer, along with reliable internet access. You will be able to access a range of software and services from a Windows, Mac, Chromebook or Linux device. For certain degree programmes, you may need a specific device, or we may provide you with a laptop and appropriate software - details of which will be available on relevant programme pages. A dedicated IT support helpdesk is available in the event of any problems.
The University provides limited financial support to assist students who do not have the required IT equipment or broadband support in place.
Study abroad courses
In addition to travel and accommodation costs, while you are studying abroad, you will need to have a passport and, depending on the country, there may be other costs such as travel documents (e.g. VISA or work permit) and any tests and vaccines that are required at the time of travel. Some countries may require proof of funds.
Placement and industry year courses
In addition to possible commuting costs during your placement, you may need to buy clothing that is suitable for your workplace and you may have accommodation costs. Depending on the employer and your job, you may have other costs such as copies of personal documents required by your employer for example.
The fee that you pay will depend on whether you are considered to be a home or international student. Read more about how we assign your fee status.
Home fees are subject to annual review, and are liable to rise each year in line with UK government policy. International fees (including EU) are reviewed annually and are not fixed for the duration of your studies. Read more about fees in subsequent years.
We will charge tuition fees to Home undergraduate students on full-year study abroad/work placements in line with the maximum amounts permitted by the Department for Education. The current maximum levels are:
Students studying abroad for a year: 15% of the standard tuition fee
Students taking a work placement for a year: 20% of the standard tuition fee
International students on full-year study abroad/work placements will also be charged in line with the maximum amounts permitted by the Department for Education. The current maximum levels are:
Students studying abroad for a year: 15% of the standard international tuition fee during the Study Abroad year
Students taking a work placement for a year: 20% of the standard international tuition fee during the Placement year
Please note that the maximum levels chargeable in future years may be subject to changes in Government policy.
Scholarships and bursaries
You will be automatically considered for our main scholarships and bursaries when you apply, so there's nothing extra that you need to do.
You may be eligible for the following funding opportunities, depending on your fee status:
Unfortunately no scholarships and bursaries match your selection, but there are more listed on scholarships and bursaries page.
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We also have other, more specialised scholarships and bursaries - such as those for students from specific countries.
Download the course booklet to find out more about Lancaster University, how we teach English Literature, and what you'll study as a English Literature student.
The information on this site relates primarily to the stated entry year and every effort has been taken to ensure the information is correct at the time of publication.
The University will use all reasonable effort to deliver the courses as described, but the University reserves the right to make changes to advertised courses. In exceptional circumstances that are beyond the University’s reasonable control (Force Majeure Events), we may need to amend the programmes and provision advertised. In this event, the University will take reasonable steps to minimise the disruption to your studies. If a course is withdrawn or if there are any fundamental changes to your course, we will give you reasonable notice and you will be entitled to request that you are considered for an alternative course or withdraw your application. You are advised to revisit our website for up-to-date course information before you submit your application.
More information on limits to the University’s liability can be found in our legal information.
Our Students’ Charter
We believe in the importance of a strong and productive partnership between our students and staff. In order to ensure your time at Lancaster is a positive experience we have worked with the Students’ Union to articulate this relationship and the standards to which the University and its students aspire. Find out more about our Charter and student policies.
Open days and campus tours
Visit campus and put yourself in the picture at an open day or campus tour.
Take five minutes and we'll show you what our Top 10 UK university has to offer, from beautiful green campus to colleges, teaching and sports facilities.
Most first-year undergraduate students choose to live on campus, where you’ll find award-winning accommodation to suit different preferences and budgets.
Our historic city is student-friendly and home to a diverse and welcoming community. Beyond the city you'll find a stunning coastline and the world-famous English Lake District.