Bachelor of Arts in Literature and Sociology (With Foundation Year)

University of Essex - Colchester Campus

UK,England

 0 Shortlist

48 Months

Duration

CAD 17,700/year

Tuition Fee

CAD 0 FREE

Application Fee

Apply Date

UK, England

Type: University

Location Type: Semi-Urban

Founded: 1965

Total Students: 17,800 +

Campus Detail

Main Campus Address

Wivenhoe Park, Colchester CO4 3SQ, United Kingdom

Bachelor of Arts in Literature and Sociology (With Foundation Year)

Program Overview

Our four-year BA Literature and Sociology (including foundation year), will be suitable for you if your academic qualifications do not yet meet our entrance requirements for the three-year version of this course and you want a programme that increases your subject knowledge as well as improves your academic skills in order to support your academic performance.

This four-year course includes a foundation year (Year Zero), followed by a further three years of study. During your Year Zero, you study three academic subjects relevant to your chosen course as well as a compulsory academic skills module, with additional English language for non-English speakers.

You are an Essex student from day one, a member of our global community based at the most internationally diverse campus university in the UK.

After successful completion of Year Zero in our Essex Pathways Department, you progress to complete your course with our Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies.

Studying literature alongside sociology means that you can investigate what connects people with each other, as well as what divides them. We consider every aspect of our daily lives, from how we relate to politicians, celebrities and friends, to how we define ourselves, our families, and others. You can study topics ranging from digital media and society, to psychiatry and mental illness, to Japanese culture, to the art, film and personal testimony of war.

Topics from both literature and sociology you can choose from include:

  • Modernist cityscapes in literature
  • Writing of the US South
  • Victorian literary realism
  • Culture, identity and subjectivity
  • Citizenship, multiculturalism and human rights