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Postgraduate Taught

MA Modern and Contemporary Literature

Please note: The below is for 2025 entries. Click here for 2024 entries.
UCAS code 1234
Duration 1 year full time
2 years part time
Entry year September 2025
Campus Streatham Campus
Discipline English
Contact
Typical offer

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2:2 Honours degree

Contextual offers

Overview

  • Specialise in Modern and Contemporary Literature while exploring global perspectives and deepening your knowledge across a broad range of optional modules, including literature, film, television, drama, and critical theory
  • Develop a nuanced understanding of literature and media within their historical, cultural, and global contexts, while enhancing your communication, research, and analytical skills
  • Join a dynamic postgraduate and research community, learning from world-renowned academics whose expertise spans Modernist Studies, Postcolonial Literatures, Critical Theory, and Film and Television Studies
  • Study in Exeter, a UNESCO City of Literature, with access to the University’s outstanding Special Collections, including the richest collection of 20th Century literary papers by writers associated with the South West of England such as Agatha Christie, Daphne du Maurier, John Betjeman, and William Golding

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Fast Track (current Exeter students)

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Contact

Programme Director: Dr Rob Turner

Web: Enquire online

Phone: +44 (0)1392 72 72 72

Research icon: a mortarboard and a cog

Our English research environment is 100% world leading

Based on 4* research environment submitted to REF 2021

Top 50 icon

Top 50 in the world for English Language and Literature

QS World University Subject Rankings 2024

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A thriving and supportive writing community - our team of prize-winning and best-selling authors will help you develop your creative writing skills

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Top 15 in the UK for English

11th in the Complete University Guide 2025; 14th in The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2025

Research icon: a mortarboard and a cog

Our English research environment is 100% world leading

Based on 4* research environment submitted to REF 2021

Top 50 icon

Top 50 in the world for English Language and Literature

QS World University Subject Rankings 2024

Book icon

A thriving and supportive writing community - our team of prize-winning and best-selling authors will help you develop your creative writing skills

Trophy icon

Top 15 in the UK for English

11th in the Complete University Guide 2025; 14th in The Times and The Sunday Times Good University Guide 2025

Entry requirements

We are looking for graduates with a 2:2 Honours degree with 53% or above in their first degree in a relevant subject area. While we normally only accept applicants who meet this criteria, if you are coming from a different academic background which is equivalent to degree level, or have relevant work experience, we would welcome your application.

Applicants will be asked to submit a sample of academic work. We require roughly 2000 - 3000 words of prose (this could be in the form of a critical essay or part of a critical essay that you have already produced for an undergraduate degree).

Entry requirements for international students

English language requirements

International students need to show they have the required level of English language to study this course. The required test scores for this course fall under Profile E. Please visit our English language requirements page to view the required test scores and equivalencies from your country.

Course content

This MA will explore the relationship between Modern and Contemporary culture and the wider world. You will be guided through some key debates in current theory and a wealth of important critical material from around the world. By doing this, you will be asked to consider how thinking globally can expand, reorient and enrich the way in which we read and practise literary criticism and cultural theory. You will also be given the opportunity to consider the relationship between queerness and normativity, and the material world and literary texts, while being trained to make connections between literature, film, and the historical and cultural contexts of the 20th and 21st centuries.

You will select 60 credits of core content from a list of four modules that span literary periods, geographical regions, intellectual history and cultural forms (literature; film; television). All of these modules are team-taught and draw on colleagues’ expertise in Modernist Studies, World and Postcolonial Literatures, Critical Theory and Film and Television Studies. The elective core modules balance the expertise and resources we have locally at the University of Exeter (including in our Special Collections) with an expansive global outlook. To learn more about Modern and Contemporary expertise in our Department, consult the staff profiles and research group websites in the Teaching and Research section below. 

The programme is specifically designed for those seeking high level training prior to embarking on doctoral research, recent graduates wishing to extend and enhance their studies by a year before taking up a career, individuals already in employment who are interested in career development, and those who simply wish to broaden their intellectual horizons.

Please note that this course requires you to read and analyse complex English literary texts, but we do not teach English language skills on these modules. You will need a near-native level of English to participate fully in classes and complete assessments successfully.

The modules we outline here provide examples of what you can expect to learn on this degree course based on recent academic teaching. The precise modules available to you in future years may vary depending on staff availability and research interests, new topics of study, timetabling and student demand.

120 credits of compulsory modules and 60 credits of optional modules

Compulsory modules

All students must take EASM023 Dissertation and two of the modules listed below

a - All students must take two of the following EASM151, EASM152, EASM167, EASM171

CodeModule Credits
EASM023 Dissertation 60
EASM151 Modernism and Material Culture see note a above30
EASM152 Criticism and Theory: Critical and Literary Theory in a Global Context see note a above30
EASM167 World Cinema / World Literature see note a above30
EASM171 Expanding Queerness: Critical Debates in Theory, Literature, Film and Television see note a above30

Optional modules

Students must choose 60 credits of option modules

CodeModule Credits
MA ELS Modern and Contemporary Literature options 2024-5
EASM150 Empire, Decadence and Modernity: Literature 1870-1910 30
EASM157 The Literature of Cold War America 30
EASM169 Publishing and Power: Black and Asian Literary Networks in the UK 30
EASM180 Crossing Medieval Boundaries 30
EASM192 Global Voices: Shakespeare and the Early Modern World 30
EASM109 Bodies Politic: Cultural and Sexual Politics in England, 1603-1679 30
EASM174 Writing Women in the English Middle Ages 30
EASM191 Environments of Early Modern Drama 30

Fees

2025/26 entry

UK fees per year:

£12,500 full-time; £6,250 part-time

International fees per year:

£25,300 full-time; £12,650 part-time

Scholarships

The University of Exeter has many different scholarships available to support your education, including £5 million in scholarships for international students applying to study with us in the 2025/26 academic year, such as our Exeter Excellence Scholarships*.

For more information on scholarships and other financial support, please visit our scholarships and bursaries page.

*Terms and conditions apply. See online for details.

Teaching and research

Learning and teaching

We believe in collaborative, small group learning and teaching for your modules will be delivered in seminar groups. Each module has one two-hour seminar per week, with independent work set that involves intensive, self-motivated research and writing.

You will be encouraged to discuss your ideas and interact with your fellow students and academic staff through our Visiting Speaker seminar series, postgraduate conferences and Research Centre activities. You will be expected to play an active role in debating and presenting your work. Throughout your programme you will develop and enhance your communication, analytical, and critical thinking skills.

Modules

On your modules, you will be assessed via a range of activities including archival projects, individual or group presentations, essays, close reading exercises and more. The final assessment piece will be your dissertation, the culmination of your programme of study. You will conceive, plan, research and write an independent 15,000-word piece that will display your subject knowledge and methodological skills. The dissertation is your opportunity to explore a topic that interests you in greater detail, something which may form the basis of further research such as a Ph.D. project.

Research areas

When you study on the MA in Modern and Contemporary Literature, you will join a world-leading English and Creative Writing Department that regularly hosts talks, workshops, and conferences spotlighting prestigious visiting speakers and the Department’s own experts. As members of our learning community, postgraduate students are warmly included in such events. These activities are coordinated by the Department’s many research groups and centres. You will benefit from staff at the forefront of their fields, stretching from medieval literature all the way up to contemporary culture.

Research Centres

Dedicated research centres and groupings within our department include:

Research Groups

Community

You will join a vibrant postgraduate and research community. All our staff belong to one or more research group which plan and develop research initiatives across the Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences. 

The Faculty of Humanities, Arts and Social Sciences also houses the Digital Humanities Lab, a state-of-the-art facility offering unique spaces, equipment and training for staff and students. A specialist team conducts and supports innovative Digital Humanities research, offers training and teaching, and undertakes the digital preservation and display of historic material and artefacts using advanced technologies. For more information view our Digital Humanities Lab page.

At Exeter, research is at the heart of what we do, and we hope you will become an active member of our research community.

To find out more about our staff research interests have a look at our staff profile pages.

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Careers

A postgraduate degree in English equips you with a range of skills that will put you in a great position to succeed in a variety of careers. Alongside in-depth subject knowledge, you will develop advanced and highly transferable skills in researching; analysing and assessing primary and secondary sources; written and verbal communication; managing and interpreting information; developing ideas and arguments; teamwork; problem solving and the ability to make informed decisions. For some of our students the MA is a step on the path to doctoral study, for others it opens a range of career paths in areas such as teaching, publishing, media, journalism, advertising and communications.

In recent years the positions some of our graduates have gone on to include:

  • Copywriter
  • Marketing Assistant
  • Assistant Editor
  • Publishing Assistant
  • Editorial Assistant
  • Freelance Journalist
  • Writer

Careers and employment support

While studying at Exeter you can also access a range of activities, advice and practical help to give you the best chance of following your chosen career path. For more information visit our Careers pages.

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