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BA | Undergraduate

English and Politics

Entry year
Academic Year 2026/27
Entry requirements
ABB
Attendance
3 years (Full-time)
UCAS Code
QL32

Applications for 2025 entry are still open for most programmes. View our 2025 courses for more detail

Students undertaking English and Politics at Queen’s explore literatures in English in the widest possible sense. From the earliest writings in Anglo-Saxon to contemporary Irish, British, and ‘global’ literatures, students study English in its historical, cultural and ideological circumstances and material manifestations. In Politics, our students assess the sources of conflict, co-operation, power and decision-making within and between societies, how differences are expressed through ideology and organisation, and how, if at all, disagreements and problems are resolved.

English Studies at Queen’s brings to life an extraordinary heritage, as represented by Nobel Laureate Seamus Heaney, where a new generation of award-winning writers and the brand new Seamus Heaney Centre (2024) continue a proud tradition.

English and Politics highlights

Professional Accreditations

The study of politics is not directed towards any one professional pathway, but rather provides the generic skills for success in a number of professional fields including the civil service, media, the charity sector, education, etc.
Politics also has links with Queen’s University’s Global Research Centre, The Senator George J. Mitchell Institute for Global Peace, Security and Justice. Many of the staff in Politics are Fellows in the Mitchell Institute, where they work in collaboration with experts in peace and conflict studies from other disciplines such as law, sociology, and the creative arts.

Global Opportunities

English at Queen's offers a range of Study Abroad opportunities, from the Turing programme with a range of European partners, to the chance to study at a number of partner institutions in the United States and Canada. We welcome applications from European students who would like to attend Queen's under the Turing programme. This programme enables students from continental Europe, North America, and Australia to take time out from their own institution and spend either one semester or a full academic year at Queen's. From 2024-5, we also offer Queen’s English students the chance to study for a full-year at one of our partner universities in Europe and North America thereby extending their 3-year degree into a 4-year degree.

Study USA: This involves 12 months studying business related courses at a U.S. church affiliated university or college. Places are available at one of over 100 institutions from Florida to Montana or California to North Carolina. You don´t need to be from a business background to apply: Study USA is open to full-time pre-final year students of any discipline from Queen's and other Northern Ireland higher education institutions. The Programme is intended to produce graduates with an international, business-orientated perspective capable of making a contribution in advancing the Northern Ireland economy. While on the programme, you will take 5 business related courses/modules along with another course of your choice. Study USA is accredited under the Degree Plus Award through the US Certificate in American Business Practice and well regarded by graduate employers. Applications are made online on the British Council Study USA website. The application form normally becomes available in late October/early November for participation in the programme the following academic year. Students must apply for the programme in their pre-final year and undertake Study USA just before final year.
http://www.qub.ac.uk/Research/GRI/mitchell-institute/

Industry Links

As well as offering students on our work-based learning module the opportunity to take up placements in schools, business, the media and the arts, we regularly consult and develop links with a large number of employers including, for example, BBC Northern Ireland.

World Class Facilities

Research-led Teaching: cutting-edge research drives our externally commended teaching, most recently evidenced in the latest student satisfaction survey.

Internationally Renowned Experts

Professor Mark Burnett is a leading scholar of Shakespearean adaptations and their global contexts and his most recent monograph is ‘Hamlet’ and World Cinema, published by Cambridge University Press in 2019. He is the founder and director of the Sir Kenneth Branagh Archive.

Dr Jane Lugea is an expert in the areas of language and stylistics. Her AHRC-funded research project on dementia explored how dementia is represented in the minds of fictional characters, and how these literary representations effect real readers.

Professor Philip McGowan is President of the European Association for American Studies (2016-2020) and sits on the Executive Board of the F. Scott Fitzgerald Society.

Dr Edel Lamb is an expert on childhood and early modern literature and she is currently completing the first book-length study of writing by girls in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.

Dr Gail McConnell is an internationally renowned critic of poetry and an award-winning poet whose first collection, The Sun is Open, published by Penned in the Margins (2021) was the winner of the John Pollard Foundation international poetry prize and the Christopher Ewart-Biggs memorial prize (2022).

Dr Alex Murray is an expert in Victorian and modernist literature. He is editor of the international journal, Cusp: Late 19th-/Early 20th-Century Cultures, and his most recent monograph, Decadent Conservatism: Aesthetics, Politics, and the Past, was published by Oxford University Press in 2023.

Professor Glenn Patterson is the Rooney Prize and Betty Trask Prize-winning author of ten novels. He is the Director of the Seamus Heaney Centre and writes regularly for BBC Radio Three and Four, The Guardian. His co-authored screenplay for Good Vibrations was nominated for a BAFTA for Outstanding Debut by a British Writer, Director or Producer.

Prof. David Phinnemore is an expert on EU Treaty reform and EU enlargement, which led to his secondment as an advisor to the UK’s Foreign and Commonwealth Office.

Student Experience

From Personal Tutors to peer mentoring, we work closely with students to ensure they are supported at every stage of their degree.

With Degree-Plus, students have the opportunity to burnish their academic achievements with employment-facing placements and projects.
https://www.qub.ac.uk/directorates/degreeplus/

A thriving cultural scene organised by our undergraduate and postgraduate communities, from the English Society and Poetry and Pints to the Lifeboat and the Yellow Nib, makes studying English at Queen’s a unique proposition.
https://www.facebook.com/QubEnglishSociety

Students can work with our visiting Fulbright Scholars, leading US academics who spend a semester at Queen’s each year.

Further Study Opportunities

Further study is also an option open to English graduates. Students can choose from a wide range of Master’s programmes, including:
• MA in English Literary Studies
• MA in Poetry: Creativity and Criticism
• MA in Creative Writing
• MSc in Software Development (conversion course)
• MLaw – Master’s in Law (conversion course)
• PGCE in Education
• MRes in Arts and Humanities (English) – research-led

Internationally Renowned Experts

Professor Nick Laird is a recipient of the Betty Trask and Eric Gregory Awards, whose most recent collection is Up Late (Faber, 2023). The central sequence from Up Late won the Forward prize for the best single poem. He is a regular contributor to The New Yorker and the New York Review of Books.

Career Development

Queen's is a member of the Russell Group and, therefore, one of the 20 universities most-targeted by leading graduate employers. Queen's students will be advised and guided about career choice and, through the Degree Plus initiative, will have an opportunity to seek accreditation for skills development and experience gained through the wide range of extra-curricular activities on offer.


Recognising student diversity, as well as promoting employability enhancements and other interests, is part of the developmental experience at Queen's. Students are encouraged to plan and build their own, personal skill and experiential profile through a range of activities including recognised Queen's Certificates, placements and other work experiences (at home or overseas), Turing study options elsewhere in Europe, learning development opportunities and involvement in wider university life through activities, such as clubs, societies, and sports.



Queen's actively encourages this type of activity by offering students an additional qualification, the Degree Plus Award (and the related Researcher Plus Award for PhD and MPhil students).Degree Plus accredits wider experiential and skill development gained through extra-curricular activities that promote the enhancement of academic, career management, personal and employability skills in a variety of contexts. As part of the Award, students are also trained on how to reflect on the experience(s) and make the link between academic achievement, extracurricular activities, transferable skills and graduate employment. Participating students will also be trained in how to reflect on their skills and experiences and can gain an understanding of how to articulate the significance of these to others, e.g. employers.


Overall, these initiatives, and Degree Plus in particular, reward the energy, drive, determination and enthusiasm shown by students engaging in activities over-and-above the requirements of their academic studies. These qualities are amongst those valued highly by graduate employers.

Student Testimonials

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