Course summary
The information provided on this page was correct at the time of publication (November 2023). For complete and up-to-date information about this course, please visit the relevant University of Oxford course page via www.graduate.ox.ac.uk/ucas. In line with the other MSt strands in the English Faculty, the MSt is made up of four elements:
- the ‘A’ course, intended as an introduction to key themes and debates in postcolonial and world literatures;
- a ‘B’ course on book history, including postcolonial and world literature approaches to book history;
- two ‘C’ or option courses, one in Michaelmas term and one in Hilary term; and
- a ‘D’ element, the dissertation, which is handed in at the end of the final term, Trinity (June).
- ‘Humanitarian Fictions’, looking at the revived idea of Humanitarianism in English, Anglophone, and World literary studies and raising specific questions about how the novel in particular embraces the discourse of human rights and humanitarianism to address global modernity’s emergences and discontents;
- ‘Literatures of Empire and Nation’, investigating the literary and cultural perceptions, misapprehensions, and evasions that accompanied empire, and the literary forms that negotiated it.
Entry requirements
For complete and up-to-date information about this course, please visit the relevant University of Oxford course page via www.graduate.ox.ac.uk/ucas
Fees and funding
Tuition fees
No fee information has been provided for this course
Tuition fee status depends on a number of criteria and varies according to where in the UK you will study. For further guidance on the criteria for home or overseas tuition fees, please refer to the UKCISA website .
Additional fee information
Provider information
University of Oxford
University Offices
Wellington Square
Oxford
OX1 2JD