Postgraduate research students - University of Glasgow.
A well-regarded two-volume collection of essays and bibliographies on one hundred well known undeniably influential mystery writers, including updated material from the four-volume set Critical Survey Of Mystery And Detective Fiction (Salem Press, 1988), including everyone from from Ellery Queen and John le Carre to Baroness Orczy and Sara Paretsky. Featuring in-depth analysis of characters.
The Creative and Professional Writing BA (Hons) course is designed to develop multi-skilled and entrepreneurial graduates, with a flexible skill set that will equip them to work in a wide range of creative industries. The core development of written skills will therefore be enhanced by a strong focus on oral communication, digital literacy, critical thinking, and problem solving.
Many scholars recognize the importance of Harry Potter as a vehicle for discussions about society—from race relations and gender studies to economic, political, religious and educational applications of the texts. This interdisciplinary collection of new essays brings to the forefront a critique of modern Western society, using Harry’s world as a mirror to our own.
For many years until his death Clarke was president of the British Science Fiction Association and patron of the Science Fiction Foundation, and at the ceremony formalizing the housing of the latter's research collection with the University of Liverpool, he received an honorary doctorate from the University, by videolink; he also received many other awards not directly linked to his sf work.
Reading and Writing Science Fiction and Fantasy; Plus an elective in a variety of subjects. Year 3. In your final year, there is greater flexibility for you to select options, in addition to the compulsory modules which you need to complete the single honours programme. Compulsory modules. English Literature Dissertation (40 Credits) The Shock of the New: Modern and Contemporary Literature.
Combine your passion for theatre, performance and literature with the BA (Hons) Drama and English degree at the University of Lincoln. This interdisciplinary joint honours programme considers literature from a variety of theoretical, historical, and cultural perspectives, while the theatre and performance components of the course allow students to encounter creative practice, technical theatre.
Dr Kate Macdonald and Dr Nick Turner invite abstracts for essays for a projected special issue of 'Women: A Cultural Review', which will explore how British women novelists in the period before, during and after the Second World War write comedy. We use the term 'intermodernism' as delineated by contributors to Kristin Bluemel's edited collection of the same name (2009), as a mid-twentieth.