Course overview
You explore a rich mix of English literature and creative writing – spanning poetry, prose, drama, cultural criticism and experimental texts. Alongside learning how to analyse literature from diverse periods and perspectives, you’ll take part in workshops, student-led conferences and real-world writing projects.
From your first year through to your final project, you’ll be guided by expert tutors who are published writers and active researchers. You’ll develop your creative voice, sharpen your analytical skills, and gain the confidence to shape your future – whether that’s in writing, publishing, education or the wider creative industries.
Delivered 100% online and flexibly designed to fit around your life, this course gives you the freedom to study at your own pace, wherever you are.
You’ll explore a rich mix of English literature and creative writing – spanning poetry, prose, drama, cultural criticism and experimental texts. Alongside learning how to analyse literature from diverse periods and perspectives, you’ll take part in workshops, student-led conferences and real-world writing projects.
From your first year through to your final project, you’ll be guided by expert tutors who are published writers and active researchers. You’ll develop your creative voice, sharpen your analytical skills, and gain the confidence to shape your future – whether that’s in writing, publishing, education or the wider creative industries.
Whether you are crafting a novel, penning poetry or analysing literary texts, this course provides the tools and support you need to hone your craft and prepare for a successful career in the creative industries.
Join a vibrant online community of fellow writers and take advantage of the flexibility to study at your own pace. With a curriculum designed to challenge and inspire, this is your gateway to a world of literary excellence and creative expression.
Top reasons to study this course
- Flexible learning: study at your own pace and from anywhere in the world with our 100% online course delivery.
- Expert tuition: learn from experienced and passionate tutors, who are active researchers and published writers in their fields.
- Practical experience: develop your writing skills through workshops, seminars and independent projects that mimic real-world writing scenarios.
Course details
Course structure
Year 1 core modules
Literature Now: Writing and Audience
Why do you write? Who are your readers? What do you need to consider in terms of voice? What purpose can literature serve in an era of Twitter threads, viral stories, post-truth and fake news? Do we need libraries when we have Google? How has the rise of the internet impacted on the physical book? Has the growth of social media and online lives replaced reading? Do all cultures access and read literature in the same way?
You explore and analyse professional writing including online articles, reviews, ‘how to’ guides, interpretative writing and live texts using augmented reality technologies. You work towards your final portfolio using the workshop space to experiment with different forms and approaches to professional writing.
This is a 20-credit module.
On and Off the Page: Critical and Creative Skills in Practice
Get an introduction to critical and creative skills and techniques to support you in developing your own reading and writing. Learn how to apply close reading techniques to a range of texts and voices, across different forms, genres and global perspectives. You deepen your understanding of writing and reading by analysing a range of critical approaches to novels, poetry and drama.
This is a 40-credit module.
Romantics to Victorians: Literature, Culture, and Society
Consider how romantic and Victorian literature is influenced by so many factors - the political revolution in Europe and beyond, a rising discussion of rights, the Woman Question, and industrial, economic and scientific transformations. You focus on the period between the French Revolution and Queen Victoria's death in 1901 to explore the dynamic relationship between their historical and cultural context.
Critically write about class, gender and race to explore the ideological assumptions covered in late 18th and 19th-century literature.
This is a 40-credit module.
Words Matter: Writing for Social Change
You investigate key writers, past and present, who have played or continue to play a role in social change. You address questions about why studying literature and creative writing matters.
You consider the opportunities available after graduation including becoming an educator, publisher, facilitator, communicator and creative. And you write your own manifesto, alongside a personal development plan, to achieve your goals after you graduate.
This is a 20-credit module.
Year 2 core modules
Colonial and Postcolonial Writing: Global Voices in Context
Examine colonial-era and postcolonial literary texts, including poetry, fiction, short fiction, drama, and life-writing. Consider different historical perspectives on, and legacies of, empire, from a range of country contexts including South Asia, Africa, Australasia, as well as America and Europe. Explore pressing concerns about how far such texts have questioned, and may continue to contest, dominant and often damaging perspectives on race, ethnicity, class and gender in changing colonial, postcolonial, neo-colonial and decolonising contexts.
This is a 40-credit module.
Future Directions: Research, Careers and Development in the Humanities
Develop graduate skills in preparation for further study, employment or lifelong learning, through engagement with our Student Futures team and humanities practitioners. Gain insight into career pathways and explore the opportunities available to humanities graduates, including as educators, policy-makers, publishers, facilitators, communicators, and creatives. Work on an individual project, either work focused or academic focused.
This is a 20-credit module.
Make it New: Experimental Writing
Explore modernism as one of the most innovative and artistic movements of the 20th century, whilst examining your own experimental writing practices.
You examine the diverse ways of writing in the early 20th century by experimenting with new methods of writing whilst reflecting on your own style. You investigate literature and other forms of cultural expression such as visual art, music and film to understand the relationship between modernism and modernity. You also learn how past artists and writers responded to historical and cultural change. And you analyse if current writers continue to innovate new styles in the same way.
This is a 40-credit module.
Representation and Cultural Identity: Student Conference
It is believed that our sense of who we are and how we perceive others is tied to the way identities are constructed through cultural representation. How does the way our perception is constructed tend to privilege some groups over others? Examine key theoretical perspectives on the representation of identity in relation to a range of concepts – such as class, gender, race, sexuality and disability – as constructed in and represented by contemporary culture. Investigate these ideas in relation to a contemporary cultural text of your choosing and present your research as a paper at a student conference.
This is a 20-credit module.
Year 3 core modules
Contemporary Debates in Creative Writing
What does it mean to facilitate or be part of a writing group? How do you find an agent, or publish your writing? What are the links between writing and well-being? What are some of the central debates in creative writing and publishing today? Gain the tools and skills that help you to understand issues and ethics in a variety of professional settings for writers. You produce a seminar report that reflects on one of the issues or debates introduced during the module, and a professional project plan that you can go on to implement after the course.
This is a 20-credit module.
Through a major piece of creative writing, you explore a specific type of writing in depth and reflect on the process involved in its production. You develop your skills in working both autonomously and in small groups, with guidance from your supervisor. Address the real topics and issues faced by professional writers to enhance your transferable skills such as gathering, researching and organising your ideas, editing, redrafting, incorporating feedback and contextualising your writing.
This is a 40-credit module.
Doing Research: Developing Your Specialism
Gain the skills and knowledge to devise, develop and execute an extended independent research project in an area of critical or creative practice. Develop advanced research skills including reflective practice, critical research, creative practice-based research, self-management, and research project management, preparing you for your dissertation and creative writing project. Explore the work of researchers in English and creative writing through research specialism workshops, which showcase recent and active research projects, providing insights into the wide-ranging research practices underpinning this work.
This is a 40-credit module.
You address what is meant by genre writing and how this can be used to engage readers. Consider writers’ approaches to a range of genres, forms and modes of writing across fiction, non-fiction and poetry. You explore how writers borrow and develop speech and conventions including speculative writing, writing about popular culture, memoir, horror writing and young adult writing. Develop your understanding of different kinds of audiences, and explore developments in style and genre.
You practise and develop skills to produce, craft and edit a final submission of creative work. And you reflect on the process within a framework drawn from the topics discussed from your own independent reflection and research.
This is a 20-credit module.
Modules offered may vary.
How you learn
The course is delivered 100% online (distance learning). There is no requirement to attend classes at a set time. You can access the course space and complete coursework whenever works best for you.
While you interact with content such as video lectures, reading and online tasks independently, you also collaborate, network and participate in group learning activities online, such as discussions and debates on concepts, theories and practical applications, writing workshops and reading groups.
You learn through:
Lectures and group discussions: around texts, ideas and approaches across a range of forms and genres – both contemporary and historical – and drawn from a range of writers and global perspectives.
Reading groups: apply and develop close reading skills to analyse and discuss selected texts through the lens of chosen critical frameworks and theories.
Writing workshops: develop practical hands-on skills in drafting, editing and rewriting in response to weekly themes and texts. Gain skills in reading and responding to others’ writing, incorporating others’ feedback into your own work and developing a portfolio.
Our Virtual Learning Environment provides supporting reading questions, writing prompts, practical examples and case studies for learning and assessment, including video content and annotated examples.
How you are assessed
There are no formal exams. You are assessed through creative-critical projects, essays, portfolios, reports, presentations, manifestos and a major final-year writing project – all of which develop advanced skills in creative, academic and professional writing, as well as high-level presentation and communication skills.
Our Disability Services team provide an inclusive and empowering learning environment and have specialist staff to support disabled students access any additional tailored resources needed. If you have a specific learning difficulty, mental health condition, autism, sensory impairment, chronic health condition or any other disability please contact a Disability Services as early as possible.
Find out more about our disability services
Find out more about financial support
Find out more about our course related costs
Entry requirements
2026-27 entry requirements
For Clearing 2025 entry requirements, please refer to the information in the box above.
Typically 96-112 points from at least two A-levels, T level or equivalent.
If you are a mature applicant with an Access qualification or no formal qualifications, please contact us.
For general information please see our overview of entry requirements.
You can gain considerable knowledge from work, volunteering and life. Under recognition of prior learning (RPL) you may be awarded credit for this which can be credited towards the course you want to study.
Find out more about RPL
Employability
Career opportunities
You can progress into a range of careers in the creative industries, including:
- professional writer: work as a novelist, poet, screenwriter or playwright
- editor or publisher: join publishing houses, magazines or online platforms to edit and publish written content
- content creator: develop content for websites, blogs, social media and marketing campaigns
- educator: teach English and creative writing at various educational levels
- researcher: conduct research in literature, cultural studies or creative writing
- communications specialist: work in public relations, corporate communications or media.
The skills gained from this programme, such as critical thinking, creative problem solving and effective communication, are highly valued in many other sectors including advertising, journalism and the arts. With a strong portfolio of work and a deep understanding of the literary and creative landscape, you are well-equipped to pursue your chosen career path or further academic study. For those interested in extending their studies, we offer postgraduate degrees in creative writing (online and on-campus), and in creative writing and wellbeing (online).
Postgraduate courses in English and Creative Writing
Learning platform
Our virtual learning environment (VLE) is the platform you use to access your online course
Teesside University online learning courses are delivered through the Brightspace Learning Environment.
Here are some of the benefits.
- You can use it on your smartphone, tablet and computer.
- And you can use it anytime, so that you can plan your learning to fit your own schedule.
- It's easy to use and navigate.
- Modules are set out by topics and themes. You can use the progress bar to understand where you are in your modules, and appreciate your achievements.
- We support you to become familiar with your VLE, helping you to start learning quickly.
- You get feedback, help and guidance from tutors throughout your course through the VLE, and you can ask questions at any time.
- Our tutors use a live activity feed to keep you updated about your course.
- You can create a student profile, collaborate with other students and take part in online discussion forums.