BA History and English Literature
-
UCAS code
QV31 -
A level offer
BBB -
Year of entry
2027/28 -
Course duration
Full Time: 3 Years
-
Year of entry
2027/28 -
Course duration
Full Time: 3 Years
Our joint honours BA History and English Literature course allows you to explore the richness of English literature alongside the rich history and variety of human experience.
Discover a thousand years of history whilst experiencing all the specialist areas on offer at the University of Reading. The Department of History's expertise covers a wide range of regions, from Europe and Africa to America, South Asia and the Middle East.
The University of Reading ranks joint 144th globally, and 27th in the UK of UK universities featured for Arts and Humanities in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2026. We also rank in the top 125 universities in the world offering History, Philosophy and Theology (Times Higher Education World University Rankings by Subject, 2026).
In your first year, your core History modules will explore people, politics, and revolution – finding out how people struggled for power in past societies – and the culture and concepts those societies developed. We will teach you the skills you need to study and research history through an individual project of your choice.
In your English literature modules, you will read more of authors and genres that you may already know (from tragedy to Gothic, from Shakespeare and Dickens to Plath and Beckett). But you will also encounter aspects of literary studies that may be less familiar to you, from children’s literature to publishing studies and the history of the book.
Our academics have published research on everything from medieval poetry to contemporary American fiction. 100% of our research is of international standing (REF 2021, combining 4*, 3* and 2* submissions – English Language and Literature). We're ranked joint 100th in the world for English Language and Literature in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2026.
As you progress through your degree, your module choices become more diverse and specialised: you can pursue archive work, or look at the politics of literature.
Everyone in the Department of English Literature, from new lecturers to professors, teaches at every level of the degree: this gives you the benefit of our expertise and makes you part of the conversation about our research and its impact outside the classroom.
In both the Department of English Literature and the Department of History, we place a strong emphasis on small-group learning within a friendly and supportive environment. In your first and second years, you will have a mix of lectures and seminars.
In the latest National Student Survey, 97% of students in the Department of English Literature and 98% of students in the Department of History said that teaching staff are good at explaining things. (National Student Survey 2025, 97.4% of respondents from the Department of English Literature; 98.4% of respondents from the Department of History).
This course is flexible and enables you to shape your study to match your interests. Taught in small interactive seminar groups, you will regularly be able to discuss and debate topics with teaching staff and fellow students.
Field trips in the UK and abroad enable you to access new areas of history within their historical surroundings. Past examples include the National Trust in Winchester and Westminster, and further afield in Paris and Berlin.
You can study abroad for a term in your second year at one of the University's partner institutions, including those in Europe, the USA, and Australia. The University also offers all students the chance to learn a modern language alongside their core subjects.
Placement
Placements are a prominent feature of our degree courses and highly encouraged. Placements are a good way to show you how you can use the skills acquired through studying history in the real world. In History we ensure that placements are incorporated into your core learning. In the second year, we offer opportunities for short group placements in museums and heritage and media organisations, and encourage students to reflect on what they have learned from previous employment or voluntary work experience.
Through our links with the Careers Centre, you can source potential employers and help with CVs and letters of application. Staff in the department also have close links with the university’s Institute of Education, Museum of English Rural Life (MERL) and Special Collections (archives), and with external organisations such as the Berkshire Record Office.
You also have the option to study abroad for a semester in the second year. Some of the universities we have links with include University of Ottawa, Canada; University of Maastricht, Netherlands; University of Georgia, USA; and Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
For more information, please visit the Department of History website.
Overview
Our joint honours BA History and English Literature course allows you to explore the richness of English literature alongside the rich history and variety of human experience.
Discover a thousand years of history whilst experiencing all the specialist areas on offer at the University of Reading. The Department of History's expertise covers a wide range of regions, from Europe and Africa to America, South Asia and the Middle East.
The University of Reading ranks joint 144th globally, and 27th in the UK of UK universities featured for Arts and Humanities in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2026. We also rank in the top 125 universities in the world offering History, Philosophy and Theology (Times Higher Education World University Rankings by Subject, 2026).
In your first year, your core History modules will explore people, politics, and revolution – finding out how people struggled for power in past societies – and the culture and concepts those societies developed. We will teach you the skills you need to study and research history through an individual project of your choice.
In your English literature modules, you will read more of authors and genres that you may already know (from tragedy to Gothic, from Shakespeare and Dickens to Plath and Beckett). But you will also encounter aspects of literary studies that may be less familiar to you, from children’s literature to publishing studies and the history of the book.
Our academics have published research on everything from medieval poetry to contemporary American fiction. 100% of our research is of international standing (REF 2021, combining 4*, 3* and 2* submissions – English Language and Literature). We're ranked joint 100th in the world for English Language and Literature in the QS World University Rankings by Subject 2026.
Learning
As you progress through your degree, your module choices become more diverse and specialised: you can pursue archive work, or look at the politics of literature.
Everyone in the Department of English Literature, from new lecturers to professors, teaches at every level of the degree: this gives you the benefit of our expertise and makes you part of the conversation about our research and its impact outside the classroom.
In both the Department of English Literature and the Department of History, we place a strong emphasis on small-group learning within a friendly and supportive environment. In your first and second years, you will have a mix of lectures and seminars.
In the latest National Student Survey, 97% of students in the Department of English Literature and 98% of students in the Department of History said that teaching staff are good at explaining things. (National Student Survey 2025, 97.4% of respondents from the Department of English Literature; 98.4% of respondents from the Department of History).
This course is flexible and enables you to shape your study to match your interests. Taught in small interactive seminar groups, you will regularly be able to discuss and debate topics with teaching staff and fellow students.
Field trips in the UK and abroad enable you to access new areas of history within their historical surroundings. Past examples include the National Trust in Winchester and Westminster, and further afield in Paris and Berlin.
You can study abroad for a term in your second year at one of the University's partner institutions, including those in Europe, the USA, and Australia. The University also offers all students the chance to learn a modern language alongside their core subjects.
Placement
Placements are a prominent feature of our degree courses and highly encouraged. Placements are a good way to show you how you can use the skills acquired through studying history in the real world. In History we ensure that placements are incorporated into your core learning. In the second year, we offer opportunities for short group placements in museums and heritage and media organisations, and encourage students to reflect on what they have learned from previous employment or voluntary work experience.
Through our links with the Careers Centre, you can source potential employers and help with CVs and letters of application. Staff in the department also have close links with the university’s Institute of Education, Museum of English Rural Life (MERL) and Special Collections (archives), and with external organisations such as the Berkshire Record Office.
You also have the option to study abroad for a semester in the second year. Some of the universities we have links with include University of Ottawa, Canada; University of Maastricht, Netherlands; University of Georgia, USA; and Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.
For more information, please visit the Department of History website.
Entry requirements A Level BBB
Our typical offers are expressed in terms of A level, BTEC and International Baccalaureate requirements. However, we also accept many other qualifications.
Typical offer
BBB, including History or a humanities-based essay subject.
Humanities-based essay subjects include: Classical Civilisation, English Language, English Literature, Geography, Philosophy, Politics, Religious Studies.
International Baccalaureate
30 points overall including 5 in History or a humanities-based essay subject at higher level.
Extended Project Qualification
In recognition of the excellent preparation that the Extended Project Qualification (EPQ) provides to students for University study we can now include achievement in the EPQ as part of a formal offer.
BTEC Extended Diploma
DDM (Modules taken must be comparable to subject specific requirement)
English language requirements
IELTS 7.0, with no component below 6.0
For information on other English language qualifications, please visit our international student pages.
Alternative entry requirements for International and EU students
For country specific entry requirements look at entry requirements by country.
Pre-sessional English language programme
If you need to improve your English language score you can take a pre-sessional English course prior to entry onto your degree.
Structure
Compulsory modules include:
| Code | Module | Convenor |
|---|---|---|
| EN1GC | Genre and Context | DR Chloe Houston |
| EN1PE | Poetry in English | DR Paddy Bullard |
| EN1RC | Research and Criticism | DR Stephen Thomson |
| HS1JH1 | Journeys through History 1:Power and People | DR Daniel Renshaw |
| HS1JH2 | Journeys through History 2: Culture and Concepts' | PROF Anne Lawrence |
| HS1RSO | Research Skills and Opportunities in History | DR Ruth Salter |
These are the modules that we currently offer. They may change for your year of study as we regularly review our module offerings to ensure they’re informed by the latest research and teaching methods.
Optional modules include:
| Code | Module | Convenor |
|---|---|---|
| EN2BB | The Business of Books | DR Nicola Wilson |
| EN2CF | Contemporary Fiction | DR Madeleine Davies |
| EN2CMN | Chaucer and Medieval Narrative | DR Mary Morrissey |
| EN2CRI | Critical Issues | DR Stephen Thomson |
| EN2MOD | Modernism in Poetry and Fiction | DR Mark Nixon |
| EN2OEL | Introduction to Old English Literature | DR Mary Morrissey |
| EN2RP | The Romantic Period | DR Matthew Scott |
| EN2RTC | Renaissance Texts and Cultures | DR Alanna Skuse |
| EN2SH | Shakespeare | PROF Lucinda Becker |
| EN2VIC | Victorian Literature | DR Lucy Bending |
| EN2WA | Writing America | DR Sue Walsh |
| EN2WGI | Writing, Gender, Identity | DR Stephen Thomson |
| EN2WPS | Writing in the Public Sphere | DR Mary Morrissey |
| HS2GPP | Going Public: Presenting the Past, Planning the Future | PROF Kate Williams |
| HS2HAD | Historical Approaches and My Dissertation | MISS Liz Barnes |
| HS2INT | Intellectuals and Society in Twentieth Century Italy | PROF Daniela La Penna |
| HS2O10 | The Colonial Experience: Africa, 1879 to 1980 | DR Heike Schmidt |
| HS2O12 | Belief and Unbelief in Europe: Religion, Science and the Supernatural c.1400-1800 | PROF Joël Félix |
| HS2O14 | Rebel Girls: The Influence of Radical Women 1792-1919 | DR Jacqui Turner |
| HS2O16 | ‘The brightest jewel in the British crown’: The Making of Modern South Asia, 1757-1947 | DR Rohan Deb Roy |
| HS2O19 | Europe in the Twentieth Century | DR Daniel Renshaw |
| HS2O21 | Utopia: the Quest for a Perfect World | DR Jeremy Burchardt |
| HS2O3 | People, power and revolution: political culture in seventeenth-century England | DR Rachel Foxley |
| HS2O53 | The American Civil War | MISS Liz Barnes |
| HS2O55 | American Century: United States history since 1898 | DR Mara Oliva |
| HS2O56 | Medieval Medicine | DR Ruth Salter |
| HS2O57 | Encountering the Atlantic World, 1450-1850 | DR Richard Blakemore |
| HS2O7 | Kingship and Crisis in England, c.1154–1330 | DR Elizabeth Matthew |
| HS2STA | Society, Thought and Art in Modern Europe | DR Veronica Heath |
| HS2UNR | Unity, Nationalism and Regionalism in Europe | DR Athena Leoussi |
| AR2M8 | Medieval Europe: power, religion and death | DR Gabor Thomas |
| LS2LLE | Literature, Language and Education | MRS Suzanne Portch |
These are the modules that we currently offer. They may change for your year of study as we regularly review our module offerings to ensure they’re informed by the latest research and teaching methods.
Optional modules include:
| Code | Module | Convenor |
|---|---|---|
| EN3AGN | American Graphic Novels | PROF David Brauner |
| EN3AH | Hitchcock | DR Neil Cocks |
| EN3BBF | Black British Fiction | DR Cato Marks |
| EN3CL | Children's Literature | PROF Karin Lesnik-Oberstein |
| EN3DD | Decadence and Degeneration: Literature of the 1880s and 1890s | DR Lucy Bending |
| EN3DIC | Dickens | PROF Andrew Mangham |
| EN3DIS | Dissertation | DR Stephen Thomson |
| EN3HT | Holocaust Testimony: Memory, Trauma and Representation | PROF Bryan Cheyette |
| EN3LMH | Literature and Mental Health | DR John Scholar |
| EN3MAT | Margaret Atwood | DR Madeleine Davies |
| EN3MCP | Modern and Contemporary British Poetry | PROF Steven Matthews |
| EN3MO | Medieval Otherworlds | DR Aisling Byrne |
| EN3OW | Oscar Wilde and the World of Art | DR John Scholar |
| EN3PC | Publishing Cultures: Writers, Publics, Archives | DR Nicola Wilson |
| EN3PSY | Psychoanalysis and Text | PROF Karin Lesnik-Oberstein |
| EN3RF | From Romance to Fantasy | DR Mary Morrissey |
| EN3SHF | Shakespeare on Film | PROF Lucinda Becker |
| EN3TBS | The Bloody Stage: Revenge and Death in Renaissance Drama | DR Chloe Houston |
| EN3UTD | Utopia and Dystopia in English and American Literature | DR Chloe Houston |
| EN3VW | Virginia Woolf and Bloomsbury | DR Madeleine Davies |
| EN3WWP | Writing Women: Nineteenth Century Poetry | DR Lucy Bending |
| HS3CCO | Crisis, Change, Opportunity: Italy from 1968 to the Present | PROF Daniela La Penna |
| HS3DAC | Discovering Archives and Collections | DR Jacqui Turner |
| HS3HED | History Education | DR Elizabeth Matthew |
| HS3HLD | Dissertation in History | DR Heike Schmidt |
| HS3SAU | Anarchy in the UK: Punk, Politics and Youth Culture in Britain, 1976-84 | PROF Matthew Worley |
| HS3SCW | Cold War Berlin: Politics and Culture in a Divided City, 1945-89 | PROF Patrick Major |
| HS3SEU | Eugenics from 1865 to the Present Day | PROF David Stack |
| HS3SHP | Heretics and Popes: Heresy and Persecution in the Medieval World | PROF Rebecca Rist |
| HS3T100 | Sexual Politics: Gender, Sex, and Feminism in Britain after 1918 | DR Natalie Thomlinson |
| HS3T101 | Pirates of the Caribbean: Empire, Slavery, and Society, 1550-1750 | DR Richard Blakemore |
| HS3T102 | Melancholy Medicine: Healing the Body and Mind in Early Modern England, 1570-1730 | MS Amie Bolissian McRae |
| HS3T25 | Medieval Magic and the Origins of the Witch-Craze | PROF Anne Lawrence |
| HS3T88 | The Romantic Revolution: Culture, Environment and Society in England, c.1790-c.1900 | DR Jeremy Burchardt |
| HS3T89 | Africa from European Settlement to Nelson Mandela | DR Heike Schmidt |
| HS3T90 | Poor Law to Hostile Environment: Repatriation, Deportation and Exclusion from Britain 1800-2016 | DR Daniel Renshaw |
| HS3T91 | Politics and Popular Culture: Post-Arab Spring Egypt | DR Dina Rezk |
| HS3T92 | Policing the United States | MISS Liz Barnes |
| AR3HCP | The Anthropology of Heritage and Cultural Property | DR Alanna Cant |
| AR3M7 | The Archaeology of Crusading | DR Aleks Pluskowski |
These are the modules that we currently offer. They may change for your year of study as we regularly review our module offerings to ensure they’re informed by the latest research and teaching methods.
Fees
New UK/Republic of Ireland students: The home tuition fee for 2027 entry is £10,050. The home tuition fee is subject to annual increases in subsequent years of study.
New international students: £26,850 for 2027/28. The international tuition fee is subject to annual increases in subsequent years of study as set out in your student contract. For more details, please visit our Fees for International Students page.
Tuition fees
To find out more about how the University of Reading sets its tuition fees, see our fees and funding pages.
Additional costs
Some courses will require additional payments for field trips and extra resources. You will also need to budget for your accommodation and living costs. See our information on living costs for more details.
Financial support for your studies
You may be eligible for a scholarship or bursary to help pay for your study. Students from the UK may also be eligible for a student loan to help cover these costs. See our fees and funding information for more information on what's available.
Become a Global Sustainability Leaders Scholar
This exciting new undergraduate scholarship scheme is focused on creating a community of global sustainability leaders of the future. We are offering up to 400 scholarships per year, for high-achieving students from the UK and overseas.
Each scholar will receive £6,000 a year for maintenance and living costs, for up to four years of full-time study on their course (subject to terms and conditions).
Find out more about the Global Sustainability Leaders Scholarship scheme.
Careers
Throughout your degree you can select career and skills related modules, encouraging you to think about what career you would like and what skills you will need.
If you would like a career in teaching, or in archives or records management, try our optional third-year modules, History Education and Discovering Archives and Collections. We have had a high success rate from students who have completed History Education, with many of our graduates gaining places for Initial Teacher Training. Additionally, these modules develop a wide range of interpersonal, organisational, presentational and research skills readily transferable to other areas of employment.
Overall, 94% of graduates from the Department of History and 95% of graduates from the Department of English Literature are in work or further study within 15 months of graduation (based on our analysis of HESA data, Graduate Outcomes Survey 2022/23; includes first degree History and English Literature responders).
As a graduate you will have a broad range of transferable skills, including the ability to think clearly and critically, to communicate with confidence and work effectively both individually and as part of a team. Recent employers have included The British Museum, The Football Association, The House of Commons, Marks and Spencer, MI5, Morgan Stanley and Siemens Financial Services.
You may also wish to consider postgraduate study.
Build the skills to succeed in your career – and contribute to a sustainable future
At the University of Reading, we help you turn your environmental and sustainability values into opportunities that make a difference to your career and the wider world.
Employers are already reshaping their businesses to respond to climate change, and they increasingly value graduates with expertise in environmental stewardship – one of the fastest-growing skill areas (World Economic Forum, Future of Jobs Report 2025).
During your time at Reading, you’ll have access to a wide range of opportunities and support. This will help you graduate with the knowledge and confidence to tackle environmental and sustainability challenges in your career.
In 2025, the University of Reading won the AGCAS Green Careers Award. Judges highlighted the impact of our Careers service and the positive outcomes our students achieve.
Explore climate and sustainability initiatives you can get involved with as a student at Reading.

