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Anthropology | Art and Architectural History | Business and Economics | Classics and Classical Languages | Climate and Sustainability | Creative Writing | Education | English | Film | Gender Studies | History | Languages | Music | Philosophy | Political and Social Sciences | Psychology | Theatre | Theology and Religious Studies | Women’s Studies | Other disciplines
While the largest subject areas catered to by ASE are English, History, Creative Writing and Theatre and Film, there is a rich range of courses in many other areas. Some are interdisciplinary, so may appear listed under more than one subject area.
If your subject area of interest is not listed, please get in touch - we may be able to organise a customised tutorial course for your desired subject.
In this course, we will consider different ways of looking at the castle, not just as a piece of military architecture, but as a home, a centre of power and a stage for social and cultural display.
What does it mean to be British in one of the most diverse countries in the world today? How did the rich ethnic tapestry that constitutes Britain in the early twenty-first century come into being?
This course examines the development of Irish nationalism, the struggle for Irish independence and the development of a separate identity in the north-east of Ireland.
This course aims to give students the knowledge and tools to analyse contemporary struggles over the environment and place them in their historical context.
This course provides insights into how economic concepts directly impact the natural environment, from the development of international policies to the vast ramifications of single individuals’ choices.
This course aims to give students the knowledge and tools to analyse contemporary struggles over the environment and place them in their historical context.
This course provides insights into how economic concepts directly impact the natural environment, from the development of international policies to the vast ramifications of single individuals’ choices.
Over the past three decades, humanity has become increasingly conscious that we are changing the climate, and contemporary writers are finding expression for this concern in emergent genres such as cli-fi and ecopoetry.
“An ideal blend of challenging academics and amazing cultural experience.”
— Chris Smith, Gettysburg College