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Admissions

UCAS Course Codes
3 year course: QQ38
4 year course: QQH8

Brief Course Outline

Course I: 3 years
Course II: 4 years (including preliminary year for those without A-level or equivalent in either Greek or Latin)
Degree awarded: BA
Intake: 5
Applications shortlisted for interview: 82.8%
Successful applications: 24.1%

Open days

See Classics
See English Language and Literature
Applicants are welcomed at any of these days. There will be staff available at open days in both Faculties who can discuss this joint degree with prospective students.

Contact details

Classics:
Ioannou Centre for Classical and Byzantine Studies, 66 St Giles, Oxford OX1 3LU
+44 (0) 1865 288391
Please email us at enquiries@classics.ox.ac.uk
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English:
Faculty of English Language and Literature, St Cross Building, Manor Road, Oxford OX1 3UQ
+44 (0) 1865 271055
Please email us at english.office@ell.ox.ac.uk
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Classics and English

Courses tab icon About the course Course outline Entrance requirements How to apply

What is Classics and English?

Classics-and-EnglishClassics and English appeals to those with a particular interest in literary and cultural interactions. English may be taken with Latin or Greek or both. For candidates with an A-level or equivalent in either Latin or Greek or both, this is a three-year course (Course I). For those who have not had the opportunity to study either language at school or college there is a preliminary year in which they learn either Latin or Greek, combined with some study of classical literature; for them the course lasts four years (Course II).

Oxford has a long and distinguished tradition of research and teaching in both Classics and English; the Classics Faculty is the largest in the world, and the English Faculty the largest in this country. Oxford possesses remarkable library provision in both subjects, in the Bodleian Library, the Sackler Library, the English Faculty Library and the college libraries.

The first year of the course (which follows the preliminary year of language learning for those taking Course II) is divided equally between the classical and English elements. The core of the Classics and English course at Oxford is formed by the link papers, which are studied over the second and third years of the course. These papers emphasise the interactions between Classics and English. They provide an opportunity to compare texts from both sides of the course, and to study classical influence. Further papers are also chosen from each of the ‘parent’ subjects.

Careers

Many graduates in Classics and English continue on to further study in their subject, or for other professional courses, such as teaching. Others have entered fields such as the media, management, advertising and librarianship.

Recent Classics and English graduates include a freelance writer and a teacher.

Philip, who graduated in 2000, is now a writer. He says: "Since graduating I have embarked on a career in writing and journalism. I have published two novels, and write for a wide range of magazines and papers, and am a Contributing Editor to Literary Review, the Periscope Post and Port. My degree helped me develop the analytical, presentational and linguistic skills that are paramount in the media world."

Related Courses

Students interested in this course might also like to consider other Classics courses or other English courses.

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Key Information Sets

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Click on the subject names below to see KIS data for each subject of each course.

 

Classics and English (3 year course) QQ38

 

Classics and English (4 year course) QQH8