Bachelor of Arts (BA)

BA American Studies

Immerse yourself in the field of American studies, encompassing history, literature, popular culture, politics, and cultural theory.

  • Duration: 3 years
  • Year of entry: 2025
  • UCAS course code: T701 / Institution code: M20
  • Key features:
  • Study abroad

Full entry requirementsHow to apply

Course description

Our three-year American Studies degree is designed for those wanting to develop a deep understanding of the US, both at home and around the world. You have the option of one semester of immersive study in North America. The course enables you to think in interdisciplinary ways about the United States, including its extensive forms of ‘soft’ and ‘hard’ power.

This course encourages you to integrate a variety of methods and approaches, allowing you to develop critical and contextual thinking. As you progress, you will have the choice to concentrate more on one particular approach: you might focus on historical topics – and we employ one of the largest groups of American historians in the UK, offering classes from the beginning of European colonization to the contemporary period – or you might decide to concentrate more on American literary and cultural studies.

At Manchester, we train our students to be attentive to the counter-currents of US history, society and literature, and many of our course emphasize the themes of race, capitalism, sexuality, the cultures of labour, political protest, environmental crises and questions of governance. You will learn how to analyse a wide range of texts and materials, including historical documents, literary works, social media communication, films, manuscripts, political rhetoric, marketing campaigns and popular music. Having developed these interpretive skills, you will develop an advanced grasp of theories of change (and continuity) in a nation that continues to exert considerable influence over international politics, culture, and economics.

Special features

Apply your subject-specific knowledge in a real-world context through an optional placement year in your third year of study (making this a four year programme), enabling you to enhance your employment prospects, clarify your career goals and build your external networks.

Teaching and learning

In Year 1 and 2, you will learn through a combination of lectures and seminars.

Lectures are used to sketch an outline of the major themes and questions, and often to underscore the wider significance certain topics have had in society or among scholars.

Seminars usually involve groups of around 10 to 15 students, enabling you to discuss in detail a body of reading, or to advance inquiry into a specific subject area. 

This will help you to hone your ability to express and defend your ideas.

To benefit from lectures and seminars you will spend a significant amount of time preparing through reading, taking notes, preparing presentations, and drafting and writing essays.

On some units, students are also taught in regular tutorials, which may be used to discuss a draft of an essay or provide feedback on one already submitted. 

Several final-year course units are also taught through a weekly workshop model, in which students work collaboratively with each other on a research project, assignment, or presentation.

Your degree is completed by your final-year dissertation, which is undertaken under the supervision of a specialist, and will allow you to carry out independent research and produce an extended piece of writing.

Coursework and assessment

Our assessment methods for this course are designed to improve your ability to work and think independently, to express your ideas with clarity, and to allow you to produce imaginative and incisive interpretations of the subject.

We are keen for our students to learn to write for different audiences.

To do this you will produce varied written work, including essays, journals, gobbet responses and your final-year dissertation.

Most units are assessed through a combination of an essays and final examinations.

American Studies modules also allow you to undertake more creative forms of assessment, such as producing visual essays, films, historical map-making, and short radio-style oral essays.

All modules encourage you to work collaboratively with other students.

Course content for year 1

Receive an introduction to the field of American Studies, the development of American literature, and US history from the period of colonisation to the end of the Cold War.  

You will also examine more recent social, political, and cultural issues, and be able to take an optional course unit of your choice.

Course units for year 1

The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

TitleCodeCredit ratingMandatory/optional
A Global Nation: Power, Politics, and Struggle Across the American Century, 1870-2020 AMER10002 20 Mandatory
Introduction to American Literature to 1900 AMER10021 20 Mandatory
American History to 1877: Columbus to Civil War AMER10211 20 Mandatory
Twentieth Century American Literature AMER10312 20 Mandatory
Introduction to American Studies AMER10501 20 Mandatory

Course content for year 2

Receive an advanced training in interdisciplinary ways of working through a module on African-American history and culture, `From Jamestown to James Brown', and select from a range of units covering 20th century US history, literature, film and politics. You can also apply to spend some of your second year abroad in the US.

Course units for year 2

The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

TitleCodeCredit ratingMandatory/optional
From Jamestown to James Brown: African-American History and Culture AMER20141 20 Mandatory
American Cultural Studies AMER20331 20 Mandatory
American Film Studies AMER20072 20 Optional
American Literature and Social Criticism, 1900-Present AMER20481 20 Optional
The American Civil War AMER21002 20 Optional
Uncle Tom's Cabin as Global Media Event AMER22662 20 Optional

Course content for year 3

Complete a long essay or dissertation on a subject of your choice and under individual supervision.

You will also select five other course units from a range of specialised modules in American Studies.

Course units for year 3

The course unit details given below are subject to change, and are the latest example of the curriculum available on this course of study.

TitleCodeCredit ratingMandatory/optional
Long Essay AMER30002 20 Mandatory
Slavery and the Old South AMER30021 20 Optional
Love American Style AMER30162 20 Optional
Conspiracy Theories in American Culture AMER30382 20 Optional
Occupy Everything AMER30422 20 Optional
Climate Change & Culture Wars AMER30571 20 Optional
American Hauntings AMER30811 20 Optional
James Baldwin in Context: Race, Sexuality and Activism AMER32271 20 Optional
Novel Democracy AMER33131 20 Optional

What our students say

Discover what current and previous American Studies students have had to say about their time on the course .

Facilities

The University of Manchester has one of the strongest collections of archival, printed, and digitised materials relating to the Americas anywhere in the UK.

Some of these materials, such as those relating to the transatlantic abolitionist movement, civil rights and race relations and 19th century American popular culture are housed at the University's John Rylands Library, the Ahmed Iqbal Ullah Race Relations Centre, and the University Special Collections Library.

The University Library, which has benefited from Manchester's long history of scholarship in this field, has one of the largest collections of electronic databases relating to the US, providing access to important newspapers, literary works and movements, entertainment, and popular culture journals, as well as unique materials relating to US politics, civil rights and black power groups, and the cultural industries.

Further details on these resources can be found on the subject's  Facilities  page.

Disability support

Practical support and advice for current students and applicants is available from the Disability Advisory and Support Service. Email: dass@manchester.ac.uk