Overview
The Department of English has an outstanding international reputation. Our postgraduate researchers benefit from strong research-led teaching covering a wide and continuous range of writing. When you study a PhD in Creative Writing, you'll be equipped with the critical and communication skills and the capacity for adaptable intelligence which are in demand in all areas of modern life.
Introduction
At the University of Liverpool, ‘English’ is the study of the interlinked activities and histories of speaking, listening, writing, reading, and communicating, in a global language of many variants and in literatures of many types. Engagement with media has allowed our researchers to be at the forefront of developing a rich cultural agenda at national and international levels, opening access to literature to a diverse audience. This has resulted in four staff members succeeding in the New Generation Thinkers scheme. We also actively support impact in terms of reaching the general reader, through the publication of research in various, high-profile formats. The impact of such intervention into the nation’s cultural life creates new and evolving long-term contexts for thinking, understanding, writing and imagining.
Many of our academics specialise in contemporary literature that overlaps with science fiction, climate change, visual arts, comics and graphic novels, and travel and nature writing, as well as psychogeography and the urban environment. Our creative writers are leading practitioners, but they’re also critics who play an important role in responding to contemporary writing in scholarly monographs, journals, literary magazines and newspapers. Members of the department have also judged significant national and international literary prizes including the Man Booker Prize, the Costa prize and the T.S. Eliot prize.
Research topics
We particularly welcome proposals that match those of our researchers. Our research themes are:
- Citizenship and Identity
- Poetry and Diversity
- Literature and the Visual Arts.
See our staff list to explore our research specialisms.
Research culture
Ranked top 10 in the UK for research impact classified as outstanding (4*) (REF 2021), the Department of English conducts research in three main areas: literature, language and creative writing. Our work fosters interdisciplinarity and aims to develop strategic partnerships, particularly with local and national cultural organisations to reach those who can benefit from our research.
Our research has produced world-leading academic outputs and shows strong commitment to local, national and international public engagement activities and partnerships, and to generate maximum research impact on issues in health, education, citizenship, and heritage in the world of which the academy is part.
Key to our research strategy is the establishment of research centres and departmental clusters across our three main areas of expertise. These research units facilitate peer support, foster collaborative research and encourage different kinds of knowledge exchange and outreach work.
The Centre for New and International Writing is the University’s focal point for the study of contemporary and international literatures for creative writing and new writing in its many manifestations. All staff whose work is allied to the centre teach in the Department of English and offer supervision at doctoral level in either literature or creative writing.