English Lit Final PDF
English Lit Final PDF
English Lit Final PDF
Undergraduate Handbook
2012 entry
Contents
Welcome from Head of School ...............................................................................................5
Contact and Welfare Information ............................................................................................6
Frequently Asked Questions...................................................................................................9
Your Degree: Aims and Objective .........................................................................................12
Your Degree: Curriculum Information ..................................................................................14
Table of Modules ..................................................................................................................15
Assessment and Examination information ............................................................................18
Study Aids ............................................................................................................................24
Teaching and Learning Methods ..........................................................................................25
First Year Module Outlines ...................................................................................................28
Faculty Contact Details and Research Interests ...................................................................34
Appendix: Guidance on Essay Referencing ..........................................................................38
Please Note:
Although every effort is made to ensure that all information contained in this
handbook is correct at the time of going to print (September 2012), the University
cannot accept responsibility for errors or omissions. The University also reserves the
right to introduce changes from the information given, including the addition,
withdrawal or restructuring of courses and/or modules. The terms and conditions on
which the University makes offers of places on its courses of study, including those
covered in this handbook, may be found in the University of Sussex Undergraduate
Prospectus, copies of which can be obtained from the Admissions Office in
Sussex House.
can
be
found
at:
Email
You will be registered for an email account here at the University of Sussex, and it is
important that you check this account daily during the week in term times, as much
communication is done by email. University emails will automatically be sent to your
University account rather than other personal accounts, such as Hotmail.
The Web
The School of English website has lots of useful information including faculty contact details,
module and course information and up-to-date news and events in the School:
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/english/internal/
Sussex Direct
When you arrive you will be registered to Sussex Direct, which is your personalised online
gateway to university information. The system will provide you with your study timetable
information, as well as help you track your marks, assessment deadlines, exams timetable
and attendance. Behind the scenes, Sussex Direct helps your Academic Adviser, and
Student Advisers, to support your studies.
You will also be able to access your library account and personal information pages,
including; contact, financial, printing and training course information.
Study Direct
You will also be registered to Study Direct, which has a range of on-line academic
resources to help you with your studies.
You will find the links to Sussex Direct and Study Direct at www.sussex.ac.uk (via the
student internal link).
Notice boards
Some key information may be displayed on student notice boards in the Arts B Building (in
the lobby area outside the English School Office, B133), so it is important that you
familiarise yourself with where they are located and check them regularly.
Pigeonholes
Undergraduate pigeonholes for students in the School of English are located in Arts B134
and these should be checked regularly. The pigeonholes contain post and
coursework/feedback from assessments. Students will be emailed when coursework is
ready to be collected.
Personal Concerns
Student Funding: Access to Learning Fund, all scholarships, bursaries and Vice
Chancellors loans.
Student Mentoring
Information about taking a temporary break (temporary withdrawal) or withdrawing
from the university.
Student Complaints
Student Discipline
Specialist financial advice services are provided by the Student Union Advice and
Representation Centre.
You can contact the Student Life Centre by: telephoning 01273 87 6767; emailing
studentlifecentre@sussex.ac.uk ; or texting slcentre to 88020.
Further details about the Centre are available at: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/studentlifecentre
Student Mentors
Student mentors are current students who are here to help you settle into university life.
They can show you how different systems work (e.g. Sussex Direct), advise you on time
management and revision skills and a range of other issues no question is too small.
Drop-in sessions are open to anyone or you can e-mail one of the mentors and they will
arrange a time to see you.
See the website: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/studentlifecentre/mentors for more information on
Student Mentors or contact the Student Life Centre.
New
undergraduates
attend
Autumn Term
2012-13
2013-14
2014-15
Arrival Weekend
Freshers' induction
Teaching starts
Teaching finishes
Christmas vacation
Attendance only
if required
Spring Term
Mid-year
assessment period
starts
Teaching starts
Easter teaching
break
Teaching finishes
Year-end
assessment period
starts
Year-end
assessment period
ends
Summer vacation
Graduation
Attendance only
if required
Mid-year
assessment period
ends
Spring vacation
Summer Term
Thu 13 Dec 2012 - Thur 12 Dec 2013 - Thur 11 Dec 2014 Tue 8 Jan 2013
Tue 07 Jan 2014
Tue 06 Jan 2015
Resit period
It is extremely important therefore, that you do hand all of your work in on time.
Losing marks for lateness can have a significant impact on your degree classification.
Where do I get a photocopy card from, and where is the nearest photocopier?
You can purchase a photocopy card (and recharge it) in the Library. The nearest
photocopiers and printers are in the Library.
What do I do in an emergency?
If there is an accident or emergency you should phone the campus emergency hotline on
3333 (from a mobile or external line call 01273 873333). Do not dial 999. If you hear a fire
alarm, leave the building straight away by the nearest exit and go to the local building
assembly point.
and remember, the staff in the English School Office (Arts B133) are here to help you with
any queries you may have.
11
What role has literature played in past societies as well as in present society?
How do we analyse and understand different genres such as the novel, poetry, drama,
the short story and autobiography?
What is the relationship between literature and other cultural forms, including film,
photography and the visual arts?
What are the links between modernism, post-modernism and post-colonial writing?
The variety of module choices available during your degree course will provide you with the
scope and flexibility to pursue your individual interests - anything from creative writing to
sexual politics.
Core skills
While at Sussex you will be acquiring and developing many skills. Below is a list of core
skills used in our modules. The language may be unfamiliar now, but it can help you to
express the skills you learn through academic study when you apply for employment or
further study. The aim for the present is to help you to:
Listening to others
12
Academic Skills
Learning Skills
Contributing effectively in seminars
Evaluating evidence, developing
argument
13
14
Credits
30
15
15
15
Spring (core)
Spring (core)
Spring (option)
Spring (elective)
30
15
15
15
* Single Honours students can take an elective in place of Reading Genre 1 and/or 2
(nb. elective means that you choose a module from a list of options across the Schools)
Second Year
Term
Autumn (core)
Module
Period of English Literature choose ONE from:
1500-1625; 1625-1750; 1750-1880; 1860-1945
Choose TWO from:
Autumn (option)
Q3171 American Literature Since 1890 Part 1
Q3012 Lyric Poetry
Q3150 Translating Cultures
Q3059 Staging the Renaissance: Shakespeare
Q3052 The Art of Short Fiction
Q3049 The Arts and Literature of Satire
Q3077 Twentieth Century Novel & the Supernatural
Q3010 Writing and the Great War
Autumn (elective)
Autumn Term Elective*
Spring (core)
Q3060 Traditions, Innovations and Genres: The Novel
Choose TWO from the following options:
Spring (option)
Q3172 American Literature Since 1890 Part 2
Q3103 Avant Garde Cinema: Theory, Practice and Criticism
Q3129 Languages of Racisms
Q3126 Creative Writing in the Renaissance
Q3127 Pulp Culture
Q3072 Reading Post-Colonial Texts
Q3117 Representation and the Body
Q3128 Scenes of Learning
Q3097 Sense and Sexuality: Women and Writing in the 18th
Century
Q3086 Senses of the Self
Q3033 Tragedy
Q3130 Travel and Transgression
Spring (elective)
Spring Term Elective*
* In either or both terms of the second year, Single Honours students may take ONE
plus an elective from a list offered across the Schools.
15
Credits
30
15
15
30
15
15
option
Final Year
Term
Autumn (core)
Autumn (option)
Spring (core)
Spring (core)
Module
Period of English Literature choose ONE from:
1500-1625; 1625-1750; 1750-1880; 1860-1945
Special Author choose ONE from:
Austen, Beckett, Dickens, Hardy, Hitchcock, John Ashbery,
Marlowe, Rushdie, Woolf,
Modern and Contemporary - choose ONE from:
British Writing
Contemporary Film: Contemporary Theory
21st Century Literature
Special Subject choose ONE from:
Q3141 Culture and Pornography
Q3142 Documentary America
Q3024 Islam, Literature and the West
Q3020 Language, Truth & Literature
Q3079 Literatures of Africa
Q3006 Sexual Difference: Women and Writing
Q3051 The Uncanny
Q3119 Utopias and Dystopias
Credits
30
30
30
30
(Joint Honours):
BA English and History
BA English and Art History
BA English and a Language (French, German, Italian or Spanish)
BA English and Film Studies
BA Philosophy and English
BA American Studies and English
BA Drama Studies and English
First Year
Term
Autumn (core)
Spring (core)
16
Credits
15
15
30
Credits
15
15
15
15
Final Year
Term
Autumn (core)
Spring (core)
Module
Period of English Literature choose ONE from:
1500-1625; 1625-1750; 1750-1880; 1860-1945
Q3060 Traditions, Innovations and Genres: The Novel
OR
Writing, Translation and Performance choose TWO from
an array of options (see second year BA English table on
page 15 for list of options)
The remainder of your modules for the second year will be
from your joint subject.
Credits
30
30
15 each
Module
Credits
Special Author Choose ONE from an array of options 30
(see final year BA English table on page 16 for list of
options):
Special Subject Choose ONE from an array of options 30
(see table on page 16)
The remainder of your modules for the final year will be
from your joint subject.
N.B. For details of the modules that you will take for your joint subject, please refer to the
relevant course handbook.
PLEASE NOTE: Whilst the above course tables are accurate at the time of printing this handbook (September
2012), the curriculum may have changed by the time you are in your second and final years i.e. some new
modules may be running and some modules may not be offered. The English website will always have the most
up to date degree course structures go to
http://www.sussex.ac.uk/english/internal/coursesandmodules/ugcourses
17
Modes of Assessment
You will be assessed throughout your degree course through a variety of
modes of assessment, chosen to test the particular skills and forms of knowledge you have
been taught on particular modules.
In year 1, we make use of short coursework exercises, group presentations, coursework
essays, portfolios and unseen examinations as modes of assessment. In year 2, we make
use of longer coursework essays, unseen exams, log books, oral presentations and
takeaway papers. In year 3, we make use of longer coursework essays, an extended essay,
oral presentations and a dissertation as modes of assessment.
Coursework
Many modules include a coursework component in their assessment. Assessed coursework
allows your regular essays and/or exercise work to contribute to your final result for the
year, and demands continuing commitment and effort. This mode of assessment will enable
you to research and reflect upon a topic before writing, develop your skills in organising and
presenting a coherent argument within a designated word-length, show your skills in the
close reading of particular passages in order to reflect upon genres and styles of writing and
to substantiate general points about the texts discussed, and to demonstrate your ability to
present your written work in a scholarly and professional manner.
Please note: there is a manual entitled Guide to Planning and Writing Essays and
Dissertations, which contains lots of helpful information and advice regarding the planning
and writing of coursework essays. This manual is available online via the School of English
website: http://www.sussex.ac.uk/english/internal/forstudents/uginformation/ughandbooks
18
Portfolio
You will submit a specified number of coursework essays in a specified number of words for
assessment at the end of a module as part of a portfolio. You may be set specific topics
upon which to write or you may be asked to write on a topic of your own choice. You will be
informed about the manner of assessment at the beginning of the module.
Log-Book
The log-book enables you to reflect on your own learning experiences and to make a record
of your methods of reading, research and critical and creative analysis.
Takeaway Papers
Takeaway examinations [for which you have to answer a set number of questions in a
specified number of words over a specified period] allow you to display your skills in writing
about literary texts without relying exclusively on memory.
Unseen Examinations
Unseen examinations test your assimilated knowledge and understanding and the ability to
write succinctly at short notice. There is an Examinations Handbook for Undergraduates
published each year by the University, which will provide more detailed information about
examinations.
to
the
following
web
page:
20
At the end of the year, you must have achieved at least 90 credits worth of modules in order
st
to progress to the next year of your degree course. Marks for the 1 year do not contribute
towards your degree classification (final degree result), but you must pass the first year in
nd
order to progress to the second year. For a three-year degree course your 2 year marks
contribute 40% to your degree classification, and the final year contributes 60% to your
degree classification.
Grid Marking
English uses a grid system of marking. On the one hand, we do so in order to make our
marking precise and transparent; on the other hand, we do so in order to provide students
with very detailed feedback so that you can see where your strengths and weaknesses are
and where you need to do further work in order to improve your performance.
As you will see, we consider four main elements when marking your work: 1) research, 2)
analysis, 3) subject knowledge and 4) communication, argument and presentation. In order
to perform at the highest level, you will need to meet the criteria set out below in all of these
four areas. Your tutor will give you guidance on the ways in which these categories apply to
the marking of your written work on a particular module.
Research: As well as engaging with an appropriate range of primary texts, your work
should reveal wide and critical reading in the secondary sources recommended to you by
your tutor, sources which may be critical or theoretical. The best work will show evidence of
independent research.
Analysis: Your work should reveal a clear, accurate and original defining of a topic for
discussion and a clear, accurate and original handling of the matter you discuss whether it
is a textual interpretation and/or evaluation, an idea, a critical or theoretical approach, a
question of literary type or genre or a contextual question related to the particular module
you are taking. Of course, your analytical work may well involve combining elements from
some or all of these.
Subject Knowledge: Your work should reveal a close engagement with the text or texts
you are discussing in ways which reflect on the text as text, whether formally and/or in
relation to its context and to other texts. Please note that the phrase formal levels of the
text in the marking criteria below may include questions of context and/or questions of
genre, form, literary technique, language and style.
Communication, Argument and Presentation: Your work should be well written, with the
fullest attention paid to clarity, accuracy of expression, management of argument and
regard for your reader. Your work should follow the guidelines for presentation set out for
you by the department.
21
Marking Criteria
0-39
RESEARCH
ANALYSIS
SUBJECT
KNOWLEDGE
COMMUNICATION,
ARGUMENT &
PRESENTATION
40-49
50-59
60-69
70-74
75-79
80 -85
86-100
Inadequate
evidence of
secondary
reading (critical
or theoretical)
Little evidence of
secondary reading
(critical or
theoretical)
Some evidence of
secondary reading
(critical or
theoretical)
Good evidence of
secondary reading
(critical or
theoretical)
Wide use of
secondary
sources (critical or
theoretical);
evidence of
independent
research.
Wide and
penetrating use of
secondary
sources (critical or
theoretical);
evidence of
independent
research.
Inadequate
evidence of
analysis; below
the standard
required at the
current level of
module.
An elementary or
incomplete
account of the
material; prone to
stray from point or
lose focus.
An adequate
understanding of
the material;
maintains focus
on topic[s]
addressed.
A sound
understanding of
the material, with
some awareness
of the complexity
of the issues
discussed.
An original
approach to the
material by
questioning
established views
and advancing a
well-considered
analysis or
interpretation.
A fresh and
original approach
to the material by
questioning
established views
and manifesting a
developed and
striking analysis or
interpretation.
A fresh and
original approach
to the material by
questioning
established views
and manifesting
an outstandingly
bold analysis or
interpretation.
Inadequate
knowledge of
text[s] under
discussion;
quotes
inapposite or
inaccurate.
An insufficient
knowledge of
text[s] under
discussion; quotes
them occasionally
and seldom
accurately.
A basic
knowledge of the
text[s] under
discussion; quotes
aptly and with
regard to formal
levels of text.
A sound
knowledge of the
text[s] under
discussion; quotes
well used to
support argument
and shows
marked regard to
formal levels of
text.
A detailed and
accurate
knowledge of
texts, with
excellent use of
quotes and full
regard for formal
levels of texts.
A precise and
detailed
knowledge of
texts, with high
level of expertise
in discussing
formal levels of
texts.
A precise and
detailed
knowledge of
texts, with striking
level of expertise
in discussing
formal levels of
texts.
A precise and
detailed knowledge of
texts, with
outstanding level of
expertise in
discussing formal
levels of texts.
Argument poorly
structured and
below the level
required at the
current level of
the module.
Inadequate
expression;
inadequate
presentation.
An argument
which is
sometimes
muddled or
incoherent and is
rarely
substantiated by
textual evidence.
Frequent errors in
the rules of
grammar.
Presentation does
not follow
guidelines.
An argument
which shows a
basic but limited
command of
expression.
Observes the
rules of grammar.
Presentation in
line with
guidelines.
An argument
which shows a
sure command of
expression.
Critical terms
used accurately in
sound and
accurate prose.
Presentation in
line with
guidelines.
Argument
cogently
expressed,
anchored in
textual evidence.
Flawlessly
expressed and
presented.
As for 70-4:
writing
distinguished by
nuance,
complexity and
regard for style
As for 70-79:
writing
distinguished by a
sense of
assurance
associated with a
higher level.
As for 70-85:
writing distinguished
by a command of
style and exposition
associated with a
higher level.
Study Aids
Module Readers and Module Packs
To enable you to make full use of your lecture series, we have prepared comprehensive
module readers to support many of the modules taught through lectures. Students are required
to download module readers specially written for all lecture-based modules and accompanying
module packs of critical articles selected and edited for your modules. The module readers
will be available online via Study Direct.
24
25
The module reader or module outline will help you to decide on what is significant. It is
essential that you read these thoroughly before the lecture series and that you read
recommended sections before the lecture.
Active Participation
We believe that active participation is essential to your learning through lectures. You must
attend: do not rely on the notes of those who have attended lectures. Notes record what the
note taker has decided is significant and will not reflect your own analysis and assessment of
what is significant. It is often helpful, however, to compare your notes with those of others after
the lecture and reflect upon the reasons for divergences.
Make your notes legibly and on loose-leaf paper so that you can integrate your notes in a way
you find helpful into your binder for the module as a whole. Write only on one side and use the
back for your own thoughts and responses and for further work to follow up or to contest a
proposition made in the lecture. Set aside a few minutes every day to edit your notes and keep
them in a safe place.
26
Oral Presentations
In the promotion of active learning, a common teaching/learning method is the student-led
seminar, in which one or more of you give an oral presentation on an aspect of the week's
topic. Oral presentations are a formal part of the assessment of some of your modules. It is
helpful if you can work on a text which engages you and it is also helpful if you can decide in
advance (either through consultation with the tutor or simply on your own initiative) what your
presentation will be about. You may find it useful to give your presentation a title so that the
seminar will know the subject matter and mode of approach you will be adopting. Your
presentation should consist of an introduction (in which you tell your seminar group what your
presentation will be about), a development of your argument, with references to the texts
discussed, and a conclusion.
Organise the main points of your argument one after another and signpost the main points
clearly. Illustrate your points by quotation from the texts. Use appropriate language for the
occasion. [Do not start by saying "I'm really nervous, but here goes/ I'm not very good at this/ I
haven't got a lot to say."] Do not speak too fast or too slowly and do not use over-long
sentences. In your conclusion you should emphasise the main points of your presentation to
make sure your audience has understood them.
Working in groups
As with lectures, you need to reflect upon your listening skills to make full use of a seminar.
You are not listening to a detailed argument that has already been formed by an expert. You
are participating in a discussion in which arguments are in the process of being formed, views
expressed and contested, judgements made and re-made. Remember that the text(s) you all
have read will provide you with the evidence you need to justify your own position or to
challenge the position advanced by your tutor or by other members of the seminar. You may
find it useful to record insights and ideas as the seminar progresses; but try to assess the
different lines or kinds of argument that are being tested in discussion. Your own reading of a
text may be very different at the end of a seminar discussion from what it was at the outset and
you should at least have had the opportunity to make your own response more concrete and
defined.
The success of a seminar depends on the active and equal participation of all those
taking part and you will not have made the best use of the seminar if you have remained
uninvolved during the discussion. Equally, if you have definite ideas about a text, use these
to stimulate and provoke rather than to dominate discussion.
27
28
Leitch, Vincent and others (eds). The Norton Anthology of Theory and Criticism (2nd
ed).New York: W. W. Norton, 2010
Carroll, Lewis. Alices Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. Ed. Hugh
Haughton. Penguin Books, 2009. ISBN-10: 0143117734
Rhys, Jean. Wide Sargasso Sea. (any edition)
Alfred Hitchcock, Vertigo (film, 1958)
Recommended Reading
The best preparation for the module is reading widely in the Norton Anthology of Theory and
Criticism, but you may also want to make yourself familiar with a few of these useful overviews
before the module begins.
The best preparation for the course is reading widely in the Norton Anthology of Theory and
Criticism, but you may also want to make yourself familiar with a few of these useful overviews
before the course begins.
Bennett, Andrew. The Author. Oxford: Routledge, 2005.
Bennett, Andrew and Royle, Nicholas (eds). An Introduction to Literature, Criticism and Theory.
(4th ed.) Harlow: Pearson Education Limited, 2009.
Culler, Jonathan. Literary Theory: A Very Short Introduction. Oxford: Oxford University Press,
1997.
Eagleton,Terry. Literary Theory: An Introduction. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press,
1983.
Lodge, David (ed). Twentieth Century Literary Criticism: A Reader. London: Longman, 1972.
Rivkin, Julie and Michael Ryan (eds) Literary Theory: An Anthology. Oxford: Blackwell,
1998.
29
Milton, John (ed. Stephen Orgel and Jonathan Goldberg). Paradise Lost (Oxford: Oxford
University Press, 2008; revised edition). (For other suitable editions, see the information in
the module outline).
30
Beckett, Samuel Waiting for Godot: A Tragicomedy in Two Acts (Faber and Faber, 2006).
Ibsen, Henrik. An Enemy of the People. In Henrik Ibsen, An Enemy of the People, The Wild
Duck, Rosmersholm, James McFarlane, Editor and Translator (Oxford World's Classics,
Reissued edition 2009).
Shakespeare, William Othello ed. E.A.J. Honigmann (Arden Shakespeare. Third Series
2001).
Sophocles Oedipus the King In The Complete Greek Tragedies: Sophocles, Pt.1, transl.
David Grene, in the series The Complete Greek Tragedies, edited David Grene and
Richmond Lattimore, (Chicago University Press; 2nd Revised edition 1991).
31
hope to make copies of the core secondary reading available online, either via the Library or
via the module Study Direct site. You should acquire your own copies of the core primary
reading: all the relevant books are listed separately at the end of this document, as well as
being given in the detailed module outline below. The week-by-week recommended secondary
reading offers some suggestions for further reading. Remember, there are further resources
available in the library more than we can list here. There will also be a Study Direct site for
both modules, where further resources (including some core secondary reading) will be
available.
Learning Outcomes
By the end of Texts in Time 1, a successful student will be able to:
Demonstrate a developed understanding of relationships between literary texts and their
historical contexts.
Display an ability to discuss relationships between literary texts of a shared historical
period.
Participate in group work to produce a project on themes addressed by the module.
Participate in seminar discussion on themes addressed by the module.
By the end of Texts in Time 2, a successful student will be able to:
Demonstrate a developed understanding of relationships between literary texts and their
historical contexts.
Offer sustained analysis of literary texts from a number of historical periods.
Show developed critical and close reading skills in written responses to module material.
Primary reading
The books listed here (also listed above, in the module outline) are available at a specially
discounted price from John Smiths book shop, in the University Library
Where no particular edition is specified, you are welcome to buy any good-quality scholarly
edition (but avoid cheap editions, which may be abridged and will lack scholarly notes).
Where a core text appears in the module outline above but is not included in the lists below,
copies of required material will be made available and/or further details will be given of how the
text can be located or accessed online.
For Texts in Time 1
Norbrook, David (ed.). The Penguin Book of Renaissance Verse. London: Penguin, 1993
etc.
Middleton, Thomas and Thomas Dekker (ed. Elizabeth Cook). The Roaring Girl. London: A
& C Black, 2003.
Shakespeare, William (ed. J.W.Lever). Measure for Measure. London: Arden, 2008.
Shapiro, James. 1599 : a year in the life of William Shakespeare. London: Faber, 2005.
32
Shelley, Mary. Frankenstein. (Various suitable editions, e.g. OUP and Penguin)
Swift, Jonathan. Gullivers Travels. (Various suitable editions, e.g. OUP and Penguin)
Bechdel, Alison. Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic. London: Jonathan Cape, 2006.
Bronte, Charlotte. Jane Eyre. (Various suitable editions, e.g. OUP and Penguin)
Carroll, Lewis. Through the Looking Glass (1871), in Lewis Carroll (ed. Hugh Haughton)
Alices Adventures in Wonderland and Through the Looking Glass. London: Penguin, 1997.
OHara, Frank. Lunch Poems. San Francisco: City Lights Books, in print.
Wilde, Oscar. The Picture of Dorian Gray. (Available in various suitable editions)
33
Room
Ext.
Dr Richard Adelman
B241
(87) 3460
Dr Gavin Ashenden
B262
(87) 7123
g.ashenden@sussex.ac.uk
B333
(87) 7982
j.c.b.taylor@sussex.ac.uk
B263
(67) 8719
p.boxall@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Ruth Charnock
B226
2454
r.n.e.charnock.ac.uk
Dr Sam Cooper
B329
Dr Sara Crangle
B239
(67) 8064
s.crangle@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Alistair Davies
B331
(87) 7353
h.a.davies@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Christina Davidson
B223
B268
(87) 7112
d.decaires-narain@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Matthew Dimmock
B349
(87) 7663
m.dimmock@sussex.ac.uk
B350
(87) 7627
a.hadfield@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Margaret Healy
B233
(67) 8992
m.j.healy@sussex.ac.uk
B255
(67) 8099
t.f.healy@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Michael Jonick
B327
(87) 3044
Dr Vicky Lebeau
B323
(60) 2215
v.a.lebeau@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Stephanie Newell
B324
(67) 8900
s.newell@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Rachel O'Connell
B327
(87) 7375
r.c.o-connell@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Catherine Packham
B244
(87) 3953
c.m.packham@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Vincent Quinn
B322
7354
v.r.quinn@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Chloe Porter
B229
(87) 7126
B272
(67) 8966
j.d.rhodes@sussex.ac.uk
B338
(87) 7396
n.w.o.royle@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Martin Ryle
B251
(87) 2516
m.h.ryle@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Liz Sage
B329
Dr Minoli Salgdo
B225
(60) 2300
k.m.salgado@sussex.ac.uk
B238
(67) 8831
l.j.smith@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Keston Sutherland
B260
(87) 6628
k.sutherland@sussex.ac.uk
34
E-mail (@sussex.ac.uk)
Dr Pam Thurschwell
B222
(67) 8721
p.thurschwell@sussex.ac.uk
B341
(67) 8631
r.n.c.vance@sussex.ac.uk
Dr Katie Walter
B231
(87) 7349
B320
(60) 2136
Dr Tom Wright
B340
(60) 2649
m.m.g.wood@sussex.ac.uk
N.B. Office hours will be confirmed at the start of each term and will be noted on the faculty
members office door.
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