""
Language skills
required
Programme length
Three years.
Study mode
Face-to-face learning
Application status
International students:
Students with Icelandic or Nordic citizenship:
Overview

  • Do you want to speak excellent English? 
  • Do you enjoy English-language literature and culture? 
  • Are you good at written and spoken English? 
  • Do you want a diverse selection of courses that suit your interests? 
  • Do you want to open up future opportunities in challenging careers? 

The programme in English Studies at the University of Iceland provides an academic overview of English linguistics and literature, English-speaking cultures and English as an international language. The programme is designed for students who are already proficient in spoken and written English. 

English Studies can also be taken as a 120 ECTS major alongside a 60 ECTS minor in another subject. A minor can be taken entirely online without attending on-site classes.  

Course topics include:

  • The linguistic system - sounds and words 
  • British cultural history and literature 
  • The history of the English language, English literature and writing skills 
  • Literary studies and linguistics 
  • Multiculturalism, bilingualism and language teaching 
  • English teaching and creative writing 
  • Hollywood, Vikings and Romanticism 

Teaching methods and programme structure 

The programme is taught through lectures, seminars, individual tutorials and independent study, depending on the course and the learning material. 

Teaching is as flexible as possible and learning material is varied and diverse. 

The first year of the BA can be taken entirely through distance teaching. Recordings of lectures, lecture slides and various other digital files are available online. Students can access this material at any time. 

Face-to-face teaching takes place in all the largest buildings on the University campus, depending on the size of the class. 

Please contact the Faculty of Languages and Cultures for more information about the programme or the International Division for more information about exchange studies.  

The practical value of English

English is the international language of business, science, education and culture. 

In our globally connected modern society, there are few jobs that do not require good English proficiency. English is important for careers in the media, IT and online companies, international business, tourism, office and administrative work, teaching, translation and more. 

English is the key that unlocks career opportunities and graduate studies, both in Iceland and abroad. English is also the key to many cultural spheres, in particular the literature, music and film of the UK, the USA, Canada, India, Australia, New Zealand, many African nations and several Asian nations. English is not only the language of Shakespeare and Whitman, but also of NASA and the world wide web – not to mention Hitchcock, Kubrick, Presley and Lennon! 

Knowledge of English is essential in the modern world: for education, work, culture and leisure. A degree in English is therefore an invaluable springboard to success! 

Icelandic matriculation examination (stúdentsprófor equivalent qualification. Further information can be found in article 15, regulation on admission requirements for undergraduate study no. 331/2022.

New students must have English language proficiency on the C1 level according to the Common European Framework of Reference for Languages.
TOEFL 5.0, IELTS 7.0.

TOEFL exams taken before 21 January 2026 need a score of 93.

The BA degree requires 180 ECTS credits over three years, i.e. 60 credits per year. The first-year courses, which are all compulsory, comprise both literature and linguistics. After the first year, students may choose to concentrate their studies in either of these two areas or a combination of the two. Students should complete all first-year courses before they commence the second academic year.

The following courses are also required to complete the degree:

  • ENS329G Literary Theory
  • ENS346G British Literature from Early Middle Ages
  • ENS455g British Literature 1603-1789

Students must also take at least one of ENS315G Literature and Essay Writing and/or ENS328G Linguistics and Research Writing.

The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

Students select their remaining courses according to their area of interest within the subject area (English Studies). The following courses from School of Education count as courses within the subject area (English Studies): ÍET202G Introduction to English language teaching; ÍET304G EFL learning and second language acquisition. 

Students may also elect to take up to 20 ECTS in other subject areas. 

Programme structure

Check below to see how the programme is structured.

This programme does not offer specialisations.

First year | Fall
Languages and Cultures I: Academic Methods and Techniques (MOM102G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course is an introductory course in the Faculty of Languages and Cultures. Its aims and purpose include an introduction of basic concepts and terminology in the field, exploration of critical thinking to increase reading comprehension of academic texts, implementation of practical learning practices and academic procedures to facilitate successful academic studies, discussion on plagiarism and academic integrity, evaluation of academic standards, etc. Students receive practical training in critical evaluation of academic texts, basic argumentation analysis, identification of rhetorical patterns and text structure in various text types, review of acceptable references, and an introduction to analytical reading. Furthermore, students will gain insight into the importance of academic literacy to enhance understanding and writing of academic papers, presentation of research findings, etc.

The course is taught in English and is intended for students in:

  1. The English BA program.
  2.  Students of foreign languages (other than English)

 *Those students that need ECT credits as a result of changes in the MOM courses, as MOM102G used to be a 5-credit course, need to add an individual assignment (MOM001G, 1 ECT) within the MOM102G course.

  • This individual assignment is only intended for students who finished MOM202G (before the school year 2024-2025) and are now enrolled in MOM102G, and have thus only gained 9 credits in the two mandatory MOM courses.
  • Students who intend to increase their credits with a 6 ECT course, within their departments, are free to do so – and do thus not take this additional individual assignment (in MOM102G).

To sign up for the individual project you must talk to the teacher of MOM102G.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
First year | Fall
How Language Works I: Sound and Word (ENS101G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is the first of two introductory courses in linguistics.  It addresses such questions as: what kinds of sounds do humans make when using spoken language? How are those sounds organised within the sound system of a language? What is a word? If a sign is a combination of a form with a meaning, are words linguistic signs? Where do words come from? How are words put together?

The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
First year | Fall
The Talking Animal (ENS102G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course offers a survey of important domains of linguistics, especially those which emphasise the relation of human language to man in a broader context: sociolinguistics, dialect variation, first language acquisition, second language acquisition, language and the brain, historical comparative linguistics, and animal communication.  The focus of the course is on English and the course introduces students of English to areas of linguistics that they can explore in more detail later in their studies.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
First year | Fall
British and European Cultural History (ENS103G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The aim of this course is to give students a good overview of the social and political backgrounds to Great Britain. In the process of doing that we will examine patterns of British culture, political and social institutions and ethnic minority groups. Assessment: a 2 hour final exam.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
First year | Fall
British Literature 1789-1954 (ENS110G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This is a survey course of British Literature from the beginnings of Romanticism to the early twentieth century. The required reading includes some poetry, a play, short stories, novellas, and a novel. Students will read and analyze works by major Romantics (including Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats), Victorians (Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, Gaskell, and Wilde) and modern authors (Yeats and Joyce). They will also be introduced to various literary terms and themes.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
First year | Spring 1
Languages and Cultures II: Intellectual and Linguistic History (MOM202G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In a world increasingly awash in conspiracy theories, fake news, AI-generated deep fakes and denialism of scientific and historical facts, our ability to interpret politics, culture and society with critical discernment is more important than ever.  

Focusing on culture, this course aims to give you the analytical tools you need as a student and citizen to critically interpret texts, visual culture and language.  

You will train your hermeneutical skills on short narratives and images, with help from selected readings in literary theory, cultural studies and visual culture(s), and engage in historical contextualization  

The emphasis in the class will be on critical thinking and group discussion, allowing you to share your analytical discoveries with your fellow students and build an interpretative community. 

Language of instruction: English
Distance learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
First year | Spring 1
History of the English Language (ENS201G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

An overview of the history and development of the English language.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
First year | Spring 1
How Language works II: Word, Sentence, Discourse (ENS202G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is the second of two introductory courses in linguistics. It addresses such questions as: how are words put together to form sentences? how is the form of words affected by their place in a sentence? what other kinds of grammatical information influence the shape and use of words in a sentence? how are sentences related to each other? how can sentences be combined to form larger sentences? how do separate sentences relate to each other when strung together? what do words mean? what do sentences mean? what is discourse meaning?

The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
First year | Spring 1
English Composition (ENS203G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The ability to write well in English is a prerequisite for all other courses in the English department. The main aim of this course is to equip students to write in English for academic purposes. Course work will involve writing practice and composing essays based on primary and secondary research. There will be a strong emphasis on the organization of ideas as well as on style. The main goal is for students to gain an understanding of the writing process and develop their own voice in writing.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
First year | Spring 1
American History and Culture (ENS204G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description
  • This course aims at revisiting decisive moments of the history of the United States of America, from the early settlement to the present.
  • Particular attention will be dedicated to the events surrounding the Independence of the country, the American Civil War and ensuing Reconstruction, as well as offering a broad overview of the 20th and early 21st centuries.
  • There will also be an emphasis on the experiences of minorities and disenfranchised collectives (Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans, the LGBTQ community, as well as the rights of women) in the history of the United States, from the settlement to present.
Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
First year | Spring 1
American Literature (ENS205G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Authors representative of nineteenth-century American Literature are read in historical context.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Fall
Literature and Essay Writing (ENS315G, ENS328G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

“Literature and Essay Writing” will expose students to exemplary texts in English across a range of historical periods and genres. It will prompt students to engage in imaginative and critical dialogues with works of literature  foregrounding close reading skills, poetic and critical thinking, scholarly and creative journaling, and analytical and research essay writing skills. The course is designed to increase proficiency in the generation and organization of ideas, in editing and research skills, and in the use of the MLA style of citation.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Fall
Linguistics and Research Writing (ENS315G, ENS328G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course will expand student's capacity to enjoy, understand and write about language and linguistics. The aim of the module is to develop students' proficiency in process writing in English for academic purposes, with special attention given to increasing proficiency in organization, writing and revising, and on students developing their own voice in expository writing. Course work will include writing assignments and essays, as well as reading a variety of texts for critical reflection and analysis. Individual and peer feedback will be a major feature of this module. The course is also designed to strengthen skills in research and the use of APA style.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Fall
Literary Theory (English) (ENS329G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course provides an introduction to the major principles of contemporary literary theory and criticism and to established methods and materials of literary research. Major theories include, structuralism, feminism, Queer Theory, postmodernism, marxism, post-colonial criticism, posthumanism, and eco-criticism. The objective of the course is to help you to develop your skills as a reader and critic.

Midterm Exam information:  
Midterm essay  of 1000-1,500 words. 35 percent (home assignment, file upload)

Final exams:
Exam (theory-focused) 25 percent (short answer questions onsite with inspera) 
Final Essay 40 percent (home assignment, file upload)

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Fall
British Literature from Early Middle Ages to 1603 (ENS346G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential literary texts in English from the early Middle Ages (Old English period) to the end of the Elizabethan era.

IMPORTANT: This course is the first half of ENS303G British Literature II (which has now been split into two separate courses, one for each term of the academic year). Students who have completed ENS303G are not eligible to take this course.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Fall
Semantics (ENS311G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Fall
Shakespeare (ENS451G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Second year | Fall
Language Myths (ENS613G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Fall
Introduction to English language teaching (ÍET202G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Second year | Fall
EFL learning and second language acquisition (ÍET304G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Second year | Spring 1
British Literature 1603-1789 (ENS455G)
A mandatory (required) course for the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential poetry and prose in English from the early 17th to the late 18th century.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Spring 1
BA-thesis in English (ENS231L)
Free elective course within the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Second year | Spring 1
Sociolinguistics (ENS313G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
Second year | Spring 1
Children's Literature (ENS456G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Second year | Spring 1
English Syntax (ENS503G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Second year | Spring 1
The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films (ENS505G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction (ENS516G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Second year | Spring 1
British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok (ENS622G)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Second year | Spring 1
The Ancestry of English Words (ENS350M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
David Cronenberg’s Adaptations (ENS456M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature (ENS820M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Second year | Spring 1
Languages and Theatre (MOM401G)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Third year | Fall
Semantics (ENS311G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Third year | Fall
Shakespeare (ENS451G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Third year | Fall
Language Myths (ENS613G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Third year | Fall
Introduction to English language teaching (ÍET202G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Not taught this semester
Third year | Fall
EFL learning and second language acquisition (ÍET304G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Third year | Fall
BA-thesis in English (ENS231L)
Free elective course within the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Third year | Fall
Vocabulary Acquisition: Research and Theory (ENS344M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course covers the nature of vocabulary acquisition: how vocabulary develops, is learned and taught. Various factors will be analyzed in detail, including, the role of pronunciation, word frequency, various learning strategies for vocabulary growth and considerable attention will be drawn to current research methodology in Vocabulary Acquisition. Students will review research as well as conduct a mini study.

Taught on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 am (2. and 3. year students only)

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Third year | Fall
Creative Writing Course (ENS817M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

You are the perfect candidate if you have a burning desire to write fiction or poetry, and enjoy reading good books.

Aims include:

1. To sharpen awareness and improve skills through exercises in writing, and especially through revision

2. To provide practical criticism of work-in-progress in a workshop setting, along with advice about revisions and improvisation.

In addition to invoking the muse, students will learn practical writing skills such as organization, structure, characterization and dialogue. The course will also involve the examination of the work of key novel and short story writers, and poets. Throughout the course, students will develop their own work as well as improving their critical skills. Students will complete a short story or a small collection of poems by the end of the course.

Attendance requirement is 100% - you must attend one 1-hour presentation and one 2-hour workshop session per week. Not suitable for distance students.

Students who fulfil the prerequisites will be signed up. Sign up is on first come first served bases and there are 6 seats reserved for MA students and 6 seats reserved for BA students. Any unfilled seats for the course after the first week of classes will be offered to students on the waiting list. 

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Attendance required in class
Third year | Spring 1
BA-thesis in English (ENS231L)
Free elective course within the programme
0 ECTS, credits
Course Description

BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

Language of instruction: English
Prerequisites
Part of the total project/thesis credits
Third year | Spring 1
Sociolinguistics (ENS313G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Distance learning
Online learning
Third year | Spring 1
Children's Literature (ENS456G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Third year | Spring 1
English Syntax (ENS503G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Third year | Spring 1
The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films (ENS505G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Third year | Spring 1
Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction (ENS516G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Third year | Spring 1
British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok (ENS622G)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Third year | Spring 1
The Ancestry of English Words (ENS350M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Online learning
Prerequisites
Third year | Spring 1
David Cronenberg’s Adaptations (ENS456M)
Free elective course within the programme
5 ECTS, credits
Course Description

World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Third year | Spring 1
Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature (ENS820M)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

Language of instruction: English
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Third year | Spring 1
Languages and Theatre (MOM401G)
Free elective course within the programme
6 ECTS, credits
Course Description

Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Prerequisites
Year unspecified | Fall
Latin I: Beginner's Course (KLM101G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is a beginner’s course in Latin. No prior knowledge of Latin is assumed at the outset. It introduces the basics of Latin grammar and syntax. Chosen passages will be read in Latin, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of 24 lectures on particular aspects of the Latin language and assigned readings.

This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
Year unspecified | Fall
Ancient Greek I: Beginner's Course (KLM102G)
Free elective course within the programme
10 ECTS, credits
Course Description

This course is a beginner’s course in Ancient Greek. It introduces the basics of grammar and syntax of the Attic dialect. No prior knowledge of Greek is assumed at the outset. Reading knowledge of Ancient Greek will be prioritized and chosen passages will be read in Greek, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of both lectures on particular aspects of the Greek language and assigned readings. It is essential that students read the assigned materials before each lecture.

This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

Language of instruction: Icelandic
Face-to-face learning
First year
  • Fall
  • MOM102G
    Languages and Cultures I: Academic Methods and Techniques
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is an introductory course in the Faculty of Languages and Cultures. Its aims and purpose include an introduction of basic concepts and terminology in the field, exploration of critical thinking to increase reading comprehension of academic texts, implementation of practical learning practices and academic procedures to facilitate successful academic studies, discussion on plagiarism and academic integrity, evaluation of academic standards, etc. Students receive practical training in critical evaluation of academic texts, basic argumentation analysis, identification of rhetorical patterns and text structure in various text types, review of acceptable references, and an introduction to analytical reading. Furthermore, students will gain insight into the importance of academic literacy to enhance understanding and writing of academic papers, presentation of research findings, etc.

    The course is taught in English and is intended for students in:

    1. The English BA program.
    2.  Students of foreign languages (other than English)

     *Those students that need ECT credits as a result of changes in the MOM courses, as MOM102G used to be a 5-credit course, need to add an individual assignment (MOM001G, 1 ECT) within the MOM102G course.

    • This individual assignment is only intended for students who finished MOM202G (before the school year 2024-2025) and are now enrolled in MOM102G, and have thus only gained 9 credits in the two mandatory MOM courses.
    • Students who intend to increase their credits with a 6 ECT course, within their departments, are free to do so – and do thus not take this additional individual assignment (in MOM102G).

    To sign up for the individual project you must talk to the teacher of MOM102G.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS101G
    How Language Works I: Sound and Word
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the first of two introductory courses in linguistics.  It addresses such questions as: what kinds of sounds do humans make when using spoken language? How are those sounds organised within the sound system of a language? What is a word? If a sign is a combination of a form with a meaning, are words linguistic signs? Where do words come from? How are words put together?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS102G
    The Talking Animal
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a survey of important domains of linguistics, especially those which emphasise the relation of human language to man in a broader context: sociolinguistics, dialect variation, first language acquisition, second language acquisition, language and the brain, historical comparative linguistics, and animal communication.  The focus of the course is on English and the course introduces students of English to areas of linguistics that they can explore in more detail later in their studies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS103G
    British and European Cultural History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The aim of this course is to give students a good overview of the social and political backgrounds to Great Britain. In the process of doing that we will examine patterns of British culture, political and social institutions and ethnic minority groups. Assessment: a 2 hour final exam.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS110G
    British Literature 1789-1954
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a survey course of British Literature from the beginnings of Romanticism to the early twentieth century. The required reading includes some poetry, a play, short stories, novellas, and a novel. Students will read and analyze works by major Romantics (including Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats), Victorians (Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, Gaskell, and Wilde) and modern authors (Yeats and Joyce). They will also be introduced to various literary terms and themes.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • MOM202G
    Languages and Cultures II: Intellectual and Linguistic History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In a world increasingly awash in conspiracy theories, fake news, AI-generated deep fakes and denialism of scientific and historical facts, our ability to interpret politics, culture and society with critical discernment is more important than ever.  

    Focusing on culture, this course aims to give you the analytical tools you need as a student and citizen to critically interpret texts, visual culture and language.  

    You will train your hermeneutical skills on short narratives and images, with help from selected readings in literary theory, cultural studies and visual culture(s), and engage in historical contextualization  

    The emphasis in the class will be on critical thinking and group discussion, allowing you to share your analytical discoveries with your fellow students and build an interpretative community. 

    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS201G
    History of the English Language
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An overview of the history and development of the English language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS202G
    How Language works II: Word, Sentence, Discourse
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the second of two introductory courses in linguistics. It addresses such questions as: how are words put together to form sentences? how is the form of words affected by their place in a sentence? what other kinds of grammatical information influence the shape and use of words in a sentence? how are sentences related to each other? how can sentences be combined to form larger sentences? how do separate sentences relate to each other when strung together? what do words mean? what do sentences mean? what is discourse meaning?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS203G
    English Composition
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The ability to write well in English is a prerequisite for all other courses in the English department. The main aim of this course is to equip students to write in English for academic purposes. Course work will involve writing practice and composing essays based on primary and secondary research. There will be a strong emphasis on the organization of ideas as well as on style. The main goal is for students to gain an understanding of the writing process and develop their own voice in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS204G
    American History and Culture
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description
    • This course aims at revisiting decisive moments of the history of the United States of America, from the early settlement to the present.
    • Particular attention will be dedicated to the events surrounding the Independence of the country, the American Civil War and ensuing Reconstruction, as well as offering a broad overview of the 20th and early 21st centuries.
    • There will also be an emphasis on the experiences of minorities and disenfranchised collectives (Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans, the LGBTQ community, as well as the rights of women) in the history of the United States, from the settlement to present.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS205G
    American Literature
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Authors representative of nineteenth-century American Literature are read in historical context.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Literature and Essay Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    “Literature and Essay Writing” will expose students to exemplary texts in English across a range of historical periods and genres. It will prompt students to engage in imaginative and critical dialogues with works of literature  foregrounding close reading skills, poetic and critical thinking, scholarly and creative journaling, and analytical and research essay writing skills. The course is designed to increase proficiency in the generation and organization of ideas, in editing and research skills, and in the use of the MLA style of citation.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Linguistics and Research Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course will expand student's capacity to enjoy, understand and write about language and linguistics. The aim of the module is to develop students' proficiency in process writing in English for academic purposes, with special attention given to increasing proficiency in organization, writing and revising, and on students developing their own voice in expository writing. Course work will include writing assignments and essays, as well as reading a variety of texts for critical reflection and analysis. Individual and peer feedback will be a major feature of this module. The course is also designed to strengthen skills in research and the use of APA style.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS329G
    Literary Theory (English)
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an introduction to the major principles of contemporary literary theory and criticism and to established methods and materials of literary research. Major theories include, structuralism, feminism, Queer Theory, postmodernism, marxism, post-colonial criticism, posthumanism, and eco-criticism. The objective of the course is to help you to develop your skills as a reader and critic.

    Midterm Exam information:  
    Midterm essay  of 1000-1,500 words. 35 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Final exams:
    Exam (theory-focused) 25 percent (short answer questions onsite with inspera) 
    Final Essay 40 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS346G
    British Literature from Early Middle Ages to 1603
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential literary texts in English from the early Middle Ages (Old English period) to the end of the Elizabethan era.

    IMPORTANT: This course is the first half of ENS303G British Literature II (which has now been split into two separate courses, one for each term of the academic year). Students who have completed ENS303G are not eligible to take this course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ENS455G
    British Literature 1603-1789
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential poetry and prose in English from the early 17th to the late 18th century.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS344M
    Vocabulary Acquisition: Research and Theory
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers the nature of vocabulary acquisition: how vocabulary develops, is learned and taught. Various factors will be analyzed in detail, including, the role of pronunciation, word frequency, various learning strategies for vocabulary growth and considerable attention will be drawn to current research methodology in Vocabulary Acquisition. Students will review research as well as conduct a mini study.

    Taught on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 am (2. and 3. year students only)

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS817M
    Creative Writing Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    You are the perfect candidate if you have a burning desire to write fiction or poetry, and enjoy reading good books.

    Aims include:

    1. To sharpen awareness and improve skills through exercises in writing, and especially through revision

    2. To provide practical criticism of work-in-progress in a workshop setting, along with advice about revisions and improvisation.

    In addition to invoking the muse, students will learn practical writing skills such as organization, structure, characterization and dialogue. The course will also involve the examination of the work of key novel and short story writers, and poets. Throughout the course, students will develop their own work as well as improving their critical skills. Students will complete a short story or a small collection of poems by the end of the course.

    Attendance requirement is 100% - you must attend one 1-hour presentation and one 2-hour workshop session per week. Not suitable for distance students.

    Students who fulfil the prerequisites will be signed up. Sign up is on first come first served bases and there are 6 seats reserved for MA students and 6 seats reserved for BA students. Any unfilled seats for the course after the first week of classes will be offered to students on the waiting list. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Spring 2
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • KLM101G
    Latin I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Latin. No prior knowledge of Latin is assumed at the outset. It introduces the basics of Latin grammar and syntax. Chosen passages will be read in Latin, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of 24 lectures on particular aspects of the Latin language and assigned readings.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • KLM102G
    Ancient Greek I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Ancient Greek. It introduces the basics of grammar and syntax of the Attic dialect. No prior knowledge of Greek is assumed at the outset. Reading knowledge of Ancient Greek will be prioritized and chosen passages will be read in Greek, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of both lectures on particular aspects of the Greek language and assigned readings. It is essential that students read the assigned materials before each lecture.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
Second year
  • Fall
  • MOM102G
    Languages and Cultures I: Academic Methods and Techniques
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is an introductory course in the Faculty of Languages and Cultures. Its aims and purpose include an introduction of basic concepts and terminology in the field, exploration of critical thinking to increase reading comprehension of academic texts, implementation of practical learning practices and academic procedures to facilitate successful academic studies, discussion on plagiarism and academic integrity, evaluation of academic standards, etc. Students receive practical training in critical evaluation of academic texts, basic argumentation analysis, identification of rhetorical patterns and text structure in various text types, review of acceptable references, and an introduction to analytical reading. Furthermore, students will gain insight into the importance of academic literacy to enhance understanding and writing of academic papers, presentation of research findings, etc.

    The course is taught in English and is intended for students in:

    1. The English BA program.
    2.  Students of foreign languages (other than English)

     *Those students that need ECT credits as a result of changes in the MOM courses, as MOM102G used to be a 5-credit course, need to add an individual assignment (MOM001G, 1 ECT) within the MOM102G course.

    • This individual assignment is only intended for students who finished MOM202G (before the school year 2024-2025) and are now enrolled in MOM102G, and have thus only gained 9 credits in the two mandatory MOM courses.
    • Students who intend to increase their credits with a 6 ECT course, within their departments, are free to do so – and do thus not take this additional individual assignment (in MOM102G).

    To sign up for the individual project you must talk to the teacher of MOM102G.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS101G
    How Language Works I: Sound and Word
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the first of two introductory courses in linguistics.  It addresses such questions as: what kinds of sounds do humans make when using spoken language? How are those sounds organised within the sound system of a language? What is a word? If a sign is a combination of a form with a meaning, are words linguistic signs? Where do words come from? How are words put together?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS102G
    The Talking Animal
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a survey of important domains of linguistics, especially those which emphasise the relation of human language to man in a broader context: sociolinguistics, dialect variation, first language acquisition, second language acquisition, language and the brain, historical comparative linguistics, and animal communication.  The focus of the course is on English and the course introduces students of English to areas of linguistics that they can explore in more detail later in their studies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS103G
    British and European Cultural History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The aim of this course is to give students a good overview of the social and political backgrounds to Great Britain. In the process of doing that we will examine patterns of British culture, political and social institutions and ethnic minority groups. Assessment: a 2 hour final exam.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS110G
    British Literature 1789-1954
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a survey course of British Literature from the beginnings of Romanticism to the early twentieth century. The required reading includes some poetry, a play, short stories, novellas, and a novel. Students will read and analyze works by major Romantics (including Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats), Victorians (Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, Gaskell, and Wilde) and modern authors (Yeats and Joyce). They will also be introduced to various literary terms and themes.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • MOM202G
    Languages and Cultures II: Intellectual and Linguistic History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In a world increasingly awash in conspiracy theories, fake news, AI-generated deep fakes and denialism of scientific and historical facts, our ability to interpret politics, culture and society with critical discernment is more important than ever.  

    Focusing on culture, this course aims to give you the analytical tools you need as a student and citizen to critically interpret texts, visual culture and language.  

    You will train your hermeneutical skills on short narratives and images, with help from selected readings in literary theory, cultural studies and visual culture(s), and engage in historical contextualization  

    The emphasis in the class will be on critical thinking and group discussion, allowing you to share your analytical discoveries with your fellow students and build an interpretative community. 

    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS201G
    History of the English Language
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An overview of the history and development of the English language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS202G
    How Language works II: Word, Sentence, Discourse
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the second of two introductory courses in linguistics. It addresses such questions as: how are words put together to form sentences? how is the form of words affected by their place in a sentence? what other kinds of grammatical information influence the shape and use of words in a sentence? how are sentences related to each other? how can sentences be combined to form larger sentences? how do separate sentences relate to each other when strung together? what do words mean? what do sentences mean? what is discourse meaning?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS203G
    English Composition
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The ability to write well in English is a prerequisite for all other courses in the English department. The main aim of this course is to equip students to write in English for academic purposes. Course work will involve writing practice and composing essays based on primary and secondary research. There will be a strong emphasis on the organization of ideas as well as on style. The main goal is for students to gain an understanding of the writing process and develop their own voice in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS204G
    American History and Culture
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description
    • This course aims at revisiting decisive moments of the history of the United States of America, from the early settlement to the present.
    • Particular attention will be dedicated to the events surrounding the Independence of the country, the American Civil War and ensuing Reconstruction, as well as offering a broad overview of the 20th and early 21st centuries.
    • There will also be an emphasis on the experiences of minorities and disenfranchised collectives (Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans, the LGBTQ community, as well as the rights of women) in the history of the United States, from the settlement to present.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS205G
    American Literature
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Authors representative of nineteenth-century American Literature are read in historical context.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Literature and Essay Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    “Literature and Essay Writing” will expose students to exemplary texts in English across a range of historical periods and genres. It will prompt students to engage in imaginative and critical dialogues with works of literature  foregrounding close reading skills, poetic and critical thinking, scholarly and creative journaling, and analytical and research essay writing skills. The course is designed to increase proficiency in the generation and organization of ideas, in editing and research skills, and in the use of the MLA style of citation.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Linguistics and Research Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course will expand student's capacity to enjoy, understand and write about language and linguistics. The aim of the module is to develop students' proficiency in process writing in English for academic purposes, with special attention given to increasing proficiency in organization, writing and revising, and on students developing their own voice in expository writing. Course work will include writing assignments and essays, as well as reading a variety of texts for critical reflection and analysis. Individual and peer feedback will be a major feature of this module. The course is also designed to strengthen skills in research and the use of APA style.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS329G
    Literary Theory (English)
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an introduction to the major principles of contemporary literary theory and criticism and to established methods and materials of literary research. Major theories include, structuralism, feminism, Queer Theory, postmodernism, marxism, post-colonial criticism, posthumanism, and eco-criticism. The objective of the course is to help you to develop your skills as a reader and critic.

    Midterm Exam information:  
    Midterm essay  of 1000-1,500 words. 35 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Final exams:
    Exam (theory-focused) 25 percent (short answer questions onsite with inspera) 
    Final Essay 40 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS346G
    British Literature from Early Middle Ages to 1603
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential literary texts in English from the early Middle Ages (Old English period) to the end of the Elizabethan era.

    IMPORTANT: This course is the first half of ENS303G British Literature II (which has now been split into two separate courses, one for each term of the academic year). Students who have completed ENS303G are not eligible to take this course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ENS455G
    British Literature 1603-1789
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential poetry and prose in English from the early 17th to the late 18th century.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS344M
    Vocabulary Acquisition: Research and Theory
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers the nature of vocabulary acquisition: how vocabulary develops, is learned and taught. Various factors will be analyzed in detail, including, the role of pronunciation, word frequency, various learning strategies for vocabulary growth and considerable attention will be drawn to current research methodology in Vocabulary Acquisition. Students will review research as well as conduct a mini study.

    Taught on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 am (2. and 3. year students only)

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS817M
    Creative Writing Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    You are the perfect candidate if you have a burning desire to write fiction or poetry, and enjoy reading good books.

    Aims include:

    1. To sharpen awareness and improve skills through exercises in writing, and especially through revision

    2. To provide practical criticism of work-in-progress in a workshop setting, along with advice about revisions and improvisation.

    In addition to invoking the muse, students will learn practical writing skills such as organization, structure, characterization and dialogue. The course will also involve the examination of the work of key novel and short story writers, and poets. Throughout the course, students will develop their own work as well as improving their critical skills. Students will complete a short story or a small collection of poems by the end of the course.

    Attendance requirement is 100% - you must attend one 1-hour presentation and one 2-hour workshop session per week. Not suitable for distance students.

    Students who fulfil the prerequisites will be signed up. Sign up is on first come first served bases and there are 6 seats reserved for MA students and 6 seats reserved for BA students. Any unfilled seats for the course after the first week of classes will be offered to students on the waiting list. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Spring 2
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • KLM101G
    Latin I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Latin. No prior knowledge of Latin is assumed at the outset. It introduces the basics of Latin grammar and syntax. Chosen passages will be read in Latin, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of 24 lectures on particular aspects of the Latin language and assigned readings.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • KLM102G
    Ancient Greek I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Ancient Greek. It introduces the basics of grammar and syntax of the Attic dialect. No prior knowledge of Greek is assumed at the outset. Reading knowledge of Ancient Greek will be prioritized and chosen passages will be read in Greek, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of both lectures on particular aspects of the Greek language and assigned readings. It is essential that students read the assigned materials before each lecture.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
Third year
  • Fall
  • MOM102G
    Languages and Cultures I: Academic Methods and Techniques
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is an introductory course in the Faculty of Languages and Cultures. Its aims and purpose include an introduction of basic concepts and terminology in the field, exploration of critical thinking to increase reading comprehension of academic texts, implementation of practical learning practices and academic procedures to facilitate successful academic studies, discussion on plagiarism and academic integrity, evaluation of academic standards, etc. Students receive practical training in critical evaluation of academic texts, basic argumentation analysis, identification of rhetorical patterns and text structure in various text types, review of acceptable references, and an introduction to analytical reading. Furthermore, students will gain insight into the importance of academic literacy to enhance understanding and writing of academic papers, presentation of research findings, etc.

    The course is taught in English and is intended for students in:

    1. The English BA program.
    2.  Students of foreign languages (other than English)

     *Those students that need ECT credits as a result of changes in the MOM courses, as MOM102G used to be a 5-credit course, need to add an individual assignment (MOM001G, 1 ECT) within the MOM102G course.

    • This individual assignment is only intended for students who finished MOM202G (before the school year 2024-2025) and are now enrolled in MOM102G, and have thus only gained 9 credits in the two mandatory MOM courses.
    • Students who intend to increase their credits with a 6 ECT course, within their departments, are free to do so – and do thus not take this additional individual assignment (in MOM102G).

    To sign up for the individual project you must talk to the teacher of MOM102G.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS101G
    How Language Works I: Sound and Word
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the first of two introductory courses in linguistics.  It addresses such questions as: what kinds of sounds do humans make when using spoken language? How are those sounds organised within the sound system of a language? What is a word? If a sign is a combination of a form with a meaning, are words linguistic signs? Where do words come from? How are words put together?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS102G
    The Talking Animal
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a survey of important domains of linguistics, especially those which emphasise the relation of human language to man in a broader context: sociolinguistics, dialect variation, first language acquisition, second language acquisition, language and the brain, historical comparative linguistics, and animal communication.  The focus of the course is on English and the course introduces students of English to areas of linguistics that they can explore in more detail later in their studies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS103G
    British and European Cultural History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The aim of this course is to give students a good overview of the social and political backgrounds to Great Britain. In the process of doing that we will examine patterns of British culture, political and social institutions and ethnic minority groups. Assessment: a 2 hour final exam.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS110G
    British Literature 1789-1954
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a survey course of British Literature from the beginnings of Romanticism to the early twentieth century. The required reading includes some poetry, a play, short stories, novellas, and a novel. Students will read and analyze works by major Romantics (including Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats), Victorians (Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, Gaskell, and Wilde) and modern authors (Yeats and Joyce). They will also be introduced to various literary terms and themes.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • MOM202G
    Languages and Cultures II: Intellectual and Linguistic History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In a world increasingly awash in conspiracy theories, fake news, AI-generated deep fakes and denialism of scientific and historical facts, our ability to interpret politics, culture and society with critical discernment is more important than ever.  

    Focusing on culture, this course aims to give you the analytical tools you need as a student and citizen to critically interpret texts, visual culture and language.  

    You will train your hermeneutical skills on short narratives and images, with help from selected readings in literary theory, cultural studies and visual culture(s), and engage in historical contextualization  

    The emphasis in the class will be on critical thinking and group discussion, allowing you to share your analytical discoveries with your fellow students and build an interpretative community. 

    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS201G
    History of the English Language
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An overview of the history and development of the English language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS202G
    How Language works II: Word, Sentence, Discourse
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the second of two introductory courses in linguistics. It addresses such questions as: how are words put together to form sentences? how is the form of words affected by their place in a sentence? what other kinds of grammatical information influence the shape and use of words in a sentence? how are sentences related to each other? how can sentences be combined to form larger sentences? how do separate sentences relate to each other when strung together? what do words mean? what do sentences mean? what is discourse meaning?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS203G
    English Composition
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The ability to write well in English is a prerequisite for all other courses in the English department. The main aim of this course is to equip students to write in English for academic purposes. Course work will involve writing practice and composing essays based on primary and secondary research. There will be a strong emphasis on the organization of ideas as well as on style. The main goal is for students to gain an understanding of the writing process and develop their own voice in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS204G
    American History and Culture
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description
    • This course aims at revisiting decisive moments of the history of the United States of America, from the early settlement to the present.
    • Particular attention will be dedicated to the events surrounding the Independence of the country, the American Civil War and ensuing Reconstruction, as well as offering a broad overview of the 20th and early 21st centuries.
    • There will also be an emphasis on the experiences of minorities and disenfranchised collectives (Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans, the LGBTQ community, as well as the rights of women) in the history of the United States, from the settlement to present.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS205G
    American Literature
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Authors representative of nineteenth-century American Literature are read in historical context.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Literature and Essay Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    “Literature and Essay Writing” will expose students to exemplary texts in English across a range of historical periods and genres. It will prompt students to engage in imaginative and critical dialogues with works of literature  foregrounding close reading skills, poetic and critical thinking, scholarly and creative journaling, and analytical and research essay writing skills. The course is designed to increase proficiency in the generation and organization of ideas, in editing and research skills, and in the use of the MLA style of citation.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Linguistics and Research Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course will expand student's capacity to enjoy, understand and write about language and linguistics. The aim of the module is to develop students' proficiency in process writing in English for academic purposes, with special attention given to increasing proficiency in organization, writing and revising, and on students developing their own voice in expository writing. Course work will include writing assignments and essays, as well as reading a variety of texts for critical reflection and analysis. Individual and peer feedback will be a major feature of this module. The course is also designed to strengthen skills in research and the use of APA style.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS329G
    Literary Theory (English)
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an introduction to the major principles of contemporary literary theory and criticism and to established methods and materials of literary research. Major theories include, structuralism, feminism, Queer Theory, postmodernism, marxism, post-colonial criticism, posthumanism, and eco-criticism. The objective of the course is to help you to develop your skills as a reader and critic.

    Midterm Exam information:  
    Midterm essay  of 1000-1,500 words. 35 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Final exams:
    Exam (theory-focused) 25 percent (short answer questions onsite with inspera) 
    Final Essay 40 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS346G
    British Literature from Early Middle Ages to 1603
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential literary texts in English from the early Middle Ages (Old English period) to the end of the Elizabethan era.

    IMPORTANT: This course is the first half of ENS303G British Literature II (which has now been split into two separate courses, one for each term of the academic year). Students who have completed ENS303G are not eligible to take this course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ENS455G
    British Literature 1603-1789
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential poetry and prose in English from the early 17th to the late 18th century.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS344M
    Vocabulary Acquisition: Research and Theory
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers the nature of vocabulary acquisition: how vocabulary develops, is learned and taught. Various factors will be analyzed in detail, including, the role of pronunciation, word frequency, various learning strategies for vocabulary growth and considerable attention will be drawn to current research methodology in Vocabulary Acquisition. Students will review research as well as conduct a mini study.

    Taught on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 am (2. and 3. year students only)

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS817M
    Creative Writing Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    You are the perfect candidate if you have a burning desire to write fiction or poetry, and enjoy reading good books.

    Aims include:

    1. To sharpen awareness and improve skills through exercises in writing, and especially through revision

    2. To provide practical criticism of work-in-progress in a workshop setting, along with advice about revisions and improvisation.

    In addition to invoking the muse, students will learn practical writing skills such as organization, structure, characterization and dialogue. The course will also involve the examination of the work of key novel and short story writers, and poets. Throughout the course, students will develop their own work as well as improving their critical skills. Students will complete a short story or a small collection of poems by the end of the course.

    Attendance requirement is 100% - you must attend one 1-hour presentation and one 2-hour workshop session per week. Not suitable for distance students.

    Students who fulfil the prerequisites will be signed up. Sign up is on first come first served bases and there are 6 seats reserved for MA students and 6 seats reserved for BA students. Any unfilled seats for the course after the first week of classes will be offered to students on the waiting list. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Spring 2
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • KLM101G
    Latin I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Latin. No prior knowledge of Latin is assumed at the outset. It introduces the basics of Latin grammar and syntax. Chosen passages will be read in Latin, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of 24 lectures on particular aspects of the Latin language and assigned readings.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • KLM102G
    Ancient Greek I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Ancient Greek. It introduces the basics of grammar and syntax of the Attic dialect. No prior knowledge of Greek is assumed at the outset. Reading knowledge of Ancient Greek will be prioritized and chosen passages will be read in Greek, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of both lectures on particular aspects of the Greek language and assigned readings. It is essential that students read the assigned materials before each lecture.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
Year unspecified
  • Fall
  • MOM102G
    Languages and Cultures I: Academic Methods and Techniques
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course is an introductory course in the Faculty of Languages and Cultures. Its aims and purpose include an introduction of basic concepts and terminology in the field, exploration of critical thinking to increase reading comprehension of academic texts, implementation of practical learning practices and academic procedures to facilitate successful academic studies, discussion on plagiarism and academic integrity, evaluation of academic standards, etc. Students receive practical training in critical evaluation of academic texts, basic argumentation analysis, identification of rhetorical patterns and text structure in various text types, review of acceptable references, and an introduction to analytical reading. Furthermore, students will gain insight into the importance of academic literacy to enhance understanding and writing of academic papers, presentation of research findings, etc.

    The course is taught in English and is intended for students in:

    1. The English BA program.
    2.  Students of foreign languages (other than English)

     *Those students that need ECT credits as a result of changes in the MOM courses, as MOM102G used to be a 5-credit course, need to add an individual assignment (MOM001G, 1 ECT) within the MOM102G course.

    • This individual assignment is only intended for students who finished MOM202G (before the school year 2024-2025) and are now enrolled in MOM102G, and have thus only gained 9 credits in the two mandatory MOM courses.
    • Students who intend to increase their credits with a 6 ECT course, within their departments, are free to do so – and do thus not take this additional individual assignment (in MOM102G).

    To sign up for the individual project you must talk to the teacher of MOM102G.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS101G
    How Language Works I: Sound and Word
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the first of two introductory courses in linguistics.  It addresses such questions as: what kinds of sounds do humans make when using spoken language? How are those sounds organised within the sound system of a language? What is a word? If a sign is a combination of a form with a meaning, are words linguistic signs? Where do words come from? How are words put together?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS102G
    The Talking Animal
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a survey of important domains of linguistics, especially those which emphasise the relation of human language to man in a broader context: sociolinguistics, dialect variation, first language acquisition, second language acquisition, language and the brain, historical comparative linguistics, and animal communication.  The focus of the course is on English and the course introduces students of English to areas of linguistics that they can explore in more detail later in their studies.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS103G
    British and European Cultural History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The aim of this course is to give students a good overview of the social and political backgrounds to Great Britain. In the process of doing that we will examine patterns of British culture, political and social institutions and ethnic minority groups. Assessment: a 2 hour final exam.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS110G
    British Literature 1789-1954
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This is a survey course of British Literature from the beginnings of Romanticism to the early twentieth century. The required reading includes some poetry, a play, short stories, novellas, and a novel. Students will read and analyze works by major Romantics (including Wordsworth, Byron, Shelley, and Keats), Victorians (Tennyson, Browning, Arnold, Gaskell, and Wilde) and modern authors (Yeats and Joyce). They will also be introduced to various literary terms and themes.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • MOM202G
    Languages and Cultures II: Intellectual and Linguistic History
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In a world increasingly awash in conspiracy theories, fake news, AI-generated deep fakes and denialism of scientific and historical facts, our ability to interpret politics, culture and society with critical discernment is more important than ever.  

    Focusing on culture, this course aims to give you the analytical tools you need as a student and citizen to critically interpret texts, visual culture and language.  

    You will train your hermeneutical skills on short narratives and images, with help from selected readings in literary theory, cultural studies and visual culture(s), and engage in historical contextualization  

    The emphasis in the class will be on critical thinking and group discussion, allowing you to share your analytical discoveries with your fellow students and build an interpretative community. 

    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS201G
    History of the English Language
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    An overview of the history and development of the English language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS202G
    How Language works II: Word, Sentence, Discourse
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is the second of two introductory courses in linguistics. It addresses such questions as: how are words put together to form sentences? how is the form of words affected by their place in a sentence? what other kinds of grammatical information influence the shape and use of words in a sentence? how are sentences related to each other? how can sentences be combined to form larger sentences? how do separate sentences relate to each other when strung together? what do words mean? what do sentences mean? what is discourse meaning?

    The focus of the course is on English, though other languages will be discussed as relevant.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS203G
    English Composition
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The ability to write well in English is a prerequisite for all other courses in the English department. The main aim of this course is to equip students to write in English for academic purposes. Course work will involve writing practice and composing essays based on primary and secondary research. There will be a strong emphasis on the organization of ideas as well as on style. The main goal is for students to gain an understanding of the writing process and develop their own voice in writing.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS204G
    American History and Culture
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description
    • This course aims at revisiting decisive moments of the history of the United States of America, from the early settlement to the present.
    • Particular attention will be dedicated to the events surrounding the Independence of the country, the American Civil War and ensuing Reconstruction, as well as offering a broad overview of the 20th and early 21st centuries.
    • There will also be an emphasis on the experiences of minorities and disenfranchised collectives (Native Americans, African Americans, Latinos, and Asian Americans, the LGBTQ community, as well as the rights of women) in the history of the United States, from the settlement to present.
    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS205G
    American Literature
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Authors representative of nineteenth-century American Literature are read in historical context.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Literature and Essay Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    “Literature and Essay Writing” will expose students to exemplary texts in English across a range of historical periods and genres. It will prompt students to engage in imaginative and critical dialogues with works of literature  foregrounding close reading skills, poetic and critical thinking, scholarly and creative journaling, and analytical and research essay writing skills. The course is designed to increase proficiency in the generation and organization of ideas, in editing and research skills, and in the use of the MLA style of citation.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS315G, ENS328G
    Linguistics and Research Writing
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course will expand student's capacity to enjoy, understand and write about language and linguistics. The aim of the module is to develop students' proficiency in process writing in English for academic purposes, with special attention given to increasing proficiency in organization, writing and revising, and on students developing their own voice in expository writing. Course work will include writing assignments and essays, as well as reading a variety of texts for critical reflection and analysis. Individual and peer feedback will be a major feature of this module. The course is also designed to strengthen skills in research and the use of APA style.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS329G
    Literary Theory (English)
    Mandatory (required) course
    10
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an introduction to the major principles of contemporary literary theory and criticism and to established methods and materials of literary research. Major theories include, structuralism, feminism, Queer Theory, postmodernism, marxism, post-colonial criticism, posthumanism, and eco-criticism. The objective of the course is to help you to develop your skills as a reader and critic.

    Midterm Exam information:  
    Midterm essay  of 1000-1,500 words. 35 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Final exams:
    Exam (theory-focused) 25 percent (short answer questions onsite with inspera) 
    Final Essay 40 percent (home assignment, file upload)

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS346G
    British Literature from Early Middle Ages to 1603
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential literary texts in English from the early Middle Ages (Old English period) to the end of the Elizabethan era.

    IMPORTANT: This course is the first half of ENS303G British Literature II (which has now been split into two separate courses, one for each term of the academic year). Students who have completed ENS303G are not eligible to take this course.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • Spring 2
  • ENS455G
    British Literature 1603-1789
    Mandatory (required) course
    5
    A mandatory (required) course for the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides a survey of some of the best known and most influential poetry and prose in English from the early 17th to the late 18th century.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • ENS311G
    Semantics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a general introduction to semantics, which deals with the nature of meaning in language.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS451G
    Shakespeare
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    In this course we will read five plays by William Shakespeare written across his career as a dramatist. Through detailed analysis of the plays, we will investigate Shakespeare’s innovative approach to genre, the intricacies of his language, the depth of his poetic imagination, the richness of allusion to the historical, cultural, and social issues of Renaissance England, and the insistent probing of the conventions and material realities of the early modern theatre.

    Please note that this is course is NOT open to DE students.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS613G
    Language Myths
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores some of the myths about human language. These myths include claims such as "the standards of children's speech and writing have declined"; "women talk too much"; "the 'purity' of language X is under threat"; "some languages are harder to learn than others"; "the media has a detrimental effect on language". These widely held views are examined critically and shown to be based on inadequate or false information, or simply, not to be true. Other topics to be addressed are spelling problems, attitudes towards accents, controversies over changes in language, and the belief that some languages have no grammar.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ÍET202G
    Introduction to English language teaching
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    A historical overview of principles, methods, and best practices of English language teaching. Introduction to the national curriculum of English, teaching materials, and resources. Focus on student-centered teaching, learner autonomy, teacher reflection, and developing a philosophy of teaching.

    The National Curriculum Guide will be read and analyzed. Students will have an opportunity to observe and evaluate recorded teaching and they will practice reflecting on their own ideas about teaching and experience of language learning. 

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, written assignments, discussion, group and individual work, and microteaching.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Not taught this semester
    ÍET304G
    EFL learning and second language acquisition
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course  draws on seminal and current research about effective teaching and learning of English as a foreign language.  Students will come to understand important theories that underpin EFL learning and second language acquisition, especially as it concerns teaching the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing). This is accomplished by considering relevant concepts related to language acquisition, learner autonomy, and language assessment in a self- reflective and analytical way. Essentially, this course examines the why behind language teaching through student‐led and teacher-supported seminars. It culminates in a research project considering how to practically apply this knowledge to EFL teaching in a way that benefits both teachers and learners.

    Course work demands active participation and consists of reading, lectures, face-to-face and online discussions, student-driven presentations and a research project.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS344M
    Vocabulary Acquisition: Research and Theory
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course covers the nature of vocabulary acquisition: how vocabulary develops, is learned and taught. Various factors will be analyzed in detail, including, the role of pronunciation, word frequency, various learning strategies for vocabulary growth and considerable attention will be drawn to current research methodology in Vocabulary Acquisition. Students will review research as well as conduct a mini study.

    Taught on Tuesdays and Thursdays at 10 am (2. and 3. year students only)

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS817M
    Creative Writing Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    You are the perfect candidate if you have a burning desire to write fiction or poetry, and enjoy reading good books.

    Aims include:

    1. To sharpen awareness and improve skills through exercises in writing, and especially through revision

    2. To provide practical criticism of work-in-progress in a workshop setting, along with advice about revisions and improvisation.

    In addition to invoking the muse, students will learn practical writing skills such as organization, structure, characterization and dialogue. The course will also involve the examination of the work of key novel and short story writers, and poets. Throughout the course, students will develop their own work as well as improving their critical skills. Students will complete a short story or a small collection of poems by the end of the course.

    Attendance requirement is 100% - you must attend one 1-hour presentation and one 2-hour workshop session per week. Not suitable for distance students.

    Students who fulfil the prerequisites will be signed up. Sign up is on first come first served bases and there are 6 seats reserved for MA students and 6 seats reserved for BA students. Any unfilled seats for the course after the first week of classes will be offered to students on the waiting list. 

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
    Attendance required in class
  • Spring 2
  • ENS231L
    BA-thesis in English
    Elective course
    0
    Free elective course within the programme
    0 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    BA essay in English, 10 ECTS.

    A formal departmental approval is required for a 20 credit essay (submission of a detailed proposal, a preliminary bibliography and the support of a supervisor, to the Chair of the English Department for voting at the next Department meeting).

    The BA essay is no longer a requirement to complete the BA, though it is a requirement for entering the masters programme.

    The BA thesis is primarily intended to train students in researching a chosen topic within their field of study and presenting their findings in a well-structured academic text. Students write a BA thesis on a research topic of their own choice in consultation with their supervisor. The course coordinator assists students in selecting a supervisor if needed. Students are encouraged to meet with their supervisor and prepare an initial outline of the research project before the thesis semester begins.
    The final thesis should demonstrate the student’s ability to work independently and academically, present material logically and systematically, analyse sources, and make use of scholarly resources (e.g., handbooks, dictionaries, or comparable online resources).

    Students are encouraged to use the services of the University of Iceland Centre for Writing [https://ritver.hi.is/is], which offers support for academic writing. At the Centre for Writing, students can book consultations and receive advice on any issues related to academic essays, reports, and other written assignments.

    Students are also advised to familiarise themselves with the University of Iceland guidelines on the use of artificial intelligence: https://gervigreind.hi.is/

    See detailed rules regarding BA theses at the School of Humanities (in Icelandic only): https://ugla.hi.is/kerfi/view/page.php?sid=3544 

    Prerequisites
    Part of the total project/thesis credits
  • ENS313G
    Sociolinguistics
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course provides an overview of the study of the interaction of language and society, language contact and language variation. We will examine how the way we speak is influenced by who is speaking to whom about what under what circumstances. We look how identities and cultures are conveyed through language and what the choice of language and registers reveals about language attitudes and how society is structured. We will examine the nature of national languages and language planning, regional and social dialects, familylects and idiolects, bilingualism, multilingualism and code switching and rules of discourse in different settings.

    Face-to-face learning
    Distance learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456G
    Children's Literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Children's Literature-- Strange, marvellous, and often absurd, children’s literature allows readers to escape the mundane world and to slip into a fantastical realm which follows its own laws. In these stories, children play a central role; instead of being undermined or overlooked, young people become powerful agents who control their destinies and who enjoy limitless liberty, free from responsibility and routine. Paradoxically, while this type of fiction envisions a world which is spontaneous and carefree, it also mirrors very real adult concerns, namely, a preoccupation with aging and death, with the growing and shrinking female body, with the role and place of women in society, and with the rights and welfare of animals.

    This course explores binaries such as young and old, male and female, human and animal, rationality and irrationality, reason and imagination, etc., ones that figure prominently in seminal works of this genre.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS503G
    English Syntax
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course offers a detalied introduction to the study of English sentence structure from the perspective of modern linguistic theory. The course has two main aims: to introduce students to the Principles and Parameters framework of generative linguistics as it applies to English; and to offer students practical help in the structural analysis of sentences.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS505G
    The Tudor Period as Presented in Contemporary Literature and Films
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    The course explores how the Tudors and the Tudor period are presented in contemporary (mainly 21st century) literature and film, especially through portrayals of Henry VIII and his daughter Elizabeth I, but other people connected to them will also be studied as appropriate. Students read selected literary works on the life and reign of Henry VIII and Elizabeth I and watch films and TV series where Tudor monarchs are central and/or minor characters. Emphasis is placed on debates concerning the current infatuation with the Tudors as expressed through popular culture and the social media. Furthermore, those aspects of historical, literary and cultural interpretations of the Tudors’ role in history that are most pertinent to contemporary concerns are discussed.

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS516G
    Cosmic Tragedies: Science Fiction
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course aims to introduce students to the varied and rich world of science fiction, a genre that both incorporates and shapes cultural and cosmological inscriptions of space, the future, extraterrestrial worlds, and the possibilities of intergalactic travel. Our readings will include classic as well as obscure works of science fiction, with the goal of tracking developments in the genre over the past 100 years. So too, we will explore landmark science fiction films, paying attention to aesthetic and formal differences between visual media and prose. The course will consider works that cross cultural and national boundaries, but it will also interrogate how such works engage with contemporary sociopolitical concerns. Finally, we will situate works of science fiction in the context of ongoing developments in contemporary cosmology, a field that has undergone exponential growth over the past several decades.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS622G
    British and American Poetry from the 1920s to TikTok
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course studies poetry written in English during the past century, analyzed in relation to modernism, postmodernism, literary theory, and relevant social and technological developments. Our primary method of analysis will be (very) close reading.  

    We will study works by twentieth century poets such as W. H. Auden, W. B. Yeats, T. S. Eliot, Ezra Pound, H.D., Marianne Moore, William Carlos Williams, Wallace Stevens, Philip Larkin, Elizabeth Bishop, Gwendolyn Brooks, Langston Hughes, Dylan Thomas, Denise Levertov, Adrienne Rich, Sylvia Plath, Alan Ginsberg, Frank O’Hara, Seamus Heaney, and Derek Walcott, as well as twenty-first century poets including Louise Glück, Claudia Rankine, Tracy K. Smith, Ocean Vuong, W. S. Merwin, Rupi Kaur, Amanda Gorman, Mary Oliver, Naomi Shihab Nye, Sherman Alexie, Sarah Kay, Gregory Pardlo, and Nikita Gill, among others.  

    Throughout the course, students will collaborate on a capstone project: a student-curated, annotated mini-anthology, centered on a theme/motif chosen by the class.   

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS350M
    The Ancestry of English Words
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course treats different aspects of English vocabulary: baby names, place names, the function of jargon, the value of slang words, and dialect humour. We will also learn how to estimate the size of our vocabulary and how languages interact. Finally, we will consider the history of words and how language changes. The central question is: Where do our words come from?

    Face-to-face learning
    Online learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS456M
    David Cronenberg’s Adaptations
    Elective course
    5
    Free elective course within the programme
    5 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    World renowned Canadian director David Cronenberg is commonly recognized as a cinematic pioneer of the body horror genre. However, much of Cronenberg’s work branches off from the horror genre, applying his auteurist imagery of body horror to other genres and stories. Cronenberg’s career, which began in the 1970s and continues to grow today, presents a large number of filmic adaptations of novels, short stories, and the lives of real life and historical figures.

    In this course, we will examine four different films by Cronenberg, adapted from four different sources, to study the varying capacities of adaptation and adaptation theory, as well as auteur theory, in the attempt to understand how Cronenberg retells established narratives, which include his signature themes of body horror.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • ENS820M
    Heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course explores the subject of heritage and exile in late 19th and early 20th century Icelandic-North American literature. The course will explore the subject through a selection of poems by Helga Steinvör Baldvinsdóttir (1858 – 1942), who wrote her poetry under the pseudonym Undína; a selection of poems by Stephan G. Stephansson (1853 – 1927), and a selection of poems and plays by Guttormur J. Guttormsson (1878 – 1966). Ideas on exile in modern Western literature will also be explored, in the context of poetics of exile in the works of Undína, Stephan G., and Guttormur.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • MOM401G
    Languages and Theatre
    Elective course
    6
    Free elective course within the programme
    6 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    Optional course for students of the Faculty of Languages and Cultures, in their 2nd or 3rd year of the BA-programme. The students read and study a well-known play that has been translated into several languages. The students will read the text in the target language. The students choose scenes from the play for the production.

    Teachers from the target languages will assist the students with pronunciation.

    Maximum number of students in this course is 15.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • Fall
  • KLM101G
    Latin I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Latin. No prior knowledge of Latin is assumed at the outset. It introduces the basics of Latin grammar and syntax. Chosen passages will be read in Latin, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of 24 lectures on particular aspects of the Latin language and assigned readings.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites
  • KLM102G
    Ancient Greek I: Beginner's Course
    Elective course
    10
    Free elective course within the programme
    10 ECTS, credits
    Course Description

    This course is a beginner’s course in Ancient Greek. It introduces the basics of grammar and syntax of the Attic dialect. No prior knowledge of Greek is assumed at the outset. Reading knowledge of Ancient Greek will be prioritized and chosen passages will be read in Greek, translated and thoroughly analysed. Teaching consists of both lectures on particular aspects of the Greek language and assigned readings. It is essential that students read the assigned materials before each lecture.

    This course is taught in Icelandic but students can get permission of the instructor to complete assignments and exams in English.

    Face-to-face learning
    Prerequisites

The timetable shown below is for the current academic year and is FOR REFERENCE ONLY.

Changes may occur for the autumn semester in August and September and for the spring semester in December and January. You will find your final timetable in Ugla when the studies start.

Note! This timetable is not suitable for planning your work schedule if you are a part-time employee.




Additional information

The University of Iceland collaborates with over 400 universities worldwide. This provides a unique opportunity to pursue part of your studies at an international university thus gaining added experience and fresh insight into your field of study.

Students generally have the opportunity to join an exchange programme, internship, or summer courses. However, exchanges are always subject to faculty approval.

Students have the opportunity to have courses evaluated as part of their studies at the University of Iceland, so their stay does not have to affect the duration of their studies.

In our globalised modern world, there are few jobs that do not require good English.

Education in this area can open up opportunities in:

  • Media
  • IT and online companies
  • International affairs
  • Tourism
  • Office and administration work
  • Teaching
  • Translation
  • Imports and exports

This list is not exhaustive.

More about the UI student's social life.

Students' comments
""
Because I am very interested in improving my writing skills in English and deepening my knowledge of literature, studying English at the University of Iceland seemed perfect to me - and it has been. I have become acquainted with a large selection of significant literary works in the literature courses, learned to analyze them critically and to understand what characterizes significant literature. What has impressed me the most about my studies is that I have met people who have the same passion for literature as I do and who spend hours discussing literature and analyzing them deeply.
""
As a writer, I realised that in order to improve my writing, I must study the works of great writers. As I have progressed in my studies at HÍ, I have also realised that hidden in great works of fiction are important lessons, such as where we are as a species, how we came to be here, and why we behave the way we do. I have been very impressed with the range of literary analysis that is offered in the English BA programme and has found every course both engaging and applicable. If you love reading, writing, or just want to learn more about yourself and Western society through the lenses of Linguistics and Literature, this programme is for you.
""
I chose to major in English to gain an understanding of how and why books are written and to improve my own writing. I have certainly come to a critical understanding of texts and contexts at HÍ, but I have also learned that one's writing is never perfect, it is only due. The faculty and staff are knowledgeable and more than willing to answer any questions, recommending ancillary reading and pointing in the right direction, which naturally makes for an enjoyable experience. I also love how easy it is to join study groups. The students here are friendly and welcoming, and it really feels like I fit in here. 
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