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The Bible & Literature - ENG00072H

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  • Department: English and Related Literature
  • Credit value: 20 credits
  • Credit level: H
  • Academic year of delivery: 2022-23
    • See module specification for other years: 2024-25

Module summary

The Bible has played a formative and diverse part in English literature over many centuries. Its stories, its politics, its poetic forms, its theological and philosophical demands have been encountered in numerous ways, such that every era has in effect reinvented the Bible. Its language, and the way in which the idioms of its translation have seeped into the marrow of English, render it an essential part of literary history. It is a text that has no proprietor, and no equal as a work of public property, liable to both revolutionary and conservative appropriations. It has provided and continues to provide an unfathomably wide range of religious and spiritual visions. It has been both lauded and, at times, detested, but has at no point been other than central to western and world culture.

This module will explore these, and other difficult and fascinating questions in relation to a rich range of literary, historical, and theoretical works. It will give you a solid grasp of a range of biblical texts – Genesis, Judges, Samuel, Job, the Gospels and others - looked at in parallel with works which re-imagine, re-write and re-focus the original text (authors such as Milton, Blake, Atwood, Heller, Hurston, Coetzee) and a range of critical and theological theory. It will look at key moments in its diverse reception history from the early to the modern period and explore ways in which writers and artists have engaged with the Bible on the level of story, hermeneutics and poetics. Aside from its integration into works of literature, the module will also consider the poetics of the biblical text itself – whose stories are ubiquitous and so well-known as to exist almost at the level of folk-tale – looking at the ‘literary’ nature of the text, as well as a range of feminist, postcolonial and postmodern hermeneutic approaches.

Module will run

Occurrence Teaching period
A Spring Term 2022-23

Module aims

The module aims to introduce students to key debates about the relationship between the Bible and Literature across a broad historical span and to encourage students to relate theological-philosophical, historiographical, and theoretical debates on the Bible to the individual literary texts. It will enable students to develop skills in close reading and argumentation in relation to a clearly defined thematic focus and to develop skills in group work in relation to a clearly defined thematic focus.

Module learning outcomes

On successful completion of the module, you should be able to:

  1. Demonstrate an advanced understanding of and engagement with the major genres of biblical literature;

  2. Demonstrate an advanced understanding of and engagement with a series of literary reconstructions of, responses to and meditations on the Bible;

  3. Evaluate key debates within the relevant critical fields dealing with the cultures of the Bible, the poetics of the Bible and the practices of literary appropriation;

  4. Produce independent arguments and ideas which demonstrate an advanced proficiency in critical thinking, close reading, research, and writing skills

Indicative assessment

Task % of module mark
Essay/coursework 100

Special assessment rules

None

Additional assessment information

  • You will be given the opportunity to hand in a 1000 word formative essay in the term in which the module is taught (usually in the week 7 seminar). Material from this essay may be re-visited in your summative essay and it is therefore an early chance to work through material that might be used in assessed work. This essay will be submitted in hard copy and your tutor will annotate it and return it two weeks later (usually in your week 9 seminar). Summary feedback will be uploaded to your eVision account. All students will have the opportunity to give an in-class individual presentation during a seminar in weeks 2-9.

Indicative reassessment

Task % of module mark
Essay/coursework 100

Module feedback

  • You will receive feedback on all assessed work within the University deadline, and will often receive it more quickly. The purpose of feedback is to inform your future work; it is designed to help you to improve your work, and the Department also offers you help in learning from your feedback. If you do not understand your feedback or want to talk about your ideas further you can discuss it with your tutor or your supervisor, during their Open Office Hours
  • For more information about the feedback you will receive for your work, see the department's Guide to Assessment

Indicative reading

The reading list will vary from year to year; you are expected to have a hard copy of the King James Bible, also known as Authorised version (or AV), but NOT the ‘New KJV’ (‘NKJB’ or ‘NKJV’). Typically, we will look at Genesis, Exodus, Samuel, Book of Job, Song of Songs, some of the prophets, the Gospel of Luke, Revelation. You will be told what books to read alongside this, but in recent years we have looked at

  • Naguib Mahouz, Children of the Alley (Anchor, 1997)
  • Joseph Heller, God Knows (Prentice Hall, 1997)
  • Margaret Atwood, The Handmaid’s Tale (Vintage, 1996)
  • J.M. Coetzee, The Childhood of Jesus (Vintage, 2014)
  • Cormac McCarthy, The Road (Picador, 2010)
  • Allen Ginsburg, Howl, Kaddish and other poems (Penguin, 2009)
  • Elizabeth Smart, By Grand Central Station I Sat Down and Wept (Fourth Estate, 2015)
  • Zora Neale Hurston, Moses, Man of the Mountain (Harper Perennial, 2009)
  • John Milton’s Samson Agonistes, in The Complete Shorter Poems ed. John Cary (Longman, 2006).



The information on this page is indicative of the module that is currently on offer. The University constantly explores ways to enhance and improve its degree programmes and therefore reserves the right to make variations to the content and method of delivery of modules, and to discontinue modules, if such action is reasonably considered to be necessary. In some instances it may be appropriate for the University to notify and consult with affected students about module changes in accordance with the University's policy on the Approval of Modifications to Existing Taught Programmes of Study.