MA Medical and Health Humanities (Part Time)
Key Details
- Attendance
- Part Time
- Award
- Degree of Master of Arts
- Course Length
- 2 years
- Course Start Date
- September 2024
Course Overview
How have ideas of health and illness evolved in different historical and cultural locations? How do encounters between patients and clinicians create narratives of illness and health, and how do depictions of illness, pain and disability in literature, media and culture influence these narratives? Can we find meaning in suffering?
Whether you’re a clinician planning a memoir, an intercalating medical student wanting to understand why histories of embodied experience matter in your practice, a humanities or social sciences graduate interested in health, illness and disability, or a professional interested in social prescribing and place-based healthcare, this versatile interdisciplinary course is for you.
On this MA in Medical and Health Humanities, you will learn about narrative medicine and the importance of story. You'll analyse contemporary and historical representations of disability and illness, and consider the power of writing as a way of understanding experiences connected to health. Additionally, you’ll examine the role of the arts in health and wellbeing, learning about cutting edge research and practice within the applied arts and health sectors.
Our Masters in Medical and Health Humanities explores health as a holistic and culturally embedded experience. It will challenge you to think critically and philosophically about what it means to be a doctor, nurse or allied health professional, and what it means to be a patient. We will explore how ‘health’, ‘illness’ and ‘disability’ are understood, and how concepts such as ‘quality of life’, ‘pathology’ or ‘impairment’ are constructed and take shape within cultures. The programme has at its core an understanding that lived experiences of illness and disability are affected by gender, ethnicity, sexuality and class (among other intersecting identities), as well as being situated within particular geographical and historical locations. Through studying aspects of literature, media, art, philosophy and history, and their intersections with health, you will be introduced to key debates within critical medical humanities.
The programme offers exciting opportunities for creative and practice-based learning, drawing inspiration from UEA’s unique strengths in these areas, including in partnership with the world-famous Sainsbury Centre. You can choose to develop your own life-writing, fiction or artwork on health-related themes. You’ll engage with cutting-edge content, for example graphic medicine, which pushes the boundaries of current understandings around narrative medicine.
Additionally, this course will build your knowledge of inclusive health policy and practice, as well as of the burgeoning arts and health sector. You’ll learn about contemporary policy developments such as social prescribing and place-based healthcare, as well as accumulating skills and knowledge for working in the cultural or health sectors - including in role areas that link them.
You’ll be introduced to techniques for scholarship and research used in the humanities, as well as to key methods and practices from the social and health sciences. You’ll have the opportunity to hone your knowledge and skills by undertaking a final research project in the field of medical and health humanities or producing an extended creative piece with a critical commentary.
Alongside examining the intersection of the health and cultural sectors, including the new NHS Integrated Care Systems and the policy context of social prescribing, the versatility of this course means that one week you’ll be delving into global histories of medicine and the legacies of colonialism in public health, the next you’ll be critically considering representations of disabled bodies in contemporary culture, and if your interests lie in creative practice there are ample opportunities to pursue these too.
Study and Modules
Structure
You can take the MA Medical and Health Humanities as either a one-year full-time course, or as a part-time course over two years.
Your learning is anchored in a comprehensive pair of core modules. These modules provide you with a grounding in key debates and issues in the field, equipping you with the skills to think critically about what the Medical and Health Humanities mean to different people, and how they have been used by diverse groups, from clinicians to healthcare educators, humanities scholars and creative practitioners. You'll also learn a range of research methods and practices of enquiry to apply to your own investigations in the field.
You'll take two different core modules in semester one and two, as well as an optional module in semester two. You can choose among a range of modules, which offer opportunities for you to deepen your knowledge of a variety of topics relating to the medical humanities, for example: historical and contemporary ideas about embodiment; histories and theories of gender and sexuality; histories of race and resistance; and advancing practice in dementia care; among other themes.
Compulsory Modules
Optional A Modules
(Credits: 20)Whilst the University will make every effort to offer the modules listed, changes may sometimes be made arising from the annual monitoring, review and update of modules. Where this activity leads to significant (but not minor) changes to programmes and their constituent modules, the University will endeavour to consult with students and others. It is also possible that the University may not be able to offer a module for reasons outside of its control, such as the illness of a member of staff. In some cases optional modules can have limited places available and so you may be asked to make additional module choices in the event you do not gain a place on your first choice. Where this is the case, the University will inform students.
Teaching and Learning
You'll be taught by a team of academics, clinicians and writers, all experts in their fields, who bring diverse disciplinary perspectives to the study of medicine, health and the humanities. Between them, they have strengths in critical disability studies, creative writing, including medical memoir, cultural and screen representations of embodiment, histories and cultures of medicine and of mental health, and methodology and knowledge production in medicine and the medical and health humanities. UEA also operates a Medical and Health Humanities network, bringing together researchers and practitioners with many different interests, and an interdisciplinary and collaborative approach to teaching and research lies at the heart of our provision.
You’ll mainly be taught through a blend of lectures, interactive seminars and workshops. Typically, each module will comprise around 3 hours per week of teaching events, with some modules deviating from this structure. The course teaching will incorporate some online elements as well as on-campus learning.
Independent study
Working independently is an important aspect of study at MA level. You’ll do preparatory reading for teaching events as well as working towards your coursework. UEA has excellent facilities to support your independent study, from comprehensive library materials (including electronic resources and databases), to academic skills support from the Learning Enhancement Team and Royal Literary Fellows, and inspirational repositories of visual arts and archival material are on your doorstep in the form of the Sainsbury Centre and the UEA Archives. Additionally, postgraduate students have the opportunity to attend many exciting programmes of lectures and events run by different departments and groups across the university, allowing you to take full advantage of the vibrant learning environment surrounding your course.
Assessment
Your achievement on the MA course will be assessed via coursework, through methods including essays, reports, and your final dissertation. If your interest in Medical and Health Humanities lies in the potential to develop your skills in creative expression, you'll have opportunities to submit creative or practice-based pieces (such as a film, short story, or poetry collection) for assignments within certain modules. You'll usually be required to submit a linked critical commentary with your creative work.
Structure
In the first semester, you'll take two bespoke modules, and in the second semester, you'll take a further optional module.
With input from practicing life-writers and academics working in the critical medical humanities, you'll explore what it means to conceptualise health as a ‘narrated’ experience. You'll have seminars led by academics, clinicians and writers on a range of topics including the wounded healer and radical empathy in forensic psychiatry, as well as considering how concepts such as ‘mental illness’ and ‘child development’ shape how we think about personhood, disability and wellbeing.
You'll also learn about the role of the creative arts in health and wellbeing. Sessions will be delivered by a range of specialist practitioners, for example, leaders of local Non-Governmental Organisations and arts organisations, policymakers, curators, social prescribers, and artists.
In the summer of your second year, you'll undertake your Dissertation: this is your chance to investigate an area of interest more deeply, under expert supervision in your subfield. You may choose to pursue a research project drawing from the humanities fields such as a literary, cultural, media, historical or art historical study, or you may use methods from the health and social sciences to complete an applied project. You also have the option of producing an extended creative piece with a linked critical commentary.
Compulsory Modules
Optional A Modules
(Credits: 20)Whilst the University will make every effort to offer the modules listed, changes may sometimes be made arising from the annual monitoring, review and update of modules. Where this activity leads to significant (but not minor) changes to programmes and their constituent modules, the University will endeavour to consult with students and others. It is also possible that the University may not be able to offer a module for reasons outside of its control, such as the illness of a member of staff. In some cases optional modules can have limited places available and so you may be asked to make additional module choices in the event you do not gain a place on your first choice. Where this is the case, the University will inform students.
Teaching and Learning
You'll be taught by a team of experts from a variety of disciplines, including academics, clinicians, and writers. They will bring their diverse perspectives to the study of medicine, health, and the humanities. Their areas of expertise include critical disability studies, creative writing, cultural and screen representations of embodiment, histories and cultures of medicine and mental health, and methodology and knowledge production in medicine and the medical and health humanities. UEA also has a Medical and Health Humanities network that brings together researchers and practitioners with a wide range of interests. Our teaching and research are underpinned by an interdisciplinary and collaborative approach.
You'll be taught through a combination of lectures, seminars, and workshops. Each module will typically have around 3 hours of teaching per week, but some modules may have a different structure. Some of the teaching will be online, and some will be on campus.
Independent Study
Independent study is an important part of postgraduate study. You'll do preparatory reading for teaching events and work towards your coursework. UEA has excellent facilities to support your independent study, including a comprehensive library with electronic resources and databases, and academic skills support from the Learning Enhancement Team and Royal Literary Fellows. You'll also have access to inspiring repositories of visual arts and archival material, such as the Sainsbury Centre and the UEA Archives. Postgraduate students have the opportunity to attend many exciting lectures and events run by different departments and groups across the university, which will allow you to make the most of the vibrant learning environment surrounding your course.
Assessment
Your progress on the MA course will be assessed through coursework, which may include essays, reports, and a final dissertation. If you are interested in developing your creative expression skills, you may submit creative or practice-based pieces (such as a film, short story, or poetry collection) for certain modules. You'll usually be required to submit a critical commentary that is linked to your creative work.
For your dissertation, you may choose to undertake a research project drawing from the humanities fields such as a literary, cultural, media, historical or art historical study, or you may use methods from the health and social sciences to undertake an applied project. You also have the option of producing an extended creative piece with a linked critical commentary.
Entry Requirements
- Degree Classification
- Bachelors degree - 2.2 or equivalent
- Degree Subject
- Arts and Humanities, Social Sciences, Medicine or Professional Health related subject areas. Degrees in other subjects may be considered if your application can evidence relevant clinical or professional experience (usually at least 1 year) which could include Social Work, work in the Care sector, Clinical Psychology or Psychological Therapies, Health Policy work (e.g. for a governmental or non-governmental organisation), Public Health.
- English Foreign Language
Applications from students whose first language is not English are welcome. We require evidence of proficiency in English (including writing, speaking, listening and reading):
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IELTS: 6.0 overall (minimum 5.5 in Listening & Reading and minimum 6.0 in Writing & Speaking)
Test dates should be within 2 years of the course start date.
We also accept a number of other English language tests. Review our English Language Equivalencies for a list of qualifications that we may accept to meet this requirement.
If you do not yet meet the English language requirements for this course, INTO UEA offer a variety of English language programmes which are designed to help you develop the English skills necessary for successful undergraduate study:
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- Intakes
This course is open to UK and International applicants. The annual intake for this course is in September each year
Additional Information or Requirements
Admissions Policy
Our Admissions Policy applies to the admissions of all postgraduate applicants.
Fees and Funding
- UK Students: £9,975 (full time)
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International Students: £21,200 (full time)
If you choose to study part-time, the fee per annum will be half the annual fee for that year, or a pro-rata fee for the module credit you are taking (only available for Home students).
We estimate living expenses at £1,023 per month.
Further Information on tuition fees can be found here.
Course Related Costs
Please see Additional Course Fees for details of course-related costs.
How to Apply
Applications for Postgraduate Taught programmes at the University of East Anglia should be made directly to the University.
To apply please use our online application form.
FURTHER INFORMATION
If you would like to discuss your individual circumstances prior to applying, please do contact us:
Postgraduate Admissions Office
Tel: +44 (0)1603 591515
Email: admissions@uea.ac.uk
International candidates are also encouraged to access the International Students section of our website.
Employability
After the Course
By the end of your MA, you will understand more deeply key debates in the medical and health humanities. You will have developed analytical as well as practical skills, for example advanced listening skills and a deeper understanding of narrative, including your own. You will have developed skills in research methods that could lead you onto a PhD, into the policy sector, or into research and evaluation roles in the arts and health field. You will have built a portfolio of work that could lead to a career as a writer or elsewhere in the creative industries. Existing healthcare practitioners will have enhanced their skillset and be ready to apply this to current practice or new roles.
Careers
Examples of careers that you could enter include:
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Policy and research roles
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Public sector roles, e.g. social prescribing link worker
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Consultancy roles
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Third sector and NGO roles, including in arts and health
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Careers in writing or other creative industries
Discover more on our Careers webpages.