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Conduct your research at The Shakespeare Institute, our leading centre for Shakespeare studies. You'll join a community of scholars in Shakespeare’s hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon and access the most comprehensive Shakespeare studies collection in the UK.
Benefit from our unique resources including dedicated Shakespeare library facilities and weekly seminars sharing the latest research.
Enhance your research through our collaboration with the Royal Shakespeare Company (RSC). This dynamic collaboration sees researchers and academic staff join RSC artists to explore Shakespeare through creative and critical approaches.
It usually takes three years (full-time) or six years (part-time) to complete a PhD, while the normal length of an MA by Research is either one year (full-time) or two years (part-time).
The first year (or part-time equivalent) of a PhD usually includes a literature review specific to your thesis and topic. You'll begin to undertake your research and relevant training.
Your thesis is usually written in stages over the course of your PhD, and you’ll receive regular feedback.
For an MA by Research, these timescales are condensed into one year (or two years if studying part time).
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Research Shakespeare and his contemporaries in his hometown of Stratford-upon-Avon. There's no better place in the world to study Shakespeare.
You'll have The Shakespeare Institute, the RSC theatres, and the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust archives all on your doorstep. Immerse yourself in Shakespeare's life and walk the very streets he grew up in.
A day of research could involve looking through archival records in the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust, checking sources in The Shakespeare Institute library, attending a research seminar, and then watching a performance at one of the Royal Shakespeare Company theatres.
English Language and Literature Department in the world (QS World University Rankings 2024).
Join a lively Shakespeare postgraduate community and take part in conferences and weekly play readings.
Access specialist research training, with expertise in the theoretical, educational, historical, digital and philosophical approaches to Shakespeare.
The Shakespeare Institute library has 60,000 items, including the world’s largest collection of sixteenth- and seventeenth-century dramatic manuscripts on microfilm.
Our friendly community of Shakespeare scholars are all too happy to discuss their research with each other at weekly graduate seminars. There are also opportunities to hear from international scholars at the weekly Thursday seminars.
Our collaboration with the Royal Shakespeare Company offers you opportunities to hear from theatre practitioners bringing Shakespeare's works to life on stage.
Benefit from our academics’ research expertise and knowledge of Shakespeare from anywhere in the world.
If you choose to study via distance learning, you’ll still access our unique resources. You can attend hybrid events and access digital resources through the Shakespeare Institute library.
Both our weekly graduate seminars for PhD researchers and wider Thursday seminars are hybrid events, offering distance learners the same access to global academic networks.
Most of our postgraduate research-only programmes offer a PhD or Masters by Research option, but some programmes only offer the PhD route. The PhD is taken over three-six years and the Masters by Research over one-two years. We offer flexibility so you can choose the mode of study that works for you - full-time, part-time, or distance learning.
Research is at the heart of the life of the Shakespeare Institute and informs all our activities. Our research spans Renaissance Drama, the afterlife of Shakespeare in performance, the culture of Renaissance England and the impact of Shakespeare on modern culture.
The Institute’s research culture is supported by:
(for entry to a PhD). 2:1 Honours degree (for entry to an MA by Research).
For MRes and MA by Research programmes, we usually require a good (normally a 2:1 or above) Honours degree, or an equivalent qualification if you were educated outside the UK, usually in a relevant area.
If you’re applying for a PhD , you’ll also need to hold a Masters qualification at Merit level or above (or its international equivalent), usually in a relevant area.
Any academic and professional qualifications or relevant professional experience are normally taken into account, and in some cases, form an integral part of the entrance requirements.
If you’re applying for distance learning research programmes, you’ll also need to show that you have the time, commitment, facilities and experience to study by distance learning.
You'll normally need to submit a research proposal. The word count is typically 1,000-1,500 words for Arts programmes and around 2,500 words for Law programmes. See the Application Process section for more information.
If you are an international student, you will need to demonstrate you have a suitable level of English proficiency, usually through the form of an IELTS or equivalent qualification.
For this course we require IELTS 6.5 with no less than 6.0 in any band, which is equivalent to:
Full-time. Fee to be confirmed
Part-time. Fee to be confirmed
The same fees apply to both campus-based and distance learning study. The distance learning programme also includes one fully-funded visit to campus in the first year of study.
* For UK postgraduate research students the University fee level is set at Research Council rates and as such is subject to change. The final fee will be announced by Research Councils UK in spring 2025.
We charge an annual tuition fee. Fees for 2025 entry are above.
The fees quoted are for one year only. For those studying courses that are longer than one year, tuition fees will also be payable in subsequent years of your programme.
Tuition fees can either be paid in full or by instalments. You can check whether you are eligible for UK or international fees with our admissions team.
Learn more about postgraduate tuition fees and funding.
These are most common in STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering and Medicine) subjects, but they can sometimes be available for pre-defined research projects in the arts, humanities or social sciences. These may be advertised as fully funded (with fees and a stipend) or competition funded, meaning the projects compete against other projects at each institution.
You devise your own PhD topic, find a supervisor, write a research proposal and apply to the relevant programme. If you’re offered a place at Birmingham, you can then apply for studentships or funding from various sources. Our Postgraduate Scholarships and Funding database lists all available funding.
A limited number of scholarships and studentships may be available to outstanding applicants. For further information, please explore our scholarships and funding database.
For 2025 entry Midlands4Cities Doctoral Training Partnership is offering up to 87 fully funded PhD studentships for eligible students in arts and humanities through an Open Competition and 23 studentships through Collaborative Doctoral Awards (CDA).
The deadline for AHRC funding applications is 12:00 GMT on 13 January 2025.
To apply for a postgraduate research programme, you will need to submit your application and supporting documents online.
When proposing your own research topic you’ll need to make sure the department offers the necessary expertise. We ask that you identify an appropriate supervisor before you submit your application and contact them in the first instance to discuss your research proposal.
If there is a good fit between your proposed research and our research strengths, we’ll be able to give you advice on a draft of your research proposal before you make a formal application.
When contacting a member of our staff, it would be helpful to include the following:
Please contact only one member of staff in the first instance.
View our staff and their areas of supervision.
The research proposal is a key part of your application, so take your time. Your potential supervisors will use it to decide if your research is something they can support.
Your proposal should be a clear and concise summary of your research. It generally consists of an outline of your proposed research project, including your main research questions and the methods you intend to use.
You should also comment on the potential impact and importance of your intended research and on how your work would interact with current trends in your academic field. It should illustrate the relevance of your topic to the research interests and expertise of the staff within your chosen department.
The word count is typically 1,000-1,500 words for Arts programmes and around 2,500 words for Law programmes.
If you are submitting your own research proposal, applications are accepted all year round. However, if you wish to start in September, we would encourage you to apply by 1 June. Whilst you are still welcome to apply after this date, it is important to allow time for us to review your application.
If you are seeking funding, please be aware that the majority of funding opportunities have deadlines in early spring so we would encourage you to apply as early as possible.
We have put together some helpful information on the research programme application process and supporting documents on our how to apply page. Please read this information carefully before completing your application.
If the programme has a Distance learning option then students will usually attend a residential visit in September or January, and those students wishing to attend the September residential are also encouraged to apply by 1 June 2024. The visit will take place at the end of September/beginning of October and you will receive further details once you have accepted your offer.
If you experience any difficulties with the application process and contacting potential supervisors, please contact us via the "Ask us a question" form above.
When you're ready, return to this page and begin your application by clicking APPLY NOW
The University is the top choice for the UK's major employers searching for graduate recruits [The Graduate Market in 2024, High Fliers report].
Receive one-to-one careers advice, including guidance on your job applications, writing your CV and improving your interview technique.
Meet employers face-to-face at on-campus recruitment fairs and employer presentations.
Whatever you plan to do after your degree, the Careers Network offers a range of events and support services including networking opportunities, career coaching, one to one guidance, careers fairs and links with leading graduate recruiters.
As a postgraduate researcher, you’ll benefit from tailored support to prepare you for a career in academia or set you up for a wide range of other professions.
We also offer subject specific careers consultants and a dedicated careers website for international students.
Where better to study the life and works of Shakespeare than his hometown, Stratford-upon-Avon?
You’ll study at the Shakespeare Institute in the heart of Stratford-upon-Avon. Its historic rooms and gardens buzz with play readings, theatrical experiments and all sorts of other Shakespeare-inspired activity. Only a few minutes’ walk from the Royal Shakespeare Company, one of the best-known theatre companies in the world, you’ll have the opportunity to live and breathe Shakespeare.
Most of our students choose to live in Stratford-upon-Avon rather than Birmingham to fully immerse themselves in the Shakespeare experience. There are several types of accommodation available to rent in Stratford including flats, houses, bedsits and shared houses.
An attractive market town with over 800 years history, Stratford-upon-Avon blends heritage, culture, theatre, arts and gardens along with a thriving community offering a wide variety of leisure and shopping experiences. You’ll be 50 minutes from Birmingham and 1 hour 40 minutes from London via train.
Our collaboration with the Royal Shakespeare Company brings together world leading scholars, artists and students. From productions and use of rehearsal space to Q&A and practical workshop sessions with professional theatre-makers, you’ll develop a deeper understanding of a world renowned theatre company and take a peek in to the behind the scenes operation.
Whoever you are and wherever you come from, we are committed to providing the best possible support to all of our students, both before you start and throughout your time on campus, so that you can get the most out of your university experience.
Explore the Shakespeare Institute from wherever you are. Navigate through the library, gardens, music hall, seminar rooms and main hall.