

MA Anthropology and French
About this course
Anthropology and French is a combination that sits at the heart of human diversity, pairing one of the most rigorous analytical disciplines with one of the world's most widely spoken and culturally rich languages. Anthropology asks fundamental questions about what it means to be human: how societies form, how cultures differ and why, how power is distributed, and how meaning is made in everyday life. Alongside this, French opens a window onto literature, film, politics, and social thought across Europe, Africa, the Caribbean, and beyond. Together the two subjects sharpen your sensitivity to difference and train you to move between perspectives rather than assuming any single viewpoint is universal. At Aberdeen this five-year programme allows you to build genuine depth in both disciplines across a longer arc than a standard degree. You will develop your French to a high level of reading, writing, listening, and speaking, engaging with texts and cultural artefacts from across the French-speaking world. In anthropology you will explore theoretical frameworks that range from structuralism and social organisation to medical anthropology and the anthropology of religion, drawing on ethnographic case studies from every continent. The combination means you are always cross-referencing: ideas from French intellectual life inform anthropological debate, and anthropological perspectives push you to interrogate French culture from the outside as well as the inside. A period of study abroad is embedded in the programme, giving you extended immersion in a French-speaking environment. This deepens your linguistic competence while offering first-hand experience of the kind of cultural translation that anthropology theorises in the abstract. You return to Aberdeen with a richer analytical vocabulary and a practical command of French that genuinely reflects sustained use rather than classroom exposure alone. Graduates are well placed for careers in international development, diplomacy, humanitarian organisations, journalism, cultural relations, education, and public policy. The research and writing skills that anthropology cultivates are valued in consultancy, the civil service, and the third sector, while French extends your reach into Francophone markets and institutions across Europe and globally. Many graduates also go on to postgraduate study in anthropology, French studies, area studies, or international relations.
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