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MA Anthropology
About this course
Social anthropology at Aberdeen is the study of the diversity of human communities and cultures around the world, bringing together theories about what it means to be human from a wide range of Western and non-Western thinkers to understand human action, culture, and thought as studied through long-term international research with communities themselves. The discipline insists on taking other ways of life seriously on their own terms rather than measuring them against a single standard, developing a genuinely comparative understanding of the human condition. It is a field that cultivates intellectual humility, cultural intelligence, and the kind of open-minded analytical rigour that is increasingly valuable in a complex and interconnected world. At the University of Aberdeen, this four-year full-time programme places fieldwork and ethnographic method at the heart of its approach, reflecting the discipline's commitment to sustained, in-depth engagement with the communities it studies. You will study kinship, religion, political organisation, economic life, gender, identity, and the anthropology of the environment, drawing on classic and contemporary ethnographies from across the world. You will engage with theoretical traditions from within anthropology and from neighbouring disciplines including sociology, philosophy, and human geography. A year abroad is available, giving you the opportunity to experience another society and educational tradition from within, an experience that can be transformative for an anthropologist's understanding. With a typical entry tariff of 168 UCAS points, this degree attracts students with intellectual curiosity and a genuine interest in human diversity. Graduates pursue careers in international development, NGOs, humanitarian organisations, the civil service and diplomatic service, cultural heritage, social research, health policy, education, journalism, and community development. The analytical and cultural competences anthropology develops are valued in any role requiring the ability to engage across difference. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in anthropology, development studies, international relations, or area studies.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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