

BA Czech and Hebrew
About this course
Czech and Hebrew is a distinctive pairing that brings together two languages with very different origins but each carrying a cultural weight far exceeding their number of speakers. Czech is a West Slavic language spoken primarily in the Czech Republic, a country with an unusually rich cultural and intellectual history that includes major contributions to literature, film, music, and philosophy. Hebrew, as noted in other contexts, spans both its ancient scriptural form and its modern incarnation as the living language of contemporary Israel, and both dimensions are part of what makes it so culturally and intellectually significant. At University College London, this four-year degree develops your competence in both languages alongside a thorough engagement with the cultures and histories they represent. In the Czech strand, you will develop reading, writing, and spoken proficiency in the language while studying Czech and Central European literature, culture, and history. You will engage with writers and artists who have been deeply shaped by the particular historical experience of the Czech lands in the twentieth century, from the interwar republic through the Nazi occupation to the Communist period and the post-1989 transformation. In the Hebrew strand, you will study both Modern Hebrew and engage with the textual and cultural tradition it carries, exploring the connections between ancient and modern and between religious and secular dimensions of Jewish life. UCL's School of European Languages, Culture and Society and its Hebrew and Jewish Studies provision together make this an exceptional environment for this combination. Graduates move into careers in translation, interpreting, journalism, cultural diplomacy, and academic research. Jewish studies, Slavic studies, and Central European studies are areas where this combination opens specific academic pathways. Roles in Jewish cultural organisations, museums with Judaica collections, and bodies engaged with Central European affairs draw on the cultural expertise developed in the degree. The Foreign Office, international organisations, and bodies working on European cultural heritage are further destinations. Some graduates continue to postgraduate study, deepening their expertise in one or both of the language areas or moving into related fields such as European politics or religious studies.
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