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BA Digital Media, Culture and History
About this course
Digital media, culture, and history is a programme that takes seriously the idea that understanding the digital present requires both cultural analysis and historical depth. Digital media are not a neutral channel for information: they are shaped by the societies that create them, they reinforce and challenge cultural assumptions, and they have their own histories that connect to longer traditions of communication, power, and representation. This discipline develops your ability to analyse media critically, situate it historically, and understand the cultural contexts that give it meaning. At the School of Oriental and African Studies (SOAS), which is part of the University of London, this three-year full-time programme includes a foundation year and benefits from the institution's distinctive focus on the cultures, histories, and languages of Asia, Africa, and the Middle East. You will study digital media and its cultural implications alongside the historical contexts from which contemporary digital culture has emerged, drawing on SOAS's particular expertise in areas that are often underrepresented in mainstream media studies. You will develop skills in cultural analysis, historical research, media criticism, and the ability to interpret digital forms and practices across different cultural contexts. This globally oriented perspective gives the programme a distinctive character that sets it apart from more conventional media studies degrees. Graduates go on to careers in journalism, cultural research, media production, international communications, publishing, heritage, education, and the NGO sector. The SOAS context opens particular opportunities in international and cross-cultural media roles, policy work relating to digital governance, and research on media and culture in non-Western contexts. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study in media studies, cultural studies, history, or area studies, building on the analytical foundations and global perspective that the undergraduate programme provides.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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