

BA Dutch and Hebrew
About this course
Dutch and Hebrew may seem an unlikely pairing, but studying two languages of this kind develops exceptional analytical depth. Dutch is a major European language with a substantial literary and cultural tradition and the gateway to the Netherlands and Flanders, two societies that have played outsized roles in European intellectual, commercial and artistic history. Hebrew, in both its classical and modern forms, opens access to one of the world's oldest and most influential textual traditions as well as to the contemporary Israeli context and to diaspora culture across centuries and continents. University College London has one of the UK's strongest programmes in languages and cultures, and this four-year full-time degree allows you to develop genuine proficiency and scholarly depth in both Dutch and Hebrew simultaneously. You will study the languages to a high level, developing reading, writing, listening and speaking competence alongside the ability to engage with literature, history and cultural production in both. The combination asks you to think comparatively across very different linguistic families and cultural traditions, developing the kind of intellectual flexibility that deep engagement with more than one language always produces. You will read Dutch literature and cultural history alongside Hebrew biblical and modern texts, and you will develop the analytical frameworks to understand each tradition on its own terms while also drawing connections across them. The degree trains not just language skills but the broader intellectual habits associated with humanistic study: close attention to texts, cultural empathy, historical awareness and the ability to construct careful interpretive arguments. Graduates from programmes combining European and Middle Eastern languages work in diplomacy, international relations, translation, academia, journalism, the cultural sector and a wide range of international organisations. The degree is an excellent foundation for postgraduate study in either language, in comparative literature, in Jewish studies, in Middle Eastern studies or in translation and interpreting.
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