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BA Dutch and Swedish
About this course
Dutch and Swedish is a distinctive language combination that opens access to two Northern European cultures whose global influence has been disproportionately large relative to the populations that speak them. Dutch is the language of the Netherlands and Flanders in Belgium, a country with a powerful tradition in painting, trade, colonial history, and liberal political thought, and also a language with significant presence in the Caribbean and South Africa. Swedish is the language of a society internationally admired for its approach to welfare, design, environmental policy, and gender equality, as well as the language of a rich literary and cinematic tradition and of a country that has produced a remarkable number of globally successful businesses. At University College London, this four-year full-time programme is taught within one of the UK's most cosmopolitan universities and one with genuine expertise in the languages of Northern Europe. You will develop real communicative competence in both Dutch and Swedish, working from the linguistic foundations of each to a level where you can read literary and contemporary texts, conduct professional correspondence, and engage with the cultures and contemporary affairs of the relevant countries. UCL's location in London, with its large Dutch and Scandinavian business and diplomatic communities, makes the degree particularly relevant to professional roles in the capital. Studying two related but distinct Germanic languages simultaneously deepens your understanding of how language works and how linguistic systems are organised, as Dutch and Swedish, while sharing a family, are far from identical in their structures and sound systems. The cultural content of the degree, spanning literature, history, politics, and contemporary society, is equally valuable in its own right. Graduates work in translation and interpreting, business with Dutch or Swedish companies, journalism and media, the cultural sector, teaching, and diplomatic and consular roles. The Netherlands and Scandinavia have significant bilateral relationships with the UK in trade, energy, and finance, creating professional demand for people with genuine linguistic and cultural expertise in these areas. Postgraduate study in languages, translation, European studies, or area studies is a natural continuation.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (52% response rate)
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