

BA French and German
About this course
French and German is one of the classic language pairings in British higher education, and for good reason. Together, French and German give you access to two of Europe's most important literary and intellectual traditions, two languages that between them have shaped philosophy, science, music, cinema, and politics over several centuries, and two of the major working languages of European institutions. Studying them together means you are not simply doubling your vocabulary; you are developing a comparative understanding of how different languages construct meaning and how different cultures frame their relationship to the world. At the University of Oxford, this four-year full-time programme is taught through the tutorial system, placing you in sustained, intensive dialogue with scholars who are specialists in the languages, literatures, and cultures you are studying. You will reach a high level of proficiency in both French and German, working across their spoken, written, and literary forms. Alongside language study you will engage with texts ranging from medieval poetry to contemporary fiction and theory, and you will develop skills in translation, close reading, literary analysis, and critical argument. The programme encourages you to think comparatively across the two traditions, noticing similarities and divergences and learning from what each language illuminates about the other. Oxford's resources, including its libraries, its research culture, and the intellectual community of students and tutors, make this one of the most stimulating environments in which to pursue this kind of study. The demands are real: the tutorial system requires consistent independent preparation and a willingness to engage critically with your own ideas. Graduates go into careers in the civil service, diplomacy, international law, finance, journalism, publishing, translation, and academia. Many continue to doctoral or masters-level research in French or German studies, or in comparative literature and European cultural history. The degree remains one of the strongest foundations available for a career shaped by language and ideas.
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