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BA French and Japanese
About this course
French and Japanese represent one of the most culturally contrasting language pairings available in British higher education, and that contrast is precisely what makes the combination so intellectually rewarding. French is a global diplomatic language spoken across five continents, the medium of a rich literary and philosophical tradition, and the dominant working language of many international institutions. Japanese is the language of one of the world's largest economies and most distinctive cultural traditions, with a writing system, grammatical structure and set of social conventions that differ profoundly from European languages. Studying both simultaneously develops exceptional cognitive flexibility and cross-cultural awareness. At the University of Manchester, this four-year full-time programme includes a sandwich year with embedded work placement opportunities, giving you substantial professional experience in addition to your academic studies. Manchester has strong language teaching facilities and well-developed international connections in both French-speaking and Japanese-speaking contexts. The typical entry tariff is around 152 UCAS tariff points. You will develop proficiency in both languages across speaking, listening, reading and writing, studying French and Japanese literature, culture, history and society alongside the linguistic work. Japanese will typically require intensive attention to its three writing scripts, kanji, hiragana and katakana, as well as to the grammatical patterns and social registers that have no equivalent in European languages. French will deepen through literary and cultural study, translation and language practice. Both strands of the degree reward persistence and precision. Graduates with fluency in both French and Japanese are genuinely rare, and this rarity is commercially valuable. Career paths include roles in international business, finance, trade and investment involving French-speaking and Japanese partners, diplomatic service, translation and interpreting, international law, journalism covering Europe or Asia, and cultural organisations. Many graduates work for international companies with operations in both France and Japan, or for organisations such as the OECD and European institutions where both languages are in active use. Postgraduate study in Japanese studies, French literature, linguistics or translation is a further option.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 55 respondents (74% response rate)
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