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MA French and Sociology
About this course
French and sociology is a combination that gives you two distinct but complementary ways of understanding how human beings live together. French, as a major world language with a rich literary and intellectual tradition, provides direct access to the cultural, political, and social life of France, the wider francophone world, and the international contexts where French is a language of diplomacy and exchange. Sociology examines the social structures, institutions, and forces that shape individual lives and collective experience, asking how class, gender, race, education, religion, and culture produce the patterns and inequalities we observe in society. At Aberdeen, this five-year degree allows you to develop both disciplines in depth, exploring how the societies you study in French compare and contrast with the sociological frameworks you develop in your other modules. Language study will build your proficiency in French through reading, writing, speaking, and listening, alongside cultural and literary engagement with French-speaking societies. Sociology will introduce you to the major theoretical traditions of the discipline, from Marx, Weber, and Durkheim through to contemporary sociologists working on globalisation, inequality, and social change. Aberdeen's research culture and international outlook give the degree a dynamic intellectual environment in which to develop as both a linguist and a social scientist. Graduates of French and sociology degrees bring a distinctive combination to the job market: language skills that open international opportunities, and social scientific understanding that helps make sense of the diverse environments they encounter. Careers in social research, policy analysis, international organisations, education, journalism, NGOs, and the public sector all draw on these combined competencies. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in sociology, social policy, international relations, or French studies, while others enter professional careers where the combination of linguistic fluency and social analytical ability is genuinely unusual and valuable.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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