

MA German and Social Anthropology
About this course
German and social anthropology is a combination that develops two quite different but mutually enriching ways of understanding human life in its cultural diversity. German is one of Europe's major intellectual and literary languages, with a tradition in philosophy, literature, science, and culture that has shaped the modern world from Goethe and Schiller to Kant and Hegel, from Thomas Mann to the present. Social anthropology is the comparative study of human societies and cultures, asking why people organise their lives, beliefs, and relationships differently and what those differences reveal about the human condition. Studied together, the two disciplines give you the linguistic access to one of the richest intellectual and cultural traditions in Europe and the theoretical frameworks to situate that tradition in a broader global comparative context. At the University of St Andrews, you will develop your German language and communication skills to a high level of proficiency, following your own interests through a broad range of course options that explore the rich cultural heritage of the German-speaking lands, including literature, history, film, and intellectual history. Alongside this, the social anthropology strand will take you into questions of kinship, exchange, religion, politics, identity, and ecology across the full diversity of human societies, developing the close observation, comparison, and critical analysis that are central to the discipline. The programme runs over four years and includes a year abroad, which is essential for both the language and anthropology strands, giving you direct experience of German-speaking cultures and different scholarly and social environments. Graduates from German and social anthropology degrees move into careers in international organisations, NGOs, diplomacy, journalism, education, development work, research, the civil service, and cultural organisations. The combination of language and cross-cultural analytical skills is particularly valuable for roles requiring work across national and cultural boundaries. Postgraduate study in anthropology, German studies, or related social science fields is a natural route for those who wish to continue their research.
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