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MA History of Art/Theology & Religious Studies
About this course
History of art and theology and religious studies are disciplines that both concern themselves with how human beings have represented and made sense of their deepest experiences: the beautiful, the sacred, the moral, and the transcendent. History of art asks why paintings, sculptures, buildings, and works of design look the way they do, examining the historical, cultural, and intellectual forces that shape visual and material culture. Theology and religious studies asks how religious traditions have understood the world, the divine, and human obligation, drawing on philosophy, history, textual interpretation, and comparative analysis. Studied together, they illuminate each other powerfully, since so much of the art that has shaped Western and global culture is inseparable from religious context and meaning. At the University of Glasgow, you will develop expertise in both areas across a four-year degree. In history of art, you will examine works across media and periods, developing the close visual and contextual analysis skills that are central to the discipline. In theology and religious studies, you will engage with sacred texts, theological arguments, and the practices and histories of major world religions, developing comparative and critical perspectives. Glasgow's collections and cultural resources enrich both strands, and the combination encourages you to bring historical and theological frameworks together in your analysis of art and its meanings. The programme includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study at a partner institution and encounter different scholarly traditions and cultural contexts, which deepens your comparative understanding of both art history and religious thought. Graduates move into careers in museums and galleries, heritage and cultural organisations, arts administration, education, journalism, religious ministry and community work, publishing, and policy. The combination of visual, historical, and theological literacy opens doors in any sector where nuanced engagement with culture and ideas is valued. Postgraduate study in art history, religious studies, curating, or theology is a natural route for those who wish to develop a deeper specialism.
Syllabus & Modules
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