

BA Language and Culture
About this course
Language and culture is a degree that takes seriously the idea that language is not just a vehicle for communication but the very medium through which cultures are constituted, identities are formed, and social life is conducted. It brings together linguistics, cultural studies, and the anthropological study of language in use, asking how language shapes and reflects culture, how meaning is constructed across different social and cultural contexts, and what the study of language can tell us about human cognition, social organisation, and cultural difference. At University College London, this four-year programme allows you to develop expertise in the relationship between language and culture from a genuinely multidisciplinary perspective. You will study linguistic theory, including phonology, syntax, semantics, and pragmatics, alongside cultural theory, the anthropology of language, sociolinguistics, and the study of specific language communities and their cultural practices. The four-year structure gives you the depth to develop real expertise in both the linguistic and cultural dimensions of the degree, and UCL's exceptional range of language and cultural studies faculty provides access to research expertise across many different languages, cultural contexts, and theoretical traditions. London's extraordinary diversity of languages and cultures makes it an ideal city in which to study this combination. Graduates from language and culture programmes move into careers that require an understanding of how communication works across cultural boundaries. Translation, interpreting, and intercultural communication consultancy are natural pathways. International organisations, NGOs, and businesses operating across cultural boundaries need people who understand not just linguistic differences but the cultural dimensions of communication. Teaching English as a foreign language, language policy work, and roles in literacy education draw on the linguistic expertise of the degree. Research careers in linguistics, applied linguistics, or sociolinguistics are pursued through postgraduate study. Communications, publishing, journalism, and roles in cultural organisations where language and cultural competence intersect are further possibilities.
Syllabus & Modules
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