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BA Literature and Sociology
About this course
Literature and sociology is a combination that brings two disciplines to bear on the same fundamental question: how do human beings make meaning and organise their collective life? Literature explores these questions through narrative, character, and the crafted possibilities of language, asking what it feels like to live in different times, places, and social circumstances, and how imaginative writing both reflects and shapes the social world. Sociology approaches the same territory from an analytical and empirical direction, examining the structures, institutions, and power relationships that shape social life in ways that individuals often do not see. At the University of the Highlands and Islands, this four-year programme is offered on a full-time basis and brings together the literary and sociological traditions in ways that are particularly resonant in the Scottish Highland and Islands context. Scotland has a rich literary tradition in English, Scots, and Gaelic that has long engaged with questions of identity, community, land, and belonging that are also central concerns of sociology, and studying both disciplines in this environment gives the programme a distinctive grounding in real social and cultural questions. You will develop skills in close reading and literary interpretation alongside the sociological methods of survey design, qualitative research, statistical analysis, and social theory. The combination of literature and sociology is particularly valuable in roles where both analytical and communicative skills are required, and where understanding how social structures and individual experiences interact is professionally relevant. Graduates work in education, social research, journalism, the civil service, community organisations, heritage, broadcasting, and the full range of public sector and third-sector roles. The degree also provides a strong foundation for postgraduate study in literary studies, social research, sociology, or related fields, and for professional training in social work, teaching, or journalism.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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