

BA Modern Languages
About this course
Modern languages at degree level means more than acquiring fluency. It means learning to inhabit another linguistic and cultural world deeply enough to understand how its people think, argue, tell stories, and organise their social and political lives. Languages open access to literatures, films, political debates, and intellectual traditions that are simply not fully available in translation, and they equip you to work, study, and build relationships across national and cultural boundaries in ways that matter increasingly in a connected and contested world. At the University of East Anglia, this four-year full-time programme allows you to study one or more modern languages alongside the cultures, histories, and literatures of the countries where they are spoken. UEA has a strong tradition in language teaching and literary and cultural study, and the East Anglian location connects the university to Europe in particular through proximity and longstanding academic relationships. You will develop genuine communicative competence in your chosen language or languages, from reading and writing through to speaking and listening in academic, professional, and everyday contexts. Alongside the language itself, you will engage with literary texts, films, media, and other cultural artefacts, developing critical and analytical skills in both English and your target language. The analytical capabilities you develop are demanding and transferable. Close reading, cross-cultural comparison, argumentation in more than one language, and the ability to synthesise material from diverse sources are skills that serve you well far beyond language-related roles. Employers across many sectors value graduates who demonstrate sustained intellectual engagement with cultures and languages other than their own. Graduates in modern languages work in translation, interpreting, teaching, journalism, international business, diplomacy, law, finance, the civil service, and the charity sector. The combination of linguistic competence and cultural knowledge is valued wherever organisations operate across borders or serve diverse communities. Postgraduate study in languages, translation, European studies, international relations, or area studies is another natural progression for those who want to deepen their specialism or move into research.
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