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BA Modern Languages
About this course
Language is one of the defining features of human life, shaping thought, enabling relationships, and carrying the accumulated knowledge and culture of civilisations across time. Modern languages study goes far beyond learning to speak and write in a foreign tongue; it is an engagement with other ways of seeing the world, with literatures and histories that are inseparable from the languages in which they were created. Studying modern languages develops a capacity for precision, cultural empathy, and intellectual flexibility that is valuable in almost any professional or personal context. At the University of Essex, this four-year full-time degree immerses you in the study of languages alongside their literatures, cultures, and histories. You will develop advanced proficiency in the languages you study, learning to use them with nuance and confidence across a range of written and spoken contexts. Alongside language acquisition, you will engage with texts, films, and cultural artefacts that illuminate the societies in which these languages are embedded, developing critical and comparative skills that enrich your understanding of both the language and its wider context. You will study how language works as a system, how it is used to construct meaning and identity, and how it connects to questions of power, politics, and cultural difference. The ability to operate fluently in more than one language is consistently cited by employers as a distinctive and increasingly rare asset. Modern language graduates are valued for their cultural literacy, their adaptability, and their capacity to communicate across boundaries that monolingual professionals cannot cross. Graduates pursue careers in translation and interpretation, the diplomatic and foreign services, international business, journalism, publishing, teaching, marketing, law, and many areas of the public sector. Postgraduate study in linguistics, translation studies, literature, or area studies is also a well-trodden path. The skills that language study develops transfer broadly across any career that involves communication, analysis, or working across cultural boundaries.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 25 respondents (71% response rate)
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