

BA Scandinavian Studies and History of Art
About this course
Scandinavian Studies and History of Art is a pairing that rewards the intellectually curious: both disciplines ask us to look carefully and interpret what we find, one through the lens of Nordic cultures and languages, the other through the visual and material record of human creativity across time and place. Studied together at University College London over four years full time, they form a combination that is unusual in British universities and genuinely stretching. Scandinavian Studies at UCL engages you with the languages, literatures, and cultures of the Nordic countries, including Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Iceland, and Finland. You will develop proficiency in at least one Scandinavian language, reading texts in the original and building the fluency to engage with contemporary Scandinavian society, politics, and media. The literary tradition is substantial: Old Norse sagas, the modern novel, crime fiction, and drama all feature, and you will learn to read these works within their social and historical contexts. History of Art, meanwhile, trains you in the close looking and critical analysis of paintings, sculpture, architecture, photography, and other visual forms from antiquity to the present day. You will study how artistic works are produced, received, and interpreted, and how they function within broader cultural and economic systems. UCL's location in London gives you immediate access to some of the world's great art collections, which are integral to your learning. The four-year programme gives you the space to develop genuine depth in both subjects. You will build analytical writing skills, the ability to construct well-supported arguments from primary sources, and the intellectual agility to move between textual and visual modes of evidence. Graduates from this combination are well suited to careers in arts administration, museums and galleries, publishing, journalism, cultural diplomacy, heritage, and international organisations with Nordic connections. Many also go on to postgraduate study in Scandinavian languages, art history, curating, or cultural policy. The combination of language expertise and visual literacy is distinctive and valued in creative and cultural sectors.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (52% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
What comes next? 🎓
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai →


