

MA Scottish Studies
About this course
Scottish Studies is the academic examination of Scotland's distinctive history, culture, languages, literature, and society, bringing together disciplines including history, literary studies, linguistics, cultural geography, and the social sciences to understand what Scotland is and how it has come to be understood in the ways it has. It engages seriously with the Gaelic, Scots, and English-language traditions that have shaped Scottish cultural life, with the historical processes of union, empire, industrialisation, and deindustrialisation that define the Scottish experience, and with contemporary debates about identity, devolution, nationalism, and Scotland's place in the United Kingdom and the wider world. At the University of Edinburgh, Scottish Studies is particularly well placed, situated in the capital of a country whose identity and institutions the programme examines, with access to archives, collections, and cultural organisations of the first importance for the field. This four-year full-time degree includes a year abroad, giving you the opportunity to study Scotland from an external vantage point or to engage with Scottish diaspora communities and perspectives internationally. You will develop skills in historical analysis, close literary reading, ethnographic and cultural research methods, and critical engagement with debates about nationhood, tradition, and identity. The programme is interdisciplinary by design, training you to move across different methodological frameworks and to ask how Scotland looks different depending on which tools you bring to it. Graduates of Scottish Studies programmes pursue careers in education, the arts, heritage, cultural policy, broadcasting, journalism, and public sector organisations with responsibilities for Scottish culture and identity. The research, analytical, and communication skills the degree develops are broadly transferable. Further study options include postgraduate degrees in Scottish studies, Celtic studies, history, literature, cultural studies, and museum or heritage management, as well as the full range of careers open to humanities graduates.
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