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BA Archaeology and Literature
About this course
Archaeology and literature is a combination that invites you to think about how human beings have recorded and understood their existence across very different kinds of evidence. Archaeology reads the past through its material remains, the objects, buildings, landscapes, and environmental traces that survive when written records do not. Literature is the study of written texts as creative and cultural artefacts, asking how language, narrative, and form shape and reflect the experience of a time and place. Together they develop a particularly sensitive awareness of evidence, interpretation, and the gap between what survives and what actually happened. This part-time programme at the University of the Highlands and Islands allows you to study both subjects at a pace that suits your circumstances. In archaeology you will develop skills in the analysis of material culture, fieldwork methods, and the interpretation of evidence from different periods and regions, including the particularly rich prehistoric and early medieval heritage of Scotland and the Northern Isles. In literature you will engage with texts across different periods and genres, developing your close reading skills and your ability to situate works within their historical and cultural contexts. The Highlands and Islands setting gives both subjects a distinctive regional character, connecting your learning to some of the most important and least disturbed archaeological landscapes in Europe. Graduates of this combined programme develop skills in evidence analysis, historical interpretation, textual criticism, and independent research that transfer across many professional contexts. Heritage, museums, archives, libraries, arts organisations, journalism, education, and community history projects are all natural destinations. The part-time format often means graduates enter professional life alongside their studies, building relevant experience from early in the degree. Postgraduate study in archaeology, literary studies, heritage management, or related fields is a natural continuation for those seeking further depth or academic careers.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (78% response rate)
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