

MA Art History and Social Anthropology
About this course
Art history and social anthropology make an intellectually rich and complementary pairing. Art history asks how images and objects are made, what they mean, and what role they play in the societies that create and use them, developing a visual literacy and critical framework for understanding cultural production across time and place. Social anthropology examines the diversity of human cultures, asking how different societies organise themselves, make sense of the world, and give life meaning through ritual, belief, and social practice. Both disciplines are fundamentally comparative and interpretive, and each deepens the other. At St Andrews, which has strong research reputations in both fields, this four-year full-time programme allows you to develop genuine expertise in art history and anthropology simultaneously. You will learn to analyse the history, context, style, and meaning of images and objects, engaging with different critical approaches and theoretical frameworks and exploring the complex role that visual culture plays in questions of aesthetics, politics, power, and identity. Anthropology extends this into the field, examining how art and material culture function in the social lives of diverse communities. A year abroad is embedded in the programme, giving you the opportunity to study in a different cultural and academic environment, enriching both your art historical and anthropological perspectives. Graduates go on to careers in galleries and museums, heritage organisations, cultural policy, international development, journalism, education, and a wide range of roles in the creative and cultural sectors. The combination of visual analysis, cultural understanding, and interpretive rigour that the degree develops is valued wherever complex cultural material needs to be understood and communicated. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in art history, anthropology, museum studies, or cultural studies.
Syllabus & Modules
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