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BA Art History and Sociology
About this course
Art history and sociology is a combination that approaches culture from two complementary angles. Art history asks how visual and material culture, painting, sculpture, photography, architecture, film, and design, can be read and interpreted: how objects acquire meaning, how artists respond to their historical contexts, and how the visual arts have documented, shaped, and challenged social realities across time. Sociology asks how societies are structured, how power operates, how inequality is produced, and how institutions and cultural forces shape human experience. Bringing the two together creates a particularly rich lens for understanding culture as a social phenomenon. At Liverpool Hope University, you will explore why art, design, and architecture appear as they do, engaging with the historical and cultural contexts that shape visual and material culture. The sociology strand asks the broader structural questions that give those cultural contexts their social meaning. The programme runs for three years full time, with a sandwich year, a year abroad and integrated work placement opportunities, giving you a generous combination of practical and international experience alongside the academic content. The placement and sandwich year give you professional experience in settings relevant to the arts, social research, or cultural policy, while the year abroad broadens your cultural perspective. The typical entry tariff is 88 points. You will develop close reading of visual and material culture, the ability to construct sustained analytical arguments about social and cultural phenomena, and an understanding of both art-historical methodology and sociological research methods. Graduates from art history and sociology programmes move into careers in museums, galleries, arts administration, cultural policy, social research, education, journalism, public relations, and a range of roles in the creative, cultural and social sectors. Further study at postgraduate level in art history, sociology, cultural studies, or museum studies is a natural next step for those who want to specialise.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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