

MA Celtic Civilisation/English Literature
About this course
Celtic civilisation sits at the intersection of history, archaeology, linguistics and literary study, tracing a culture that flourished across ancient Europe and shaped the languages and traditions of modern Scotland, Ireland, Wales and Brittany. Studying it alongside English literature gives you two complementary lenses on the written and spoken word, one reaching back to Ogham inscriptions and medieval saga, the other engaging with the full sweep of literature in the English tongue. Together they train you to read carefully, think historically, and appreciate how meaning is made across very different cultural contexts. At the University of Glasgow you will explore the history and societies of the Celtic-speaking peoples from their earliest traces on the European continent through to their contemporary presence in the British Isles. You will engage with Celtic languages, material culture, art, and religion alongside a wide range of literary texts in English, developing skills in close reading, historical interpretation and cultural analysis. The programme is studied part-time, allowing you to balance academic life with other commitments, and includes an opportunity to spend time abroad, broadening your understanding of European literary and cultural traditions from a different vantage point. The combination of Celtic studies and English literature is particularly valuable because it places the English-language canon in a broader context, reminding you that Britain and Ireland were shaped by languages and cultures that predate English entirely. You will learn to move between traditions, recognising what is distinctive about each and what they share. This comparative habit of mind is useful far beyond the classroom. Graduates typically pursue careers in education, heritage, cultural organisations, journalism, publishing, broadcasting and the arts. The skills developed, including critical analysis, research, communication and cross-cultural understanding, also open routes into law, public administration and the civil service. Postgraduate study in Celtic languages, medieval studies, literary criticism, linguistics or cultural history is a natural continuation, and Glasgow's specialist research environment makes it an excellent base for those considering academic careers.
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