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BA Communications and Philosophy
About this course
Communications and Philosophy is a degree that brings together two disciplines which are more closely related than they might first appear. Communication is concerned with how meaning is produced, transmitted, and interpreted: through language, media, images, and institutional practices. Philosophy is concerned with the foundations of reasoning itself: what counts as a valid argument, how we can know anything, what makes an action right, and what language actually does when we use it. Studying them together means you are simultaneously examining the content of communication and asking hard questions about its conditions and limits. At Nottingham Trent University, this three-year full-time programme develops your skills in critical analysis, argument, and media literacy across both disciplines. In Communications you will study media theory, journalism, public relations, digital communication, and the sociology of media, developing both an analytical understanding of how media systems work and practical skills in producing and evaluating media content. In Philosophy you will engage with logic, ethics, epistemology, and philosophy of language, developing the capacity to construct and evaluate arguments with precision and to identify flawed reasoning in public discourse. The two subjects reinforce each other: philosophical rigour improves your ability to analyse media messages critically, while attention to real media practice gives philosophical questions about communication a concrete grounding. A sandwich year and work placement are included, giving you direct professional experience alongside your academic studies. The skills you build are genuinely versatile: clear thinking, persuasive writing, ethical reasoning, and an understanding of how information is shaped by the contexts in which it is produced. Graduates pursue careers in journalism, public relations, marketing, digital media, the civil service, education, and the charity sector. Many go on to postgraduate study in communications, journalism, philosophy, or law. The combination of analytical depth and communicative competence is valued across a wide range of professional environments.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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