

BA Cultural and Creative Industries
About this course
Cultural and creative industries is a field that takes seriously the economic, social, and political significance of the organisations, practices, and products that constitute contemporary cultural life. From film studios and music labels to advertising agencies, museums, and digital platforms, the creative economy is a major employer and a primary arena in which ideas, values, and identities are produced and contested. Understanding how this economy works, and how to operate effectively within it, requires both creative thinking and analytical rigour. At the University of Nottingham, this three-year full-time degree includes a foundation year, which provides a carefully structured introduction to the academic skills and conceptual frameworks you will need before moving into the main programme. The foundation year is designed for students who have the aptitude and motivation to succeed at degree level but who may benefit from additional preparation, and it offers a genuine and well-supported pathway into the degree. In the main programme you will study how creative industries are structured and how they generate value, examining the relationships between creativity, commerce, and culture. You will consider the histories of different creative sectors, the policy frameworks that shape them, and the ways in which digital technology has transformed production, distribution, and consumption of cultural products. Theoretical perspectives drawn from cultural studies, media studies, economics, and sociology will help you analyse these questions with depth and precision. You will develop analytical and critical thinking skills, the ability to write and communicate with clarity, and an understanding of how cultural organisations function in practice. These capabilities are genuinely useful across a wide range of careers in the creative economy and beyond. Graduates from cultural and creative industries programmes work in arts management, media production, publishing, journalism, marketing, digital content, museums and galleries, and cultural policy. The combination of cultural knowledge and analytical skill the degree provides is also valued in roles in communications, public relations, and the wider creative economy. Postgraduate study in cultural studies, media, creative industries management, or arts administration is a natural next step for those who wish to specialise.
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