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BA Culture, Heritage and Literature
About this course
Culture, heritage, and literature is a combination that explores the relationship between the texts and artefacts that societies produce and the identities, values, and memories that those societies carry across time. Literature sits at the heart of this enquiry, as one of the primary forms through which cultures express themselves, tell their stories, and transmit their understanding of the world to future generations. Heritage studies examines how material and intangible culture is preserved, interpreted, and contested, asking who decides what is worth remembering and whose stories get told. Cultural studies provides the broader theoretical frameworks for understanding how meaning is made and circulated in societies. At the University of the Highlands and Islands, this four-year full-time programme is situated in one of the most culturally distinctive regions in Britain, where questions of heritage, language, and cultural identity have particular urgency and depth. You will engage with literature, both in English and in the context of Scottish and Gaelic cultural traditions, alongside the theory and practice of heritage and cultural work. The programme develops your ability to read and interpret texts closely, to engage with cultural history, and to think critically about how heritage is constructed and used in the present. The Highland and Island setting gives the programme a grounding in living cultural traditions and a connection to landscape, community, and identity that enriches the academic content. Graduates of culture, heritage, and literature programmes pursue careers in the heritage and cultural sector, including roles in museums, archives, historic environment organisations, cultural trusts, and arts administration. Teaching in schools and further education is a common path, as is work in community arts, cultural journalism, publishing, and broadcasting. The combination of textual and cultural knowledge developed by the degree is also valuable in tourism, interpretation work, and policy roles in local and regional government. Postgraduate study in heritage management, museum studies, Scottish literature, or cultural studies is a natural next step for those wishing to develop specialist expertise or pursue research.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (77% response rate)
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