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BA Danish and Dutch
About this course
Danish and Dutch together bring you into the Germanic language family from two closely related but distinctly different directions. Dutch is the native language of approximately 24 million people in the Netherlands and Belgium, with a significant presence also in Suriname and the Caribbean. It is the gateway to a country with one of Europe's most open and prosperous economies, a distinctive artistic tradition running from Rembrandt and Vermeer to the Dutch design movement, and a rich liberal philosophical culture. Danish, by contrast, is the language of Denmark and the Faroe Islands, with around 5.5 million speakers, and gives access to the Nordic world, its social model, its literature, and its strong contemporary design and technology culture. At University College London, this four-year full-time programme develops advanced proficiency in both languages. UCL's Scandinavian Studies and Dutch departments have strong scholarly traditions, and you will engage with the literature, culture, and history of both linguistic communities as well as developing the linguistic competence to read, write, speak, and understand both languages at a high level. Studying two closely related Germanic languages also gives you a comparative linguistic perspective that sharpens your understanding of both. Graduates with Danish and Dutch occupy a distinctive niche in the labour market. Nordic and Dutch business environments, particularly in sectors such as shipping, finance, energy, design, and technology, actively value candidates with this linguistic range. Diplomacy, journalism, translation, and interpreting are established career paths. International organisations, NGOs, and the EU recruit people with Scandinavian and Dutch language competence. Academic research in Germanic linguistics, Scandinavian studies, or Dutch literature is a further direction. Postgraduate study in Dutch or Scandinavian studies, comparative literature, or translation is a natural continuation for those who wish to specialise.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 10 respondents (52% response rate)
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