

MA Digital Media & Information Studies/English Language
About this course
Digital media and information studies examines how digital technologies shape the way we create, circulate, consume and make sense of information. It brings humanistic and social perspectives to questions that are often treated as purely technical, asking not just how digital systems work but what they mean for culture, society and individual experience. English language, as a complementary strand, offers a rigorous account of how language itself functions as a system, how it varies across contexts and communities, and how it has evolved over time. Together these subjects form a powerful combination for understanding the contemporary information environment. At the University of Glasgow, you will explore the creation and impact of digital content across media platforms, the politics of information access and algorithmic curation, the history of communication technologies and the ethics of digital participation. The English language component takes you into linguistics, covering phonology, syntax, semantics, discourse analysis and sociolinguistics. You will examine how language is used in different social and digital contexts, including how identity is constructed and negotiated through speech and writing online. The part-time structure of this programme gives you flexibility to balance your studies with other commitments, and the year abroad offers an opportunity to experience different linguistic and media cultures directly, enriching your comparative understanding of how information and language operate across national and cultural boundaries. The combination of analytical, linguistic and media-critical skills you develop is highly transferable. Graduates pursue careers in journalism and media, content strategy and digital communications, user experience research, information management, publishing, education and public sector communications. Some go on to postgraduate work in linguistics, media studies, library and information science, or digital humanities, areas where the boundary between text, technology and society is increasingly the most interesting place to work.
Syllabus & Modules
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