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BA Film & Media and Sociology
About this course
Film, media and sociology form a particularly productive pairing, since they share a concern with how culture is produced, how meaning circulates and how social power is represented and contested. Film and media studies examines the languages, industries and histories of cinema, television, digital media and popular culture, developing your ability to read audiovisual texts critically and to understand the institutions that produce and distribute them. Sociology provides the theoretical frameworks for understanding how society is organised, how inequality operates and how identity is shaped by structures that individuals inhabit without always being fully aware of them. Together they equip you to analyse culture and society with sophistication and critical depth. At the University of Stirling this four-year programme benefits from Stirling's strong reputation in both fields. You will study film history, genre, narrative and representation alongside core sociological theory, research methods and substantive areas such as gender, class, race and media sociology. The year abroad embedded in the programme gives you the opportunity to study film and media or sociology in a different national context, which is particularly valuable for understanding how cultural industries and social structures vary across societies. The four-year structure provides sufficient time to develop genuine analytical depth in both disciplines. Graduates of this combination are well placed for careers in the media industries, including journalism, broadcasting, digital content production and arts management. Sociological training opens paths into policy analysis, community development, the charity sector and research roles in both the public and private sectors. Cultural policy, audience research, equality and diversity work and education are further destinations. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in film, media studies, sociology, cultural policy or journalism, using the breadth and critical rigour of their undergraduate preparation as a foundation for specialisation.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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