

BA German and Philosophy
About this course
German and philosophy is a pairing with unusually deep intellectual coherence. The German-speaking world produced a disproportionate share of the most important philosophical writing of the last three centuries, from Kant and Hegel through Marx, Nietzsche, and Wittgenstein to the Frankfurt School and beyond. Studying German gives you direct access to that tradition in its original language, while studying philosophy gives you the analytical and critical tools to engage with it rigorously. The combination also opens the full breadth of German literary, cultural, and political life, which has itself been shaped by philosophical currents to an unusual degree. At University College London, this four-year degree develops your linguistic competence in German to a high level while simultaneously building your philosophical knowledge across the main areas of the discipline, including ethics, political philosophy, epistemology, metaphysics, and logic. You will read German texts in the original language, including works of literature, philosophy, and cultural criticism, and you will study the history and ideas of the German-speaking world alongside philosophical argument in its own right. The four-year structure gives sufficient time to develop genuine fluency in German and substantial philosophical depth, with the two strands reinforcing each other throughout. UCL's philosophy department is one of the strongest in the country, and its German programme benefits from close connections to German cultural institutions. Graduates move into careers that span a wide range of professional fields. Translation, interpreting, and roles in international organisations and businesses with German connections draw on the linguistic side of the degree. Philosophy's contribution to analytical rigour and ethical reasoning is valued in law, public policy, finance, and the technology sector. Teaching German in secondary schools is a common pathway, and academic careers in philosophy, German studies, or intellectual history draw those who continue to postgraduate study. Publishing, journalism, and cultural diplomacy are further possibilities.
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