

MA History of Art and Scottish Literature
About this course
The combination of art history and Scottish literature at the University of Edinburgh is an unusual pairing that rewards the kind of mind that is comfortable moving between visual and textual ways of understanding the world. Art history is the critical study of images, objects, and spaces across time and culture, asking not only what things look like but what they mean, how they were made, who made them and for whom, and how they have been interpreted differently across generations. Scottish literature brings into focus a literary tradition of remarkable richness and distinctiveness, from the medieval makars through the Enlightenment, the Romantic poets and novelists, and the vigorous twentieth-century renaissance associated with writers such as Hugh MacDiarmid and Lewis Grassic Gibbon, to the internationally recognised contemporary fiction and poetry produced in Scotland today. You will develop fluency in two complementary critical disciplines over four years of full-time study. In art history, you will learn to analyse visual material rigorously, to engage with the debates that animate the field, and to situate works within the broader social, political, and economic conditions of their making. In Scottish literature, you will read closely and critically in a tradition that has grappled with questions of national identity, language, class, and belonging with particular intensity and originality. The Edinburgh context itself is a significant resource, with world-class museums, galleries, and archives close at hand, and with a university that has a long and serious engagement with both disciplines. The four-year structure includes a year abroad, giving you exposure to art historical and literary traditions beyond the British Isles. The intellectual habits formed by this programme, close reading, visual analysis, historical contextualisation, and confident critical argument, are transferable across a wide range of careers. Graduates go on to work in museums, galleries, publishing, journalism, education, heritage organisations, and cultural policy. Others pursue postgraduate research in art history or literary studies, or move into areas such as arts administration, curatorial practice, and archive management. The degree is also valued in professions such as law, communications, and the civil service, where strong analytical and writing skills are an asset.
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