

MA History of Art/Social & Public Policy
About this course
History of art and social and public policy is a pairing that might seem unusual but which has considerable intellectual coherence. History of art trains you to read visual objects closely, to understand how cultural production is shaped by historical, economic, and ideological forces, and to analyse the ways in which art and design have both reflected and challenged social arrangements. Social and public policy brings those questions into the present, asking how governments respond to social needs, how welfare systems are designed and evaluated, and how political choices shape outcomes in areas such as housing, health, and inequality. At the University of Glasgow, this four-year full-time programme allows you to develop expertise in both disciplines, exploring the relationship between cultural production and social life from historical and contemporary perspectives. On the history of art side you will study how paintings, sculptures, buildings, and design objects come to look the way they do, and what social and intellectual forces have shaped artistic production across different periods and places. On the social and public policy side you will examine the frameworks through which governments address social problems and the evidence base that informs those decisions. A year abroad is part of the programme, broadening your academic and cultural experience. Graduates pursue careers in arts administration and cultural policy, museum and gallery management, heritage organisations, government roles concerned with arts funding and cultural infrastructure, social research, journalism, and the civil service. The combination of cultural analysis and policy understanding is particularly relevant to roles where art, culture, and public investment intersect. Postgraduate study in art history, cultural policy, social policy, and museum studies is a natural progression.
Syllabus & Modules
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