

MA Japanese and Linguistics
About this course
Japanese is one of the most structurally distinctive languages a native English speaker can study, with three writing systems, a grammar that works almost entirely differently from European languages, and a rich tradition of literature, film and philosophy that rewards engagement on its own terms. Linguistics, meanwhile, is the systematic study of how human languages work: how they are structured, how they are acquired, how they vary and change over time, and what they reveal about the human mind. Combining the two at the University of Edinburgh gives you both deep practical competence in Japanese and a theoretical framework for understanding language itself. This four-year full-time programme will develop your spoken and written Japanese to an advanced level while you also study core areas of linguistics such as phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics and the history of language. You will be equipped to analyse language data rigorously and to understand how Japanese illustrates, tests or complicates general linguistic theories. You will engage with Japanese culture, literature and contemporary society alongside the formal study of the language, giving you a layered and sophisticated understanding of both the subject and the country. The skills acquired on this degree are highly valued across a broad range of careers. Graduates move into translation and interpreting, international business, diplomacy and the foreign civil service, academia, journalism, the technology sector and cultural organisations. The linguistic training is particularly valuable in roles involving language technology, data analysis or cross-cultural communication. Many graduates also pursue postgraduate study in linguistics, Japanese studies or related fields. The combination of analytical rigour and language competence is unusual and genuinely distinctive in the graduate labour market.
Syllabus & Modules
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