

MA Modern Languages (Arabic and Spanish) and English
About this course
Combining Arabic, Spanish, and English opens three literary and linguistic traditions that together span some of the most significant cultural encounters in world history. Arabic is the dominant language of the Middle East and North Africa, carrying a scholarly and poetic heritage of immense depth that has shaped European intellectual history through the transmission of Greek philosophy and the development of mathematics, astronomy, and medicine during the medieval period. Spanish encompasses one of the great literary traditions of Europe and the Americas, spoken natively by around 500 million people across Spain and Latin America, and English adds a third dimension, one of the most globally significant languages and literary traditions of the modern world. At St Andrews this four-year full-time programme includes a year abroad, essential for developing practical proficiency in languages that can only be fully learned through sustained immersive experience. As St Andrews notes, Arabic is particularly valuable in combination with other subjects because it opens opportunities for comparative analysis across different languages, literatures, cultures, histories, politics, and economics. Studying Arabic alongside Spanish and English allows you to trace connections and contrasts between three traditions that have been in direct contact at crucial historical moments, particularly in the medieval Mediterranean, and that continue to engage with each other in the contemporary world. You will develop practical proficiency in Arabic and Spanish alongside critical engagement with English literature, building a linguistic range that is genuinely unusual. Graduates find careers in translation and interpreting, diplomacy, international business, journalism, the cultural sector, education, non-governmental organisations working in the Arab world or Latin America, and academic research. The triple language combination is genuinely rare and positions graduates strongly in competitive roles requiring multilingual communication and cross-cultural understanding. Many also continue to postgraduate study in one or more of these languages and literatures, or in international relations, area studies, or translation.
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