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BA Modern Languages with Philosophy
About this course
Modern languages combined with philosophy is one of those degree pairings that turns out to be more coherent than it first appears. Language study is, at root, about understanding how meaning is made, how different cultures have carved up experience through the words and structures available to them, and how thought is shaped by the medium in which it is expressed. Philosophy asks the same questions at a more abstract level, from theories of meaning, knowledge and truth to ethics, political philosophy and the philosophy of mind. Together they offer a rigorous and humanistic education with real intellectual depth. Royal Holloway's programme runs full time over four years. It includes a sandwich year, with work placement opportunities built in, giving you sustained professional experience alongside your academic studies. You will combine degree-level study in one or more modern European languages with philosophical enquiry, developing linguistic proficiency through reading, speaking, translation and critical engagement with literature and culture alongside the analytical rigour that philosophy demands. The typical entry tariff for this programme is around 120 UCAS points, and Royal Holloway's location in Surrey, with excellent connections to London, provides a rich cultural and professional environment. You will engage with continental European philosophy as well as the analytic tradition, and you will have opportunities to explore how philosophical ideas have developed differently across national cultures. The language component will typically develop your skills in reading, writing and speaking a modern language at degree level, covering contemporary culture, literature and society in the countries where it is spoken. Graduates of modern languages with philosophy programmes are sought across a wide range of careers. The combination of linguistic ability and philosophical training is particularly valued in law, where precision with language and argument is central. Roles in diplomacy, international organisations, publishing, journalism, teaching and public affairs draw on both strands of the degree. Many graduates also enter management consulting, where the capacity to analyse complex situations and communicate clearly is prized. Postgraduate study in philosophy, European languages, comparative literature or translation is a natural continuation for those who wish to develop specialist expertise.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
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