

BA Romanian and Swedish
About this course
Romanian and Swedish are two of European languages' most distinctive voices. Romanian, the only Romance language in Eastern Europe, carries the imprint of Roman conquest, Byzantine Christianity, Slavic contact, and Ottoman influence, giving it a linguistic and cultural profile quite unlike French, Italian, or Spanish. Swedish, a North Germanic language, is the key to Scandinavian literature, politics, design culture, and one of the world's most admired social models. Studying the two together trains you to move between very different linguistic systems and cultural traditions, sharpening your analytical understanding of how languages work and what they carry. At UCL this four-year full-time BA divides its attention equally between your two languages. You will develop proficiency across all four skills, speaking, listening, reading, and writing, as well as translation in both directions. Cultural study runs alongside language learning throughout the degree, taking in literature, film, history, linguistics, politics, and other fields that illuminate the societies in which Romanian and Swedish are spoken. The range of modules on offer allows you to follow your own intellectual interests as they develop, tailoring the degree towards the cultural traditions and periods that matter most to you. A year abroad in the third year places you in two countries where your languages are spoken, typically dividing your time between a Romanian-speaking and a Swedish-speaking environment. This immersive experience is central to the degree's ambitions: extended residence abroad transforms your language competence and gives you the kind of lived cultural knowledge that no amount of classroom study can fully substitute for. Graduates go on to careers in translation and interpreting, international business, diplomacy, journalism, broadcasting, education, heritage, and the civil service. Knowledge of Romanian opens connections to the wider Balkan and Eastern European region, while Swedish fluency is a significant asset in relations with Scandinavia, including within European Union and Nordic Council institutions. Many graduates also continue to postgraduate work in linguistics, translation studies, or area studies.
Syllabus & Modules
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