

MA Sociology/Classics
About this course
Sociology and classics is a pairing that rewards curiosity about how human societies work, both in the ancient world and today. Sociology is the systematic study of social structures, institutions, inequalities, and the forces that shape collective life. Classics brings you into direct contact with the civilisations of ancient Greece and Rome through their literature, history, art, and material culture, with the option to study Latin and Greek at whatever level suits your existing knowledge. At the University of Glasgow, this part-time programme combines the two disciplines with a year abroad available, giving you the opportunity to experience study in an international academic environment. The sociology strand develops your capacity to analyse how societies are organised and how that organisation both enables and constrains what individuals and groups can do. Theories of inequality, power, race, gender, class, and culture are central to the curriculum, as are the methods sociologists use to investigate social phenomena empirically. The classics strand takes you into one of the deepest intellectual traditions available to English-speaking students, engaging with texts and artefacts that have shaped Western thought, law, politics, and literature for over two millennia. Together, the disciplines offer complementary analytical lenses: classics teaches you to read cultures through their surviving traces with great care and scepticism, while sociology gives you theoretical frameworks for understanding social structures that apply across historical periods and cultures. Graduates of this combination move into careers that value analytical rigour, cultural literacy, and strong written communication. Research and policy work, the civil service, journalism, law, education, the charity sector, and heritage organisations are all natural destinations. The sociological training supports careers in research, community development, and public sector roles, while the classical background opens doors in heritage management, publishing, academia, and cultural institutions. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in sociology, ancient history, classical archaeology, or interdisciplinary humanities programmes. The year abroad broadens perspective and demonstrates the intellectual adaptability that both disciplines cultivate.
Syllabus & Modules
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