

BA Spanish and Philosophy
About this course
Spanish and philosophy is a combination that places two of the great intellectual traditions of the Western world side by side. Spanish is the language of a literary and cultural tradition of enormous richness, from the Renaissance poetry of Garcilaso to the modernism of Lorca, from Cervantes to the Latin American novelists who transformed world fiction in the twentieth century. Philosophy asks the most fundamental questions about knowledge, reality, morality, and the nature of mind, and does so with a rigour and depth that has shaped almost every other discipline in the humanities. Studied together, these subjects develop both linguistic and cultural fluency and the capacity for sustained philosophical argument. At University College London, this four-year full-time programme gives you the time and academic environment to develop real depth in both disciplines. UCL's philosophy department is one of the world's leading centres for analytic philosophy, and the Spanish and Latin American studies component offers strong coverage of both language and literary and cultural studies. You will develop genuine proficiency in Spanish, reading literature and culture in the original language, while also studying core areas of philosophy including logic, epistemology, ethics, metaphysics, and the philosophy of language and mind. The connections between the two subjects are real: Spanish philosophical and literary thought has its own rich tradition, and philosophical questions about language, interpretation, and meaning are directly relevant to literary study. The analytical rigour of philosophy and the linguistic and cultural depth of Spanish together produce a graduate who can think precisely and argue carefully in multiple registers, in English and Spanish, across philosophical and literary domains. These are unusually transferable skills. Graduates in Spanish and philosophy move into careers in law, journalism, academia, the civil service, international business, management consultancy, translation, and cultural diplomacy. The combination of philosophical training and Spanish language ability is particularly valuable in legal and regulatory contexts and in any role requiring careful reasoning about contested questions in a multilingual environment. Postgraduate study in philosophy, Spanish, Latin American studies, or law is another strong route.
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