COURSE OF Scottish Ethnology and Archaeology
University of Edinburgh (Edinburgh)
University: http://www.ed.ac.uk/studying
Course: https://www.ed.ac.uk/ug/VV94
This programme combines two related yet distinct approaches to the study of human cultures, past and present. Ethnology is the discipline which studies the culture and traditions of developed societies and is sometimes described as being at the intersection where history and anthropology meet. While commonly offered in universities across Europe, this is the only full undergraduate programme of its kind available within the UK. Focusing on Scotland, but introducing comparative material from elsewhere, you will study the varying ways in which a modern European nation expresses itself culturally, through such forms as its customs, beliefs, social organisation, language, music and song. How do these help to create and shape identity in the modern world? How do we use and make sense of the past from within our present, and how can this understanding help us to shape our future? Working with a range of rich materials, from traditional archives to modern media and digital data, you will develop the practical and intellectual tools to help navigate and indeed influence contemporary culture and society in an increasingly globalised world. While the ethnology component allows for the study of the recent past and the present, your studies in archaeology take you a good deal further back in time, and help you to develop a parallel range of skills in the interpretation of social and cultural change. The programme also enables you to appreciate the material basis of archaeology, the contested nature of objects, the social relationships that are spun around them and the people who use and interpret them.
Master of Arts (with Honours) - MA (Hons)
Duration: 4 years
Study mode: Full-time
Qualification requirements: ABB (±16 PT)
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