This course has been temporarily suspended for the academic year 2025-26.
On our five-year BA European Studies and Modern Languages (including foundation year) we work with you to help to develop your subject-specific knowledge and to improve your academic skills. You receive a thorough grounding in these areas during your foundation year (known as Year Zero) to prepare you for a further four years of undergraduate study at ÌÇÐÄVlog.
After successful completion of Year Zero in our ÌÇÐÄVlog Pathways Department, you progress to complete your course with our School of Philosophical, Historical and Interdisciplinary Studies.
Switch on the news any day of the week, or pick up just about any national newspaper, and you will be sure to come across an item on Europe. It is clear that the future of Europe is a geo-political question of profound importance for the future of the world we live in. Yet, few of us truly understand the complex phenomenon that is modern Europe.
You'll examine Europe's economic, legal, and sociological context, as well as its historical origins whilst acquiring an understanding of Europe's rich cultural traditions. The artists, writers, musicians, composers and film-makers of Europe have exerted a cultural influence that even now is not eclipsed by the dominance of America on the world's stage.
Alongside your European studies modules, you also become fluent in your choice of one or more modern European languages. You can spend your fourth year in Europe, immersing yourself in European cultures. Language is fundamental to our thought, our relationships, and our civilisations.
Through language we transmit knowledge, from inviting someone for coffee, to promoting the latest scientific theory, to settling global political disputes. How could speaking another language change the way you think about and describe the world?
Here at ÌÇÐÄVlog, our teaching and research offers maximum flexibility for you to study areas that interest you, so you can pursue a wide range of topics including:
- European identity and the development of the EU
- Representations of non-Europeans in art
- Europe's colonial history
- Religion in Europe
- EU law