Introduction
Acquire a global outlook exploring aspects of European, Francophone and Latin American literature and culture through diverse literary texts, thought and visual media.
Study Information
Study Options
- Learning Mode
- On Campus Learning
- Degree Qualification
- MLitt
- Duration
- 12 months or 24 months
- Study Mode
- Full Time or Part Time
- Start Month
- January or September
- Location of Study
- Aberdeen
The programme will provide you with the critical and theoretical methodology to undertake in-depth study of aspects of European, Francophone and Latin American literature, thought and culture. You will apply theoretical and critical concepts in French and Francophone studies, German Studies, and/or Spanish and Latin American studies to different literary texts and visual media.
Our courses allow you to explore literature, film, history, thought and culture through various media and disciplinary approaches. You can work comparatively by combining two language areas or specialising in one language area while having exposure to different theoretical and critical approaches across language areas and cultures within our courses.
We have various activities to join, including our student-led literary arts festival, WayWORD, enabling you to gain invaluable professional experience during your studies. You will develop transferable skills in language and cross-cultural understanding, communication, and critical analysis, opening potential career opportunities in journalism, publishing, charities and non-governmental organisations, diplomatic professions, international relations, and marketing across different work contexts.
The programme draws on knowledge and expertise across French & Francophone Studies, German Studies, and Spanish & Latin American studies, allowing you to appreciate diverse perspectives and gain a global outlook to navigate our interconnected world.
Available Programmes of Study
- MLitt
-
European and Latin American Literatures and Cultures
Qualification Duration Learning Mode Study Mode Start Month LocationMLitt 12 months or 24 months On Campus Learning Full Time or Part Time September Aberdeen MoreProgramme Fees
Fee information Fee category Cost UK Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year £11,100 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year £11,100 Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year (University of Aberdeen Graduates *) £7,000 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year (University of Aberdeen Graduates *) £7,000 EU / International students Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year £23,000 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year £23,000 Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year (Self-funded Students *) £15,000 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year (Self-funded Students *) £15,000 Semester 1
Compulsory Courses
LA5005 Approaches to European and Latin American Literatures and Cultures (30 credits). This course will introduce students to ways of approaching European and Latin American Literatures and Cultures at an advanced level. The course is structured around particular thinkers and ideas, which originate in specific regional and linguistic contexts, but which have had global resonances.
Optional Courses
- Locations and Dislocations: the Role of Place in Literature (EL50C1)
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30 Credit Points
This course examines the social, political and cultural construction of place in literary texts. The imaginative co-ordinates of places such as ‘Scotland’, or ‘England’ exist in a constant state of flux, refusing to yield an essential, authentic image. Using core texts from the early modern period paired with more recent literary responses we explore the idea of place in its various forms. Key themes and issues to be discussed will include the rural and urban divide; literature and nationhood; the nature of community; the significance of emigration, and displacement; walking texts, metropolitan literature, and ideas of the “new world”
- The Novel: Environments and Encounters (EL50C5)
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30 Credit Points
This module explores how the evolution of the novel form has allowed, and required, authors to find new ways of depicting spaces, places and interactions (between characters in particular environments, but also between characters and their environment). This chronologically wide-ranging course moves from the early days of the novel form through to contemporary fiction, allowing for an opportunity to study the many literary tactics that authors have employed to create the settings for their works – from vast historical backdrops, to natural spaces, to urban environments, to smaller domestic and private places. It also us to consider how different cultural moments have prompted authors to rethink how they represent characters’ encounters with the world around them, and with the other cultures, races, species and genders that inhabit that world. As well as narrative theories, students will have the chance to study canonical and less well-known texts from angles informed by current critical approaches such as ecocriticism, animal studies, postcolonial and queer theory.
- Music, Representation and Cultural Encounters (MU5033)
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30 Credit Points
As different cultures and nations have come into contact through European colonialism and globalisation, so too have their musics. In this course, we will approach the issue of cultural encounter through the prism of music, and music’s ability to represent and to bring into dialogue different cultural identities. ‘Music, Representation and Cultural Encounters’ will adopt a cross-disciplinary approach examining current scholarship in musicology, ethnomusicology and popular music studies. In the course, we will encounter a number of familiar (and not so familiar) repertoires and genres, including opera/western art music, jazz, popular music, Mediterranean and North African genres.
- Research Methods in Film and Visual Culture (FS5022)
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30 Credit Points
This team-taught course will introduce students to key research methods in the field of film and visual culture as utilised in the research and practice of faculty members in the department. Each week students will engage with a range of written and visual materials relating to a specific approach to the study and/or production of visual culture. These may include: approaches to working with living artists and documents of ephemeral art; theories of the animal gaze; approaches to practice-as-research; documentary; memory and memorialisation; the relationship between film, art and history; close reading; bricolage; walking; intermediality; and projects in art and science among others. Throughout the course students will explore important theoretical concepts and artistic paradigms in these areas, applying them in weekly exercises and seminar preparations, and ultimately using one (or more) of them in their assessed work.
Semester 2
Compulsory Courses
LA5503 Culture and Politics in Europe and Latin America (30 credits). This course is structured around Francophone, German-language and Spanish-language case studies and focuses on the ways that writers, filmmakers, and artists have responded to specific political events at different points in time. Attention will be focused on cultural production arising in response to diverse protest movements, war and conflict, societal and climate change.
Optional Courses
- Places and Environments: Critical Dialogues (EL55D3)
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30 Credit Points
This course introduces students to a range of critical, theoretical, and philosophical approaches to environment and place, as well as aligned research methods. Students will read key works of ecocriticism, ecofeminism, environmental philosophy, cultural geography, and related areas. Close reading and discussion of central texts will provide a foundation for further research, including the dissertation. Students will have the opportunity to discuss these ideas in relation to both literary and social contexts. This course is restricted to students on the MLitt Literatures, Environments, and Places, or by permission of the School.
- Writing the Self (EL55C2)
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30 Credit Points
What is at stake in writing autobiographical texts? What are the forms writers have used to write themselves? Is autobiography simply, as Oscar Wilde states, the lowest form of criticism? Looking at a range of texts from the Medieval period to the present, with a special focus on women’s writing, this course examines the formal, ethical, political, and aesthetic choices writers make when writing themselves.
- Public Engagement for Arts (EL5596)
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30 Credit Points
Art and culture are integral to our daily lives, and the ways in which these are experienced are continually changing. Whether it is in a street performance, a public gallery, an academic festival, a webcast, a documentary or in social media, the relationship between the creative artist and those who consume it, is complex and can itself be a creative process. This course explores the many ways in which creative materials can be brought to public view, and how different forms of communication, aural, verbal and visual, can enhance public engagement with aesthetic experiences and the discourses around these.
- Projects in Film and Visual Culture (FS5527)
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30 Credit Points
Projects in Film and Visual Culture gives students the opportunity to design a project or event in response to a Call for Proposals. In this way, the course simulates the management and development of project or event proposal through to a funding pitch (in the form of an assessed presentation) and will require students to address a variety of elements necessary to any successful arts project. The course is taught through weekly seminars and workshops. Students will engage with a variety of projects in film and visual culture in the form of case studies, including work produced by leading Scottish arts organisations. These content weeks are supplemented by sessions devoted to theory and workshops that will address the key aspects involved in designing a project or event in a film and visual culture context.
- Documentary Theory and Practice (FS5533)
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30 Credit Points
The module offers a comprehensive look at how documentary has interrogated, and in some rare cases even influenced, politics, social values, and even popular culture. Students will be expected to look at how documentary filmmakers have built upon the famous Griersonian quote – ‘the creative treatment of actuality’ – to evolve the form’s style and scope as well as to challenge the very notion of filmic truth and reality. Attendees to the module will also learn how to identify the key documentary modes and be expected to analyse and understand how the movement’s use of transgressive visual images, no matter how apparently ‘genuine’, is frequently presented through a cinematic perspective that is not always objective. Furthermore, the module will require students to produce a short documentary or individual video essay (in documentary form) and, in doing so, explore the challenges of objective presentations.
Semester 3
Compulsory Courses
LA5900 Dissertation in European and Latin American Literatures and Cultures (60 credits)
MLitt 12 months or 24 months On Campus Learning Full Time or Part Time January Aberdeen MoreProgramme Fees
Fee information Fee category Cost UK Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year £11,100 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year £11,100 Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year (University of Aberdeen Graduates *) £7,000 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year (University of Aberdeen Graduates *) £7,000 EU / International students Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year £23,000 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year £23,000 Tuition Fees for 2025/26 Academic Year (Self-funded Students *) £15,000 Tuition Fees for 2026/27 Academic Year (Self-funded Students *) £15,000
We will endeavour to make all course options available. However, these may be subject to change - see our Student Terms and Conditions page. In exceptional circumstances there may be additional fees associated with specialist courses, for example field trips.
Fee Information
Scholarships
All eligible self-funded international Postgraduate Masters students starting in September 2025 will receive an £8,000 scholarship. Learn more about this Aberdeen Global Scholarship here.
To see our full range of scholarships, visit our Funding Database.
How You'll Study
The programme is delivered through seminars and workshops. Students will complete independent and group work, and lead projects with guidance and support from course tutors. Assessment methods include essays, presentations, reflections, and practice-based work such as portfolios or video essays. The MLitt also requires a 15,000-word dissertation (which can include practical components).
Learning Methods
- Group Projects
- Individual Projects
- Lectures
- Research
- Seminars
- Workshops
Why Study European and Latin American Literatures and Cultures?
- Learn from experts in French & Francophone Studies, German Studies, and Spanish & Latin American Studies.
- Enhance your research and linguistic skills while cultivating cultural awareness in your chosen language area(s).
- Gain invaluable professional experience through volunteering at University of Aberdeen events and other internal activities, such as the WayWORD Festival.
Entry Requirements
Qualifications
The information below is provided as a guide only and does not guarantee entry to the University of Aberdeen.
You should have a 2:2 degree (or international equivalent) in an Arts, Humanities or Social Sciences discipline. We also recommend that you have reading proficiency in at least one language, from French, German, or Spanish.
Please enter your country or territory to view relevant entry requirements.
Aberdeen Global Scholarship
Eligible self-funded Postgraduate Taught (PGT) students will receive the Aberdeen Global Scholarship. Eligibility details and further information are available on our dedicated page.
Aberdeen Global ScholarshipEnglish Language Requirements
To study for a Postgraduate Taught degree at the University of Aberdeen it is essential that you can speak, understand, read, and write English fluently. The minimum requirements for this degree are as follows:
IELTS Academic:
OVERALL - 6.5 with: Listening - 5.5; Reading - 5.5; Speaking - 5.5; Writing - 6.0
TOEFL iBT:
OVERALL - 90 with: Listening - 17; Reading - 18; Speaking - 20; Writing - 21
PTE Academic:
OVERALL - 62 with: Listening - 59; Reading - 59; Speaking - 59; Writing - 59
Cambridge English B2 First, C1 Advanced, C2 Proficiency:
OVERALL - 176 with: Listening - 162; Reading - 162; Speaking - 162; Writing - 169
Read more about specific English Language requirements here.
Document Requirements
You will be required to supply the following documentation with your application as proof you meet the entry requirements of this degree programme. If you have not yet completed your current programme of study, then you can still apply and you can provide your Degree Certificate at a later date.
- Degree Transcript
- a full transcript showing all the subjects you studied and the marks you have achieved in your degree(s) (original & official English translation)
- Personal Statement
- a detailed personal statement explaining your motivation for this particular programme
Careers
You will acquire a range of subject-specific and transferable skills essential to an increasingly interconnected and global world.
The programme provides excellent preparation to progress into further research at PhD level or enter a range of careers. These roles include and are not limited to
- Advertising
- Diplomatic Professions
- Education
- Journalism
- International Relations
- Marketing
- Publishing
- Work in charities and non-governmental organisations.
Our Experts
- Programme Coordinator
- Dr Katya Krylova
- Other Experts
- Professor Patience Schell
- Dr Fransiska Louwagie
Information About Staff Changes
You will be taught by a range of experts including professors, lecturers, teaching fellows and postgraduate tutors. However, these may be subject to change - see our Student Terms and Conditions page.
Get in Touch
Contact Details
- Address
-
School of Language, Literature, Music and Visual Culture
University of Aberdeen
King's College
Aberdeen
AB24 3UB