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Bachelor of Arts (Art History and Curatorship) - Australian National University |
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TEL: 0207 193 7932
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| Offered By: | Faculty of Arts | | Duration: | 3 years full-time | | Minimum: | 144 units | | Academic Plan: | 3100XBAHC | | CRICOS Code: | 002284M | | 2009 Annual Fees: | A$20,400 | | | This work-related degree course seeks to bridge the gap between the theoretical side of Art History as a university discipline and the practicalities of curating cultural objects and bringing them before the public. |
Degree Structure The degree requires the completion of 144 units and two majors, one of which must be an Art History and Curatorship major. No more than 48 units may be taken at first year level. Students are required to complete: (i) An Art History and Curatorship major comprising a minimum of 42 units (7 courses) from the Art History program including at least one course from Group A and one course from Group B. (ii) A second major (minimum of 42 units) from one of the following: anthropology; archaeology; English; film studies; gender, sexuality and culture; history; a foreign language (European or Asian); or philosophy. (iii) A further 18 units (3 courses) in Art History. Majors and Specialisations Ancient Greek Major Anthropology Major Arabic Major Archaeology Major Art History and Curatorship Major Chinese Language Major English Major Film Studies Major French Major Gender, Sexuality and Culture Major German Major Hindi Language Major History Major Indonesian Language Major Italian Major Japanese Language Major Korean Language Major Latin Major Persian Major Philosophy Major Sanskrit Language Major Spanish Major Thai Language Major Turkish Major Vietnamese Language Major Career Possibilities
Many degree programs are structured to train students for one job. Most of today’s graduates, however, will change career paths four or five times during their working life. Your Arts degree will give you the necessary flexibility to adapt your knowledge and keep ahead of the changes that all of us face in our careers. It also gives you skills for life – critical analysis, research, written and oral communication – skills that are being increasingly recognised by employers as providing them with their greatest assets – employees who can adapt to and help shape change, who can think laterally, apply knowledge and express themselves clearly. The career opportunities for Arts graduates are exceptionally varied; from journalism to museum curatorship, publishing to politics, information technology to international development, advertising to art conservation – and much more.
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