Master of Social and Cultural Anthropology
KU Leuven
Key Information
Campus location
Leuven, Belgium
Languages
English, Dutch
Study format
On-Campus
Duration
2 years
Pace
Full time
Tuition fees
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Application deadline
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Earliest start date
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Introduction
What is the impact of globalisation on family life? What kind of symbols and rituals shape our daily life? What is superdiversity and what does it mean for the social dynamics of the city and its infrastructure? How do people shape their religious identity by means of social media? This is just a small selection of questions that the programme engages with.
As an aspiring anthropologist, you study issues such as the impact of colonisation, the making and unmaking of identity, the relation between people and their environment, the calibration of agency with instiutions and political economies. You will be taking the perspective of the actors involved, placing emphasis on their daily experience. This angle adds a different dimension to phenomena such as globalisation, ecology or migration.
Such a power-sensitive, agency-driven, collaborative approach is reflexively practiced in the Master of Social and Cultural Anthropology at KU Leuven. The programme offers students exciting pathways and critical insights into the fundamentals of the discipline, and invites them to pursue their own scientific interests and societal concerns in individual research projects. Drawing on the cutting-edge research conducted at the Department of Social and Cultural Anthropology, the masters provides an ample research outlook, informed by – but not limited to– its regional focus on Europe, Northern and Central Africa.
Strengths
- The programme trains you in empirical and comparative research methodologies, which challenge your familiar ways of being-in-the-world and the prejudices you hold about yourself and others.
- Throughout the programme you develop your own research focus by conducting fieldwork, critically analyzing data and writing on this particular topic in your final master's thesis.
- Depending on your research topic, students have the opportunity to engage in qualitative research in many different locations around the world, possibly in combination with an Erasmus exchange or a summer school.
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Admissions
Curriculum
The Master of Social and Cultural Anthropology is a two-year programme of 120 credits.
During the first year students gain insight into the basic concepts and theoretical foundations of the discipline. The programme starts with a preparatory package covering a historical and thematic introduction to anthropology and ethnography. This introduction is accompanied by a set of mandatory in-depth courses on the basic components of the discipline.
A research trajectory spanning the two years offers training for a 6-week individual ethnographic fieldwork project, which results in the final master thesis. Here, students explore ethnographic methods and theories, research design, data interpretation and analysis, as well as reporting and thesis writing.
In the second year, students deepen their interests through an vast array of electives, both from within and outside the social sciences, and work towards their master thesis in consultation with their supervisor.