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Anthropology, Art and Perception (MRes)

UK

What will I learn?

The MRes in Anthropology, Art and Perception provides training for postgraduate research into the anthropology of human creativity, art, material culture and visual expression. It takes perception as its starting point and draws on themes extending across the subject boundaries between art and anthropology.

Course information

The MRes in Anthropology, Art and Perception is led by the Department of Social Anthropology within the School of Philosophical, Anthropological and Film Studies.

Highlights

Students will explore new ways of thinking anthropologically and gain access to cutting-edge research tools for future research, including practical learning labs with invited experts and a field visit.
The course benefits from small class sizes and an interdisciplinary approach.
Students have the option to write a library-based dissertation or a dissertation with a practical component.

Course description

The programme takes perception as its starting point and draws on themes extending across the subject boundaries between art and anthropology. These themes include:

  • the senses and perception in anthropology
  • the role of community and cooperation in both making and use of apprenticeship and practice-based research
  • observation and the use of attention in drawing, photography, sound and film
  • the relationship between art and psychology
  • representation
  • a practical sensory project
  • heritage
  • design anthropology
  • commonalities between anthropological field work and contemporary arts practice.

The MRes provides an excellent grounding in contemporary research themes and innovative research methods for students aiming to do a PhD in anthropology, visual culture, design anthropology, heritage studies, and related subjects. It also provides important training for students interested in a career in the heritage sector, development, the creative industries, workplace management and design.

Careers

Social Anthropology graduates have characteristics many employers seek, and a Social Anthropology degree provides openings to a wide range of careers. Graduates have gained successful employment in areas such as:

  • design
  • international policy and non-governmental organisations (NGOs)
  • journalism (BBC and The Independent)
  • marketing
  • museums
  • teaching
  • wildlife conservation.

Which department am I in?

Social Anthropology

Study options

Full Time (1 year)

Tuition fees
£25,880.00 (28,19,786) per year
This is a fixed fee
Start date

September 2025

Venue

University of St Andrews

College Gate,

St Andrews,

KY16 9AJ, SCOTLAND, Scotland

Entry requirements

For international students

Students need a good 2.1 Honours undergraduate degree. No previous anthropological experience is required. IELTS (Academic): 6.0 Minimum component scores (Listening, Reading, Writing, Speaking) and 7.0 minimum overall score; TOEFL IBT: 94 minimum overall score with Listening: 12; Reading: 13; Writing: 21; Speaking: 18.

*There may be different IELTS requirements depending on your chosen course.

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