Find us on: University of East Anglia on Facebook Follow University of East Anglia news on Twitter University of East Anglia's photostream University of East Anglia's YouTube channel
Course Search:

Language and Communication Studies Courses

BA in Japanese and Film and Television (TP23)

  • Course Code UNU1RP9H401J
  • Attendance Full Time
  • Overview
  • Why Choose Us
  • Requirements
  • Course Profile
  • Fees and Funding
  • Apply
Overview

Japanese studies imageThis course combines an equal combination of advanced language learning with the study of film and television. You study Japanese language to degree level and choose from a range of specialist modules in film and television, and modules on language and translation issues. In the School of Film and Television Studies, you will be trained to ask questions about the history, political significance and formal qualities of sound and image. Whether preserving moving images, engaging in the creative activity of making them, or learning more about their role in shaping or reproducing social values, the development and character of these important audio-visual cultures will be explored in a stimulating environment. The degree includes a year abroad in Japan, studying at university.

Graduates from this degree will be highly employable and able to enter an extremely wide range of professions using their well-developed language and communication skills, intercultural sensitivity, and media knowledge.

Year 1

The Film and Television modules in year 1 (Analysing Film and Television, Studies in Film History, and Interrogating Culture) provide students with an introduction to critical concepts and historical issues central to the study of film and television, as well as a range of relevant theoretical and methodological approaches. In the School of Language and Communication Studies, alongside level 1 language competence modules, you take a module entitled Study, Research and Communication Skills which provides you with a practical and critical basis for all language and language-related study throughout the degree.

Year 2

In year two, students build up their linguistic and cultural proficiency in Japanese language modules. In addition, students consolidate and extend their knowledge through more detailed work in optional modules. In film and television studies, the options include: Television Genre, Hollywood and the World, Film Noir, The Hollywood Musical, The Practice of Screenwriting: Issues in Adaptation, World Cinema, Celebrity, and Film and Authorship. The options complementing the language work include: Subtitling and Dubbing, Translation and Adaptation, Intercultural Communication in Practice, and Translation Issues in the Media.

The Year Abroad

Your third year is spent in Japan. Please see the Study Abroad tab for further information.

Final Year

The final year language work modules make up half the year’s credit and consolidate and build on improved competence acquired on the year abroad. Students will write a dissertation in the foreign language on a film-related topic. The Film and Television options aim to promote more advanced understanding of film and television by asking students to undertake more in-depth work in modules such as: Contemporary Japanese Visual Media, Science Fiction Cinema, Popular Animation, Crime and Investigation in Contemporary US Television, Comedy, Gender and Genre in Contemporary Cinema, , Women and British Cinema, Selling Spectacle and Film and Cultural Politics.

Honours Language Work

As well as taking this programme from post-A level (from 2012 onwards), it is possible to start from beginners in Japanese or GCSE level in Japanese. In these cases, more intensive language study is provided prior to the year abroad in year three. This more intensive study reduces slightly the number of optional modules available. If you study two languages to Honours level, only one may be taken from beginners or post-GCSE level.

In each year, you have on average 4 contact-hours per week in your Honours language (8 if you study two Honours languages, and more if you study Japanese from beginners level). The Honours language teaching is closely related to the study of contemporary society in the country (or countries) where your Honours language is spoken and your experience of learning language at UEA will include a combination of lectures, seminars and conversation classes. It will cover grammar, translation from and into Japanese, reading and listening comprehension, précis and paraphrase work, the study of different styles and registers, lexical exercises and oral work. You will also spend a significant proportion of time working independently using subject-oriented teaching dossiers, radio, TV, films, transcripts, newspapers and online resources while keeping abreast of current affairs and cultural life at home and abroad. Our Language Centre has a digital language laboratory, a viewing and editing room, an interpreting suite for advanced language training, live satellite television broadcasts, a large, multi-media self-access resources room with a wide range of DVDs and reference books, up-to-date computers linked to the internet, and translation software.

You will acquire specific expertise in the traditional language skills of reading, writing, speaking and listening, as well as transferable skills such as time management, self-discipline and self-motivation,



Course Brochure
QR code for Language and Communication Studies BA in Japanese and Film and Television

Send this page to your mobile phone by scanning this code using a 2D barcode (QR Code) reader. These can be installed on most modern Smart Phones.