Cardiff’s closure of modern languages will tongue-tie its humanities

The global examination of culture is not possible without languages at degree level, say Wendy Ayres-Bennett, Charles Burdett and Emma Cayley

February 5, 2025
Two speech bubbles, one of which has exploded, symbolising the loss of language teaching
Source: ALLVISIONN/iStock

It has been well known for some time that Cardiff University’s financial situation leaves it with no option but to reduce the size of its teaching operation. But while a raft of tough decisions was expected, the university’s precise proposals, announced last week, have rightly provoked widespread concern.

That concern has primarily focused on what the threatened closure of the departments of music and nursing will mean not just for Wales but for the UK as a whole. Equally troubling, however, are Cardiff’s proposals regarding the teaching of languages and cultures.

The university is proposing to streamline its provision of humanities disciplines by setting up a new School of Global Humanities. Financially, this is sensible because it will ensure economies of scale. It also has intellectual merit because it will foreground the interdisciplinary connections between subject areas that have previously seen themselves as discrete.

Furthermore, it is imperative that all subjects consider the global relevance and purpose of their research and teaching given the range and extent of the problems that humanity is facing, from accelerated climate change to the increasing belligerence of the world’s authoritarian regimes.

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However, Cardiff has also embraced the entirely bizarre proposition that the global and transtemporal examination of culture is possible even without the provision of languages at degree level. There are very many reasons why this is alarming.

The study of culture in global perspective requires the development of an understanding of how material realities, everyday practices and modes of social interaction appear and operate differently according to the interpretative systems in which all human beings are necessarily situated. Language is the most important of those systems.

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The intellectual and ethical purpose of the integrated study of language and culture is precisely to facilitate greater knowledge of how people make sense of themselves, their communities and their dealings with the wider world. It is also to allow us to see the contingency of our own worldview, its possible underlying inequalities and the importance of genuinely transnational dialogue to its development.

Studying global culture uniquely through the medium of English would demonstrate an indifference to both linguistic and viewpoint diversity. Worse still, it would impose an Anglo-normative framework on the cultural realities being examined. When so much recent attention has, rightly, been paid to cultivating inclusive and decolonial approaches to the study of culture, it is astounding that any university would wish to predicate its approach to global humanities on such an imperialist premise.

It should also be evident that the value of a degree in global humanities will be significantly enhanced if it involves the integrated study of high-level language skills and deep cultural knowledge. Every survey tells us that employers in the public and private sector place a high premium on graduates’ proven ability to learn languages, to adapt to the reality of living abroad, and to demonstrate the mental flexibility that accompanies familiarity with diverse social, cultural and linguistic contexts.

In fact, graduates of languages, along with other arts, humanities and social science disciplines, are just as likely to be in employment as their STEM counterparts. And departments across national, regional and local government have made it abundantly clear that the UK needs more graduates in languages and cultures, not fewer.

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Linguistic competence can be used to facilitate international trade, transnational cooperation, security and social cohesion. A 2022 RAND/University of Cambridge report reveals, for instance, that removing linguistic barriers to trade could be worth an additional £19 billion annually in UK exports. Any forward-looking university should reflect that in its programmes of study and research.

A further consideration relates to the way universities interact with wider society. Though there are, no doubt, those who would like to impose linguistic homogeneity on the UK, such a desire is clearly at odds with the reality. That is especially true in Wales, where Welsh is integral to every aspect of the country’s functioning.

The evidence shows that the acquisition of one language is supported and enhanced by competence in another, and the Welsh government has also committed to international languages through its 10-year Global Futures strategy for schools in the principality. And it has stood full square behind the MFL mentoring programme that has promoted multilingualism in Wales since 2015.

Cardiff’s proposals would be at odds with such strategies. Cardiff is the largest provider of modern languages degrees in Wales, accounting for over 60 per cent of all undergraduate intake. Removal of that capacity would create a “cold spot” for language degree provision in south and south-east Wales.

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The university urgently needs to consider the path on which it has embarked. That path will damage its international reputation, the chances of future generations of students and the role that the university plays as a leading higher education institute.

And the Welsh government needs to stand behind its much-advertised support for international languages throughout the educational pipeline. Doing so must inevitably involve throwing its support behind the campaigns against Cardiff’s destructive proposals.

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Wendy Ayres-Bennett is emerita professor of French philology and linguistics at the University of Cambridge. Charles Burdett is professor of Italian and director of the Institute of Languages, Cultures and Societies at the School of Advanced Study, University of London. Emma Cayley is chair of the University Council for Languages and professor of Medieval French at the University of Leeds.

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Reader's comments (4)

None of the arguments advanced in this piece address the central issue that all universities - not just Cardiff - face. Which is simply that fewer and fewer students are choosing to study languages at degree level. The subject is already one of the least popular in the country, chosen by less than 1.5% of the undergraduate student population. And it's becoming less and less popular by the day, with a 33% decline in the last five years, hastened by the growth of STEM and more vocational subjects. Unless ways can be found to boost demand, universities will be forced to curtail supply. So rather than criticise Cardiff for reducing languages provision, it would have been more constructive to analyse why demand is declining and use that understanding to offer some solutions.
Has anyone ever asked marketing why they so consistently fail to persuade students to study the subjects that Cardiff academics have expertise in? Instead they adopt a strategy of populism, and so the continued existence of UK teaching and research strengths are at the mercy of the choices of 18 year olds. This is no way to run a university or a national HE system.
The decline in language uptake clearly remains a challenge but given the importance of language learning for the four nations of the UK it is something that should be addressed not neglected. The drop in numbers isn’t just down to student choice: policy changes, grading concerns, and lack of government support have all played a role. We should be investing in languages, making them more accessible, and showing students their real-world value. Reducing provision is a retrograde measure; if we want languages to thrive, we need to create opportunities, not take them away. Please read the article published last year: The demise of modern languages has been greatly exaggerated (https://www.timeshighereducation.com/blog/demise-modern-languages-has-been-greatly-exaggerated)
And if Modern Languages are not recruiting at good levels in an institution and have a low SSR, then, de facto, other areas of the university will have to take on additional work to subsidize this I guess with its impact on teaching quality, student satisfaction, research productivity, staff morale in those areas and so on. The semi-marketised system we have makes it very difficult now to maintain disciplines that do not recruit. Universities are not empowered to retro engineer the problems of languages in the education system per se I wish they were!

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