2 Film Studies programs in Italy
Filters
- MA
- Italy
- Performing Arts
- Film Studies
2 Film Studies programs in Italy
Filters
Featured
Rome University of Fine Arts (RUFA)
Master of Arts in Film Arts
- Rome, Italy
MA
Full time
2 years
On-Campus
English
The film is a world made up of many different languages, each one born out of the necessity to communicate a vision. Using experimentation and research one can give life to new stories and in order to tell them, RUFA has created the two-year Master of Arts Degree Program in Film Arts, born to bring together, in a single program, the talent and storytelling capacity, writing, and vision of students who have completed a degree in the Arts or Design.
Featured
University of Malta
MFA in Digital Arts
- Valletta, Malta
- Rome, Italy + 1 more
MA
Full time
On-Campus
The MFA Digital Arts programme is a practice-oriented, postgraduate award in digital art practice and theory. It is an umbrella programme that seeks to develop a learning environment in which historical traditions and new practices confront and influence each other within a contextual, cultural and theoretical framework
Popular Performing Arts Film Studies degree types
Popular study format
MA Programs in Performing Arts Film Studies
Film is subject to academic study in a variety of different areas, including film history, criticism, and production. Students often analyze the social, political, aesthetic, and narrative features of a particular work, as well as the general theories that underlie filmmaking as a whole.
Officially known as the Italian Republic, the country is found in southern Europe. The official language is Italian and the cultural rich capital is Rome. Many of the world's oldest universities are located in Italy, in particular the University of Bologna (founded in 1088). There are three Superior Graduate Schools with "university status", three institutes with the status of Doctoral Colleges, which function at graduate and post-graduate level.
An MA is a master’s degree awarded to students that have completed a program studying humanities or fine arts subjects such as history, communications, philosophy, theology or English. A Master of Arts degree typically requires coursework, research and written examinations.