The Faculty of Arts is one of the flagship faculties of the University of Hong Kong and one of the finest humanities faculties in the region and internationally.
HKU Arts graduates emerge with analytical, linguistic, critical and creative skills, a deep engagement with culture and global awareness, all of which create the foundation for effective leadership and success in a wide range of professional and life endeavours.
Our graduates are well equipped to pursue careers in business, government, education, finance, sales and marketing, media, publishing, translation, hospitality and tourism, and in the non-profit and cultural sectors.
News and Sharing
The Arts Faculty is organizing Information Sessions for JUPAS and non-JUPAS applicants. Prospective students can receive the most recent updates on various programmes as well as meeting with HKU Arts teachers and students. Come and Join us!
The new BA major in Global and Area Studies (GLAS) is a comprehensive and integrated area studies major that enables you to study different cultures and regions of the world, become proficient in a foreign language and knowledgeable about global affairs...
I am currently studying Arts at HKU, with a major in Global Creative Industries and Comparative Literature, and a minor in Journalism and Media Studies. My learning experience here has provided me with insights into the intersection of creativity, culture, and business on a global scale...
School of Chinese
History Research Forum
9 May 3:00pm
Speaker: Professor Wang Fan-sen
Sin Wai-Kin Distinguished Visiting Professor
In the Faculty of Arts, students were given a variety of options in the first year before confirming their majors and minors in the second year, which gave them freedom to learn and make decisions on their academic and career development...
School of English
The 3rd International Conference of The Modernist Studies in Asia Network (31 May-2 June)
"Modernism and Mass Culture between the American and Asian Centuries" - Jed Esty (The University of Pennsylvania)
"Modern as Contemporary: Temporalities of the Modernist Haiku" - Christopher Bush (Northwestern University)