The final degrees awarded by all university graduates in China are divided into three levels: bachelor, master and doctor, 12, namely, philosophy, economics, law (including politics, sociology and ethnology), mathematics, education (including physical education), literature (including linguistics, art and library science), history, bachelor of science, engineering, medicine and management. Law belongs to literature and history.
Specifically including:
literature
First-class subject: China language and literature.
Two disciplines: literary linguistics and applied linguistics; China philology; China classical philology; China ancient literature; China modern and contemporary literature; China minority language literature comparative literature; and world literature teaching Chinese as a foreign language.
First-class subject: foreign languages and literature
Two subjects: English language and literature, Russian language and literature, French language and literature, German language and literature, Japanese language and literature, Indian language and literature, Spanish language and literature, Arabic language and literature, European language and literature, Asian and African language and literature, foreign linguistics and applied linguistics.
First-class discipline: journalism and communication
Two disciplines: journalism and communication.
First-class discipline: art
Two subjects: art, music, fine arts, design, drama, drama, film, radio and television, fine arts and dance.
history
First-class subject: history
Two subjects: historical theory and history, historical archaeology and museum science, historical geography, historical philology (including Dunhuang studies and ancient literature), ancient history of China, modern history of China and world history.