Well, according to the module booklets for art history, it helps you develop research and analytical writing skills, presentation skills, and visual analysis skills.
I imagine most arts subjects are similar, i.e. they help you develop the ability to think about things in an intelligent manner, and then organise and present it in a similarly intelligent manner.
According to a former teacher, just the fact that you decide to go to university shows that you have a desire to learn and broaden your field of knowledge -- not just by studying but by meeting people, trying different activities, etc. God, I sound like the prospectus now, but I hope you see what I mean about degrees being useful beyond the specific subject.
Also, according to Prophet Tenebrae, you also get to develop your skills as a scrounger, scoundrel and layabout, things that will also come in handy for most jobs
[hr]'Red meat and a bottle of gin' -- Julia Child, when asked to describe her ultimate meal
Do those under a risk of death by metor run some thus-far indefinite risk of longrun meteorisation?
- David Bean