

BA French and Russian
About this course
French and Russian at Oxford is one of the most intellectually demanding language degrees available, combining two of the great literary and cultural traditions of Europe and offering access to a range of thought, literature, and history that relatively few students of English-medium universities are equipped to engage with in the original. French is the language of Descartes, Voltaire, Proust, and Beckett, and of a continuing tradition of philosophy, fiction, poetry, film, and thought that has shaped global culture. Russian is the language of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, and Akhmatova, and of a philosophical and political tradition that has engaged with questions of freedom, suffering, history, and human nature with extraordinary intensity, in part because of the conditions under which Russian writers and thinkers have often worked. At Oxford, you will develop genuine proficiency in both languages alongside a deep engagement with their literatures, cultures, and intellectual traditions over four years of full-time study. The programme combines linguistic work with literature, philosophy, film, and cultural history, and the tutorial system means that your academic development is closely supported and individually calibrated. You will read widely in both French and Russian, developing the analytical and interpretive skills to engage with texts at the highest level, and to situate them within the broader traditions and contexts from which they emerge. Oxford's libraries and academic resources are among the finest in the world for the study of both languages and their literatures. Graduates from French and Russian at Oxford develop a combination of rare language skills, deep cultural knowledge, and rigorous analytical training that opens doors across a very wide range of careers. Diplomacy and international relations, particularly in contexts touching on France, Russia, or the wider Francophone and post-Soviet worlds, are natural destinations. Translation and interpreting, journalism, publishing, the foreign service, and roles in international organisations draw on the specific language expertise. Academic research at postgraduate level is a common route for those who want to pursue literary or cultural scholarship. The analytical and communication skills developed in the degree are also highly valued in law, finance, management consultancy, and the civil service.
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