

MA German and Russian Studies
About this course
German and Russian are two of Europe's most significant languages, each carrying an extraordinary weight of literary, philosophical, historical, and political heritage. German opens the door to one of the great traditions in European thought, from Kant and Goethe to Brecht and Kafka, as well as to the modern economies of Germany, Austria, and Switzerland. Russian gives access to one of the world's richest literary traditions, the works of Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Chekhov, and Akhmatova among them, alongside a complex political and cultural history that continues to shape international affairs. At the University of Edinburgh, this four-year full-time programme develops genuine linguistic depth in both German and Russian, alongside scholarly engagement with the cultures, literatures, histories, and contemporary societies of the German-speaking and Russian-speaking worlds. You will work on language at an advanced level, developing reading, writing, speaking, and listening skills that allow you to engage with original texts, films, and cultural material, as well as with professional and academic discourse. Alongside the language work, you will study literature, film, cultural history, and intellectual traditions from both regions, developing comparative perspectives that illuminate each tradition through the other. The four-year duration of the programme reflects both the linguistic challenge and the intellectual breadth involved. Edinburgh's approach to modern languages combines rigorous language training with area studies and cultural analysis, encouraging you to think critically about how languages shape and are shaped by the societies that use them. The programme also typically involves a period spent in countries where your target languages are spoken, deepening your practical fluency and your firsthand understanding of contemporary life in those societies. Language graduates with proficiency in German and Russian pursue careers in translation and interpretation, diplomacy and international relations, journalism and media, international business, the civil service, education, and cultural organisations including museums, galleries, and publishers. The analytical reading and writing skills developed through literary and cultural study are valued in law, consultancy, and policy roles. Postgraduate study in modern languages, translation studies, area studies, or international affairs is a well-trodden route for those who wish to deepen their expertise.
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