

BA Russian and Comparative Literature
About this course
Russian and comparative literature is a degree that asks you to engage with two of the most demanding and rewarding intellectual challenges in the humanities: learning a major world language to a high level of proficiency, and studying literary tradition comparatively, across national boundaries and in multiple languages. At Queen Mary University of London, the BA Russian and Comparative Literature is a four-year full-time programme that takes both strands with equal seriousness, combining rigorous language instruction with literary and cultural study of exceptional breadth. As the current programme description notes, studying Russian means engaging deeply with language learning, and doing so in conjunction with an exploration of Russia's culture, society, and history. You will develop proficiency in Russian to the point where you can engage with literary texts, film, and cultural commentary in the original, which is a qualification with few equivalents in terms of its rarity and value. The comparative literature strand places Russian literature in dialogue with literary traditions from other languages and national contexts, developing your ability to read across boundaries of language, genre, and period. Comparative literature asks what literature is, how it travels across cultures through translation and influence, and what different national traditions share and diverge in their approaches to narrative, poetry, and form. The combination develops close reading and analytical skills of unusual depth. Graduates of Russian and comparative literature programmes carry a combination of competencies that is genuinely rare in the UK graduate pool. The geopolitical and cultural significance of Russia makes Russian language expertise consistently valuable in diplomacy, journalism, intelligence, international business, and academic research. Comparative literature skills, including analytical rigour, close reading, and the ability to engage across languages and traditions, are valued in publishing, the law, academia, arts administration, and any field requiring careful engagement with complex texts. Many graduates go on to postgraduate study in Slavonic studies, comparative literature, translation, or area studies. Others move into translation and interpreting, journalism, academic research, or international affairs.
Syllabus & Modules
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