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MA Russian/Central & East European Studies
About this course
Russian and Central and East European Studies is a degree that gives you access to one of the world's most strategically significant regions through its languages, cultures, and histories. At the University of Glasgow, this MA programme runs over five years of full-time study and includes a sandwich year and work placement, giving you extended professional and linguistic experience. As the current description notes, studying Russian provides access to a language of strategic international significance alongside the richness of Russian culture, and the Central and East European Studies dimension extends this to a broader regional understanding. Russian is a Slavic language of substantial complexity, requiring sustained commitment to the Cyrillic alphabet and a grammatical system quite different from the Germanic and Romance languages more commonly taught in UK schools. Achieving proficiency in Russian to the level this degree demands opens access to the literature of Tolstoy, Dostoyevsky, Chekhov, and Akhmatova in the original, as well as to the vast scientific and intellectual heritage of Russian scholarship. The Central and East European Studies strand broadens your geographical and cultural knowledge to include countries such as Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungary, and the nations of the former Soviet Union, providing a richer understanding of the region's diversity and the complex historical relationships between its peoples. The sandwich year and work placement give you professional experience in relevant contexts. Graduates of Russian and Central and East European Studies programmes carry a combination of linguistic expertise and regional knowledge that is genuinely rare and consistently valuable in professional life. Diplomacy, intelligence and security, journalism, academic research, international business, translation and interpreting, and roles in organisations engaged with the post-Soviet space and Central and Eastern Europe are all natural career directions. Some graduates go on to postgraduate study in Russian studies, Slavonic languages, area studies, or international relations. The depth of language training and regional expertise the programme develops is a strong foundation for a career at the intersection of languages, culture, and geopolitics.
Syllabus & Modules
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