

BA Ukrainian and Yiddish
About this course
Ukrainian and Yiddish represent two languages with distinct and deeply significant histories in Eastern Europe and beyond. Ukrainian is a Slavic language and the official language of Ukraine, a country whose history, culture, and contemporary situation have acquired global importance. Yiddish is a Germanic language that was the primary language of Ashkenazi Jewish communities across Central and Eastern Europe for centuries, and which carries a rich literary, theatrical, and cultural heritage. Studying these two languages together offers a genuinely unusual and intellectually serious perspective on the cultures, histories, and peoples of a region that shaped much of the twentieth century. At University College London this four-year joint honours programme is split equally between your two languages throughout. You will take modules not only in language skills, covering speaking, listening, reading, writing, and translation, but also in cultural topics including literature, history, film, linguistics, and politics, as well as other fields designed to complement your language learning. The range of modules available allows you to tailor the degree to your own areas of interest, whether your passion lies in the linguistic structures of the languages, their literary traditions, or their historical and political contexts. Throughout the programme you will develop skills in close reading, textual analysis, cross-cultural interpretation, and the capacity to work across very different linguistic and cultural registers. The discipline of learning two structurally distinct languages develops analytical habits of mind that are genuinely transferable. Graduates with expertise in Ukrainian and Yiddish are in demand in a world where these languages and the communities associated with them have acquired fresh cultural and geopolitical significance. Career paths include roles in diplomacy, journalism, heritage and archives, translation, academic research, cultural organisations, and international affairs. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in Slavonic studies, Jewish studies, linguistics, or related fields.
Syllabus & Modules
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