Russian & Slavonic Studies
Russian, spoken by more than 250 million people worldwide from the northern tundra to the Black Sea beaches, is an international language of culture and commerce.
Studying Russian is :
- The key to understanding the current conflict.
- A route into other Slavonic languages, like Czech and Ukrainian.
- A way of supporting the revival of a democratic society in Russia.
- An aid in understanding the multilingual, multicultural patchwork that is the former USSR.
Undergraduate degree combinations
To see how our degrees can be structured and combined, please visit the following:
BA Modern Languages & Cultures (BAMLC) - this course allows you to choose between one and three languages to study.
Dual degrees with a non-language - these options allow you to take a language (or two, in some cases) alongside a non-language subject.
Level of study
At 91̽»¨, you can start studying Russian from scratch at three different levels. If you're not sure which language course is right for you, do get in touch with us, and we'll be happy to advise you.
Modules
The Intensive Beginners' course assumes no knowledge of the language, but with 5 hours of small-group classes per week, all taught by native speakers, you'll make rapid progress towards Common European Framework Level A2.
The Intermediate course allows you to build on GCSE Russian (or equivalent) to achieve at least Common European Framework Level B1 by the end of the year. 3 hours of small-group classes each week, all taught by native speakers, will give you a solid grounding for further study.
If you have A-level Russian (or equivalent), the Advanced course provides the ideal starting point. 3 hours of specialized native-speaker instruction per week will take you to Common European Framework Level B2.
Whichever language course you take in your first year, you'll also have a weekly 1½-hour seminar to introduce you to key aspects of Russian culture. In this way, you'll be ready for the challenges of Year 2 and beyond.
You will study 40 credits in language and culture at either beginner or post A-level*.
Beginner's Russian
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
Russian Intensive | 20 | Core |
Russian and Czech Cultures in the Age of Empire and beyond This module gives an overview of Russian and Czech cultures with a focus on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It will critically examine the concepts of statehood, empire, nationalism, totalitarianism and democracy by studying the two nations' different experiences through visual sources, literature and language usage. It thus introduces students to topics dealt with in greater depth in optional modules at Levels 2 and 3, and helps them to learn how to analyse cultural artefacts and sources of different kinds. |
20 | Core (if you are studying one or two languages and cultures) Optional (if you are studying three languages and cultures) |
Post A-Level Russian
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
Russian Language Post A-Level | 20 | Core |
Russian and Czech Cultures in the Age of Empire and beyond This module gives an overview of Russian and Czech cultures with a focus on the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. It will critically examine the concepts of statehood, empire, nationalism, totalitarianism and democracy by studying the two nations' different experiences through visual sources, literature and language usage. It thus introduces students to topics dealt with in greater depth in optional modules at Levels 2 and 3, and helps them to learn how to analyse cultural artefacts and sources of different kinds. |
20 | Core (if you are studying one or two languages and cultures) Optional (if you are studying three languages and cultures) |
You may also choose from the following:
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
Intersections: Text, Image, Thought in the French-speaking world This module will focus on two important French texts per semester (with 'text' taken in its largest sense of book, film, art work, piece of music, cultural product, etc.). Each text will form the basis for a close reading, followed by analyses using French cultural, historical, literary and critical theory approaches as well as adaptations into other media (such as film, art and music) where appropriate. The module will be taught and assessed in English, but the materials will be made available in both French and English, with French students required to use and cite the French materials. The aim of the module is to introduce students to significant French texts and to illustrate and explore a range of possible critical approaches to them, including cross-media or intermedial reinterpretations. |
20 | Optional |
An Introduction to the Social and Political History of Iberia & Latin America This module examines the historical trajectory of Spain, its emergence as a state in the Iberian Peninsula, its imperial expansion overseas into Latin America, the eventual independence of the colonies and their development and consolidation into the various modern-day states we know today. The module will explore the social, political, linguistic and cultural characteristics of these states and its peoples and highlight the importance of understanding their complex history in the formation of their identities, their languages and their cultural and political values. The module has a particular emphasis on the importance of myths and how, regardless of their historical veracity, they can condition behaviours, mould identities and shape future history. |
20 | Optional |
Resist! The Art of Protest in Berlin and Amsterdam Berlin and Amsterdam: two capitals at the forefront of protest and alternative lifestyles from the early 20th century right up to the present. Where did their radical traditions spring from? What do these protests say about how the cities and nations see themselves? How does creative resistance fuel gentrification and urban tourism? This module explores the culture of resistance and protest from the first women's march for the vote and posters and activism against war and fascism, to the creative resistance of the Amsterdam PROVO movement in the 1960s to Black Lives Matter/Kick out Zwarte Piet. We will cover concepts such as populism, activism, colonial resistance, feminism, BLM, climate activism. How do these movement use art and image to press their causes? |
20 | Optional |
Comparative Visual Cultures Visual literacy is a key skill and visual culture remains one of the most accessible and important modes through which we represent, understand and critique our world. This module provides an introduction to some of the major trends within visual cultures in European languages, and the development of visual media. Students will work on a selection of visual texts across national frameworks and historical periods to examine their conditions of production, distribution and reception and to explore how meaning is constructed and critiqued in visual culture. In seminars we will engage with detailed analysis of core texts and with critical materials. Students will be encouraged to consider country-specific, transnational and comparative trends through a critical lens. |
20 | Optional |
The Soviet Union 1917-1991 Overview of the formation, development and collapse of the USSR, beginning from c.1900. Covers historiographic problems in analysing primary materials, ideological problems in dealing with the revolutionary movement and subsequent developments, debates over the nature and trajectory of the USSR and its place in the wider world. |
Optional (Autumn Semester only) |
In your second year, there are separate language courses for ex-beginners and post A-level (3-4 hours per week). By the end of this year, you’ll have the tools to thrive in Russia as a student or in employment, and will be able to talk about more complex and abstract topics (CEFR B1/ B2).
Russian Intermediate (following beginner intensive route)
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
Russian Intermediate | 20 | Core |
Russian Higher Intermediate (following advanced route)
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
Russian Higher Intermediate | 20 | Core |
Depending on your degree programme and language combination, you will take a minimum of 20 and a maximum of 100 credits from our range of optional modules. Second-year and final-year Russianists are taught together in optional modules: this makes for lively debate and means final-year students can share their experience with you.
So that you'll always have a good range of modules to choose from, we alternate our optional modules on a biennial cycle. When you come back from your Year Abroad, a different range of optional modules will be offered. A typical range of options is shown below (subject to change); under 'Year 4' below, you'll find a different offer. So if there's a module you really want to take, but which isn't available in your second year, the chances are that it will be in your final year.
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
The Slavonic Languages: Structure, History and Variation This module investigates the grammars and histories of two Slavonic languages, Russian and Czech, introducing students to the discipline of linguistics through the languages they study. Selected topics in the grammar of Slavonic languages highlight how structures of Russian and Czech have developed differently, how they are changing in the current world, and where they came from. Among the topics are case meaning and case forms; aspect; verb conjugation; animacy; and word order. Students learn how to design and implement their own linguistic research projects using sing corpora and experimental methods. Restrictions on availability: Completion of at least the L1 beginners' Russian or Czech course or the L1 |
20 | Optional |
Contemporary Russia and the World This module provides an overview of the historical changes that have affected Russian society since the introduction of the Gorbachev reform programme in 1985. This includes the dramatic economic, political, demographic, institutional and ideological changes that have occurred in the period. Attention will also be paid to the international context in which these changes have taken place, leading to an analysis of the interaction between domestic and international factors that have shaped and continue to shape Russian society today. |
20 | Optional |
Language and Society in Luxembourg and the French Borderlands This module introduces key issues in the field of sociolinguistics, which studies how language constructs rather than simply mirrors social reality and, more specifically, the ways in which people position themselves and others in relation to language use. With a sharp focus on the French borderlands, students will obtain an overview of the status and function of the French language in relation to its speakers and to speakers of other languages. We will begin by discussing how language works and the ways in which linguists and laypersons sometimes disagree about language issues. We will then relate aspects of these theoretical discussions to issues concerning linguistic minorities in the officially monolingual country of France, in addition to the bordering multilingual countries of Luxembourg, Belgium and Switzerland. We will explore the ways in which language becomes the target of struggles and debates that are embedded in broader socio-political issues. Students will have the opportunity to conduct their own small-scale analyses based on case studies. Crucially, this module underlines the necessity of questioning the presupposed homogeneity conveyed by the use of labels such as the 'French language' and 'French-speaking countries', which potentially mask the social and linguistic complexity inherent to the social world. Restrictions on availability: CEFR A2 Level French |
20 | Optional |
You can spend part or all your third year studying at a university or language school in Russia. This allows you to experience the familiarity of student life with the excitement of living in another country. University life varies enormously across the world, however wherever they go, our students develop international networks and life-long friendships. Courses at international universities expose our students to new ways of studying, learning, and interpreting the world.
In your final year, core language modules will build on your existing expertise in written and spoken Russian to develop sophisticated and idiomatic language use across a range of topics.
Second-year and final-year Russianists are taught together in optional modules -- a mix which helps students to share their experience and which makes for lively debate. We alternate our optional modules on a biennial cycle so that when you come back from your Year Abroad, a different range of optional modules will be offered for you to choose from.
You may also choose to write a dissertation on a topic of your choice in your final year, or to undertake a translation project.
Russian Language Advanced (All students)
Your final-year language modules will build on your existing level of Russian.
If you have not spent a semester abroad to learn Russian, you'll join the Higher Advanced group. In this small group, three hours of classes per week will take your Russian up to Common European Framework level C1.
If you have spent a semester or two semesters learning Russian on the Year Abroad, you will proceed to the Proficient language course in your final year if you started with the Beginner Intensive group in your first year. The three Proficient level classes will help you to deepen your linguistic skills to attain Common European Framework level C2.
If you return from learning Russian on your Year Abroad, and you completed the Intermediate language course in the first year, you have the option to take the Higher Proficient language course in the final year instead of the Proficient course. This course will take your language skills beyond Common European Framework level C2 -- and indeed beyond many other final-year undergraduate courses.
Students who took the Advanced course in their first year and who have spent either one or two semesters learning Russian on their Year Abroad will normally be expected to progress to the Higher Proficient level in their final year.
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
Russian Higher Advanced | 20 | Core |
Russian Proficient | 20 | Core |
Russian Higher Proficient | 20 | Core |
Depending on your degree programme and language combination you will take a minimum of 20 and a maximum of 100 credits from our range of optional modules. A different selection of the modules below will be on offer to those available in your second year, so allowing you to broaden your knowledge and understanding of Russian culture. As you share your experience with the second-year students in these modules, you'll be gaining skills in collaboration that will be useful in jobs of all kinds.
A typical range of modules is shown below and is subject to change.
Title | Credits | Core/Optional |
---|---|---|
The Slavonic Languages: Structure, History and Variation This module investigates the grammars and histories of two Slavonic languages, Russian and Czech, introducing students to the discipline of linguistics through the languages they study. Selected topics in the grammar of Slavonic languages highlight how structures of Russian and Czech have developed differently, how they are changing in the current world, and where they came from. Among the topics are case meaning and case forms; aspect; verb conjugation; animacy; and word order. Students learn how to design and implement their own linguistic research projects using sing corpora and experimental methods. |
20 | Optional |
Contemporary Russia and the World This module provides an overview of the historical changes that have affected Russian society since the introduction of the Gorbachev reform programme in 1985. This includes the dramatic economic, political, demographic, institutional and ideological changes that have occurred in the period. Attention will also be paid to the international context in which these changes have taken place, leading to an analysis of the interaction between domestic and international factors that have shaped and continue to shape Russian society today. |
20 | Optional |
Languages & Cultures Project Guided by individual supervision and support seminars, you will plan and execute an extended piece of independent research on a topic that complements but does not duplicate work you have done (or will do) in SLC taught modules. Alternatively, you may translate a substantial text into English accompanied by a full commentary to contextualize it. Your project must relate to at least one of the countries or cultures whose languages you are studying. As well as writing an extended piece of work, all students present their work at the end of the year. Restrictions on availability: A L2 module relevant to your proposed topic or registered on a relevant L3 module. An average of at least 62 in your optional modules at L2, with no optional module mark lower than 58. Supervisor must be agreed. |
20 | Optional |
Social Approaches to Multilingualism This module provides students with an overview of key topics in multilingualism, with an emphasis on the ways in which issues of language are linked to broader socio-political practices and debates. It allows students to gain insights into how theories of nationalism and globalisation may be applied to the analysis of texts and images in multilingual settings - with a particular focus on those in which Romance and/or Germanic languages play a central role - and it shows how debates about language are bound up with struggles over social equality and reactions to social transformations. |
20 | Optional |
Comparative Critique of Consumer Culture Critiques of consumer cultures are as old as capitalism itself. This module takes the long view, starting in the eighteenth century and tracing our conflicted identities as modern consumers into the present day. Especially applying German cultural theory to European cultural history, we shall ask what is meant by economic and social liberalism, and whether even culture owes a debt to consumer society. Consumerism can entail complicity in exploitative modes of production (causing poverty and displacement, and profiting from serfdom and slavery). It has been both celebrated and satirised for enabling hedonism and individual bad taste (or kitsch). And consumption has been nationalist, yet also cosmopolitan; today, it threatens our shared environment. Theory, the visual arts, and literature have all been critical of capitalism - but ironically, they can themselves be packaged as consumer goods. Examining a wide range of primary texts (including film and caricature) and critical reflections, you will translate and write a commentary on a historical source, and submit an essay on a topic of your choice. |
20 | Optional |
Global Careers in Languages To study languages, cultures and societies is to pursue a subject area that is outward-looking and which actively addresses global concerns. Our graduates boast linguistic fluency and cross-cultural expertise, and offer a unique set of skills to employers in several industries. This module gives students the opportunity to develop and connect specialist knowledge of their language(s) and studied areas according to four career pathways: Cultural industries; Politics, Community and Civic sectors; Translation and Teaching; and Global Business. Students will explore current debates and developments in these diverse sectors and industries, drawing on and extending their understanding of cross-cultural issues. By learning from the trajectories of industry experts, studying a variety of highly contemporary case studies, and developing vocational skills, this module allows students to reflect on and extend the substantial professional value of their advanced skills and knowledge of languages and cultures. |
20 | Optional |
The content of our courses is reviewed annually to make sure it is up-to-date and relevant. Individual modules are occasionally updated or withdrawn. This is in response to discoveries through our world-leading research, funding changes, professional accreditation requirements, student or employer feedback, outcomes of reviews, and variations in staff or student numbers. In the event of any change we'll consult and inform students in good time and take reasonable steps to minimise disruption.
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