

MA Russian Studies and Linguistics
About this course
Russian studies and linguistics at the University of Edinburgh is a combination that allows you to study one of the world's major languages with unusual depth, engaging both with the culture, literature, and history associated with Russian and with the scientific study of language itself. Russian is the most widely spoken Slavic language, a literary language of world significance with a tradition stretching from Pushkin and Gogol through Dostoevsky, Tolstoy, and Chekhov to twentieth-century writers and poets who created under conditions of extraordinary pressure and whose works remain central to any serious engagement with modern literature. Linguistics is the systematic scientific study of language as a human faculty, examining how languages are structured, how they are acquired and used, how they change over time, and what the relationship is between language, thought, and culture. At Edinburgh, you will develop genuine proficiency in Russian over four years of full-time study, engaging with its language, literature, culture, and history from the classical period to the present day. The linguistics component provides a rigorous grounding in phonology, morphology, syntax, semantics, pragmatics, and the major theoretical traditions in the discipline, as well as in areas such as sociolinguistics, language acquisition, and the history of language. You will be able to apply linguistic frameworks to the analysis of Russian and to think about Russian within the broader typology of human languages. Edinburgh has a distinguished tradition in both Slavic studies and linguistics, and the programme benefits from expert teaching and a strong research environment. Graduates with Russian and linguistics have a set of skills that opens opportunities in language-related careers and in the broader range of fields that value the combination of regional expertise and analytical rigour. Translation and interpreting, for which professional qualifications may be required, are direct applications of the dual expertise. Careers in diplomacy, intelligence, journalism, international organisations, and the NGO sector draw on the Russian language skills and geopolitical contextual knowledge. Language teaching, lexicography, publishing, and roles in organisations working on natural language processing and computational linguistics are further options. Academic research in linguistics, Slavic studies, or a combined area is the path for those who want to pursue the intellectual dimensions of the degree professionally.
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