Ohio State University Slavic Ph.D. Program Accepting Applications

Alexander Burry alexander.burry at GMAIL.COM
Fri Sep 19 01:22:13 UTC 2014


The Department of Slavic and East European Languages and Cultures at The Ohio State University welcomes applicants to our M.A./Ph.D. programs in Slavic Literature, Film, and Cultural Studies and Slavic Linguistics to begin in Autumn 2015. The Department prefers to admit students who have had at least three, and preferably more, years of Russian language, as well as related coursework. (Applicants who have had fewer than three years of Russian but who have intensive knowledge of other Slavic languages may also be considered; please contact the Graduate Studies Chair for further information.)

Prospective students applying to study literature, film, and cultural studies should have a background in this area equivalent to an undergraduate major or minor. Likewise, prospective students applying to study linguistics should have the equivalent of an undergraduate major or minor in linguistics. Candidates for admission should give evidence of academic excellence and intellectual promise, as measured by criteria such as undergraduate grades, scores on the Graduate Record Examination (GRE), evaluations in letters of recommendation, and the quality of the writing sample. We are particularly concerned with the candidate's undergraduate performance in Russian and/or other Slavic languages and in related subjects.

At Ohio State the faculty place strong emphasis on mentoring graduate students in their research, teaching, and professionalization. In addition to completing a set of basic requirements, students are also given the flexibility to develop their own specialized scholarly interests. They are provided with generous financial support, extensive teacher training in languages at all levels, literature, film, culture, and themed courses, and many resources for professional development. These resources include the Hilandar Research Center and the Midwest Slavic Conference, held annually at Ohio State, which offers graduate students an opportunity to present their research to a national audience right on campus.

Our M.A. and Ph.D. programs prepare students for academic and non-academic professions. Ph.D. graduates of the program over the past two decades are currently employed in tenure-track or lecturer positions at such institutions as Brigham Young University, Brown University, Dickinson College, Florida State University, Grinnell College, Indiana University, Middlebury College, Union College, University of Hawaii, University of Montana, University of New Mexico, University of Pennsylvania, University of Pittsburgh, University of Toronto, University of Washington, University of Winnipeg, University of Wisconsin, and Washington & Jefferson College. The department is also committed to providing the resources for graduate students to prepare for careers outside of academia, should they desire. We offer workshops on non-university careers and encourage students to earn certificates in translation, education, and other areas. Several graduates have chosen careers in editing, government, secondary school teaching, and translation work.

The Department's graduate course offerings appeal to a broad range of intellectual interests. For the Slavic Linguistics specialization, we currently offer courses and faculty expertise in Structure and History of the Slavic languages; South Slavic, West Slavic, and Balkan Linguistics; Old Church Slavonic, Palaeography, and Medieval Slavic Texts; Morphology; Pragmatics; Second Language Acquisition; Psycholinguistics; Bilingualism; and other courses. For the Slavic Literature, Film, and Cultural Studies specialization, we currently offer courses and faculty expertise on classical, modernist, Soviet, émigré, and postmodern Russian, East Central European and South Eastern European literatures, film, and interdisciplinary cultural studies; translation studies; transpositions of literature into other media; gender and feminist studies; national identity; and other courses. Languages that are the focus of faculty research include Russian, Polish, Bulgarian, Czech, Bosnian-Croatian-Serbian, Hungarian, Albanian, and Greek. We particularly encourage the pursuit of interdisciplinary studies within and outside the Slavic Department. Graduate students are welcome to take advantage of course offerings and faculty specialists in such departments as Anthropology, English, History of Art, Linguistics, and Political Studies, and incorporate a variety of fields and approaches into their research.

The primary degree granted by the Department is the Ph.D. Those interested in an interdisciplinary M.A. in Slavic Studies should consider applying to the master’s program at Ohio State’s Center for Slavic and East European Studies, which draws on faculty from across the university to prepare students for East European-related careers in government, the military, and the private sector. See http://slaviccenter.osu.edu/index.html.

To learn more about the Department and how to apply see https://slavic.osu.edu/graduate-studies/prospective-students. Other inquiries should be addressed to Alexander Burry, Graduate Studies Chair, at burry.7 at osu.edu. Applications from international students must be received by November 30 to be considered for funding, and by December 12 from domestic students. 
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