Grad Program: MA/PhD in Slavic and East European Studies (UCLA)

Open House: November 19, 2024; Deadline for applications: January 15, 2025

COME STUDY AT UCLA!

Join us at our Virtual Open House for Prospective PhD Students

Tuesday, November 19th
1-2pm PST

RSVP here by Monday, November 18th to receive a Zoom link!

The Department of Slavic, East European and Eurasian Languages and Cultures at UCLA invites applications for our M.A. / Ph.D. program in Slavic and East European studies for Fall 2025, with Ph.D. specialization in either literature or applied linguistics.  Students beginning or continuing their graduate education at UCLA (including those who have completed an M.A. in Slavic Languages and Literatures or related fields) are guaranteed five years of financial support, including graduate fellowships, teaching assistantships, research mentorships, participation in faculty-led research projects, and the opportunity for an editorial assistantship at the UC Undergraduate Journal of Slavic and East/Central European Studies, one of the few publications for undergraduate students focusing on Slavic and East/Central European topics.

Beyond Russian, the UCLA Department of Slavic, East European and Eurasian Languages and Cultures regularly offers Bosnian-Croatian-Montenegrin-Serbian, Hungarian, Polish, Romanian, and Ukrainian; we also have expertise in Bulgarian, Church Slavic as well as Czech.  Our faculty teach a broad range of courses ranging across the disciplinary fields of medieval studies, the eighteenth century and Golden Age, versification, literary history and theory, capitalism and the rise of the novel, Slavic romanticism, Russian modernism, Polish and Ukrainian literatures and cultures, film and media, the digital humanities, and theoretical and applied linguistics. For more on faculty specializations, please see https://slavic.ucla.edu/faculty/

Students and researchers at UCLA have ready access to a wide array of resources, including the consortium of University of California libraries; the UCLA Film and Television Archive; the Getty Museum and Research Institute; and the Wende Museum. The department regularly sponsors lectures, presentations, and screenings from leading scholars, artists, and activists, and collaborates closely with the departments of Comparative Literature (including its Program in Experimental Critical Theory); European Languages & Transcultural Studies (ELTS); Gender Studies; History; and Linguistics; as well as with the Center for European and Russian Studies; the Luskin School for Public Affairs; the School for Theater, Film, and Television; the Center for World Languages, the National Heritage Language Resource Center, the Inter-Departmental Program in the Study of Religion and other units. Graduate students benefit from pedagogical training in the UCLA Russian program and gain teaching experience as TAs for large lecture courses in Slavic cultures, literatures, film, and linguistics. They also have an opportunity each year to present their research at the annual California Graduate Slavic Colloquium, together with graduate students from Berkeley, Stanford, UC Santa Barbara, USC, and UC San Diego.

The deadline for national and international applicants is January 15, 2025. For additional information and the application portal, please visit the department website: https://slavic.ucla.edu/graduate/admissions/

For other questions about the program, please contact the Faculty Graduate Advisor, Professor Vadim Shneyder (vadim@humnet.ucla.edu) and the Student Services Advisor, Brianna Boling (bboling@humnet.ucla.edu).