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Subjects

Slavonic Studies

Promoting Excellence in the Study of Poland, Russia and Ukraine

The Slavonic Studies Section at the University of Cambridge offers innovative undergraduate and graduate teaching in Polish, Russian and Ukrainian and engages in the advanced study of Poland, Russia and Ukraine, with an emphasis on cultural history from the Middle Ages to the present day.

For centuries, the University of Cambridge has cultivated a deep understanding of the societies of Eastern Europe by way of celebrated scholarship and instruction. In 1900, a grant from what strikes us now as an improbable source -- the Worshipful Company of Fishmongers -- established the first University Lectureship in Russian. Today the Slavonic Studies Section at Cambridge promotes international excellence in teaching and research over a wide array of topics in the study of language, literature, thought, history and culture.

The intellectual vitality of the Slavonic Studies Section is particularly evident in the fields of Pre-Modern East Slavic culture; Polish, Russian and Ukrainian Literatures of the 19th and 20th centuries; Slavonic Linguistics; Nationalism Studies; Film and Visual Culture; and Memory Studies. It is home to a dynamic annual programme of public lectures, research seminars, conferences and exhibitions.

Upon graduation our students join a highly employable community of leaders who forge rewarding careers in such diverse fields as journalism, law, politics, and diplomacy. 

 

As part of their degree, MML students live abroad in their third year to hone language skills and cultural understanding. Following Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022, the Slavonic Studies community at Cambridge moved quickly to arrange year abroad placements in countries where Russian-language students could immerse themselves in the language outside of Russia.  We sat down with students from this first cohort to hear about their experiences at approved institutions in Armenia, Estonia, Georgia, Kazakhstan, and Kyrgyzstan.  For everyone, it was a life-changing opportunity.

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Slavonic News

PhD student Juliette Bretan presents BBC Radio 3 programme on Polish tango

14 May 2025

English PhD student Juliette Bretan recently presented a BBC Radio 3 programme on Polish tango. In the programme, Juliette traces the musical adventure of the tango and its interwar explosion eastwards in colder climes like Warsaw. A rich, unexpected history, encountering some of those who have brought it back to life...

Reconsidering Soviet Studies events for Easter Term 2025

7 May 2025

All of the events on the term card and listed below as text will be available via Zoom. Content notice: items below discuss themes of famine and war. "The Great Ukrainian Famine: Legacies of Violence in Ukraine and Beyond, 1932-2023" with Karolina Koziura of the European University Institute, Florence Wednesday 21 May, 5...