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University of California-Berkeley

Slavic Languages, Literatures, and Linguistics, General

斯拉夫语言、文学与语言学,通用

专业描述

Arkady Alexeev (1937-2016) passed away on January 19, 2016. For more than thirty years, he taught Russian at Berkeley to generations of dedicated students. He taught his last class in the Fall 2016 semester. May his contribution to knowledge live and grow. ———- Please note that, as of Fall 2015, all of our language courses have been renamed. For example, Elementary Russian was changed from Slavic 1 to Russian 1, Beginning Armenian changed from Eurasian Studies 1A/B to Armenian 1A/B. See these changes on the complete list of courses here on the Department website. On the Online Schedule of Courses (schedule.berkeley.edu), search through the Department Name dropdown menu and look for the specific language, e.g. Armenian, Bosnian/Croatian/Serbian, Czech, Hungarian, Polish, Russian. If you use Schedule Builder, look for individual languages under “Browse by Department.” Other department courses are still under Slavic Languages and Literature. ———- We study and teach the languages, literatures, and cultures of the Russian and other Slavic peoples and their immediate neighbors in East and Central Europe (Hungary and Romania) as well as the Caucasus and Central Asia (hence the terms “Eurasia” and “Eurasian”). Over the centuries, these peoples shared linguistic, literary, cultural and historical experiences, which both united and divided them. These experiences include their intermediary position between the “West” and the “East,” participation in large multi-national states and empires, membership in the Soviet bloc in the twentieth century, and, in recent decades, the transition to post-socialism. In a word, we represent peoples who have influenced the history of a large part of the world. Our department, which celebrated its one hundredth anniversary in 2001, was one of the first departments of its kind in the United States. It was home to UC Berkeley’s only Nobel Prize winner in the Humanities, Polish poet Czeslaw Milosz (1911-2004). Over the years, it has remained in the vanguard of Slavic, East European and Eurasian studies because of the breadth of coverage and interdisciplinary approach to the field. Our faculty members have a wide range of interests and train students to discover the links between language, literature and other aspects of culture (including history, religious thought, visual arts, theater, film, popular culture) as well as between our subject matter and that of other related disciplines. Thus, students find that our courses complement their studies in other fields as different as History, English, Political Science, or Business. HOW TO FIND US The Slavic Department is located on Level F (6th floor) of the office wing (north wing) of Dwinelle Hall. When visiting, it is best to enter from the north side of the building near the flag pole, and to stay in the office wing, where rooms and offices are numbered in the 1000s. (Avoid the classroom wing, where rooms are numbered in the 100s.) To find Dwinelle Hall, use the map linked at top right of this page.

学生构成

副学士学位

 

学士学位

 4

硕士学位

 4

博士学位

 3

教授信息