Balkan Languages and Literatures – Field of study catalogue MU
Balkan Languages and Literatures“Destroy the myth – on the way from the imaginary Balkans to reality.” |
After successfully completing his/her studies the graduate is able to:
- communicate in an oral and a written form in the languages of their choice at a very high level (C2 level)
- compare and analyse the theoretical knowledge of the studied languages in a broader Slavonic context, from a synchronic and a diachronic point of view
- characterize the development of the studied national literatures in literary theoretical and cultural-historical context and draw comparisons between individual Balkan literatures
- write a scholarly text on a given topic, present it in a meaningful way, and discuss it
- demonstrate a strong orientation in academic literature about Balkan studies
- analyse the processes of linguistic, literary, and historical development in the Balkans
- put the acquired knowledge into a broader context and use it in journalistic work
- apply the acquired theoretical knowledge and practical skills to concrete areas of possible future employment (translating and interpreting, helping the development of bilateral Czech-Balkan relations, working in the diplomatic service)
Graduates can also find employment in national and multinational organizations, as well as in organizations working in the countries of Southeastern Europe. To these institutions, graduates offer an ability to demonstrate a strong orientation in complicated interethnic relations which can help to solve a number of local problems peacefully. As experts in the field, graduates can take part in UN peace missions and other similar missions and organizations. They should also be prepared to influence the Czech public through media, providing a true picture of the situation in the Balkans. Graduates can work in diplomatic services, for which students go through frequent practical trainings in representative offices of the Czech Republic in Balkan countries.
Graduates are well equipped even for work in science, particularly if they choose to continue with a doctoral degree study programme.
The Master’s degree study programme deepens and broadens the knowledge obtained during the Bachelor’s degree study programme in all of their four aspects. The course structure is designed such that the Master’s degree courses are directly linked to the Bachelor’s degree courses and that the comparative character of the study programme is maintained. Due to the short duration of this form of study and the limiting impact of the obligation to take the double-subject study programme into account in the creation of the course composition (double-subject study programme has only half of the credits for obligatory courses that the single-subject study programme does), some courses are only type B/selective instead of being obligatory.
During their study programme, all students have to earn 4 credits for passing an exam in one of the following languages: English, French, German, Spanish, or Russian. Courses in foreign languages are provided by the Masaryk University Language Centre. If a student has already passed the exam during the Bachelor’s study programme, it is possible to have it recognized.
The requirements for completion of a follow-up single-subject Master’s degree study programme:
86 credits for type A/required, type B/selective, and type C/elective courses
36 credits for Master’s thesis seminar I, II (BKB501, BKB502)
4 credits for a foreign language exam
Double-subject students only enrol for type A/required courses (70 credits in their primary, and 50 credits in their secondary field of study). These students do not have to enrol in any type B/selective or type C/elective courses from the offer, because the amount of credits from type A/required courses is completely sufficient for one subject of their double-subject study programme.
The requirements for completion of follow-up double-subject Master’s degree study programme:
40 credits for type A/required courses
30 credits for Master’s thesis seminar I, II (BKB501, BKB502), or 10 credits for Master’s minor thesis seminar (BKB500)
2 credits for a foreign language exam
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