Modern Languages and Comparative Literatures at Birkbeck, University of London - UCAS

Course options

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Course summary

This modern languages and comparative literatures course offers you the chance to explore the cultures of French, German, Italian, Portuguese, Japanese, Spanish and Latin American language-speaking areas. At the same time, it gives you a thorough grounding in comparative literary and cultural studies in the context of modern languages. You can take a broadly comparative pathway through the degree or choose to engage with one or more specific language-speaking areas. This course brings together a team of renowned academic experts in a variety of different areas: cultural studies, visual studies, linguistics, comparative literature and cultures, history and thought, from the Enlightenment to the twenty-first century. We have designed it to be responsive and adaptable to the needs of our students and will help you steer a pathway through the course that reflects your specific interests, career and personal ambitions, and language knowledge. You will be able to choose whether you study texts in the original language or in English translation. You may also choose language learning at our advanced levels which incorporate workshops on advanced academic writing and allow you to enhance and perfect your language skills in conjunction with multiple forms of cultural analysis. If you opt for a language-specific focus working in the original languages, your degree title will reflect the language/s you have chosen. For example, if you decide to focus on one language-speaking area such as French-speaking, you will be awarded an MA French Studies. If you focus on two language-speaking areas such as German and Japanese, you will be awarded an MA German and Japanese Studies. MRes: If you wish to pursue a more research-oriented pathway through this course then the MRes is ideal as it offers you specialist training in research skills. You can also opt to write your dissertation related to a specific language-speaking area or areas and, if you also work with cultural artefacts in the original language/s, you can be awarded an MRes which names the language or languages, such as MRes French Studies, or MRes German and Japanese Studies. Highlights

  • You will be taught by specialists from a centre of teaching and research excellence that prides itself on research-led teaching in French, German, Italian, Japanese and Spanish, making it an outstanding multidisciplinary team.
  • Ours is a community of scholars with shared interests in interdisciplinary topics and cross-cultural research. Our affiliated research centres, the Centre for French, Francophone and Comparative Studies (CFFCS) and the Centre for Iberian and Latin American Visual Studies (CILAVS), provide an important platform for this exchange.
  • All teaching takes place in our central London location in Bloomsbury, a stone’s throw from research libraries and all the cultural richness that London has to offer by way of theatre, museums and galleries.
  • You could be studying in a building that was once home to Virginia Woolf and frequented by members of the Bloomsbury Group. The building houses our own creative hub which includes the Peltz Gallery, the Gordon Square Cinema and a theatre and performance space.
  • Students applying for this course are eligible to apply for taught postgraduate funding.
Careers and employability You will find MA Modern Languages and Comparative Literatures graduates following career paths in international organisations or businesses, translating, teaching, research, journalism, publishing, law and the civil service. Possible professions include:
  • teacher
  • researcher
  • journalist
  • translator
  • academic librarian
  • writer
  • arts administrator
  • advertising copywriter.

Modules

For information about course structure and the modules you will be studying, please visit Birkbeck’s online prospectus.

Assessment method

modules on this course are mostly assessed via essays (2500-5000 words). You will also undertake a research project (8500 words) or dissertation (15,000 words). Modules focusing on language learning (French, German, Italian, Spanish, Japanese) are also assessed via short written exercises, quizzes, multiple-choice questionnaires, in-class tests (written, aural, listening) and a piece of advanced academic writing (3500 words) that connects to your research project.


How to apply

International applicants

If English is not your first language or you have not previously studied in English, our usual requirement is the equivalent of an International English Language Testing System (IELTS Academic Test) score of 6.5, with not less than 6.0 in each of the sub-tests. If you don't meet the minimum IELTS requirement, we offer pre-sessional English courses, foundation programmes and language support services to help you improve your English language skills and get your place at Birkbeck.

Entry requirements

A second-class honours degree (2:2 or above) in an arts or humanities subject from a UK university, or an equivalent international qualification. Applications are reviewed on their individual merits and your professional qualifications and/or relevant work experience will be taken into consideration positively. We actively support and encourage applications from mature learners.


Fees and funding

Tuition fees

England £10800 Year 1
Northern Ireland £10800 Year 1
Scotland £10800 Year 1
Wales £10800 Year 1
International £19830 Year 1

Additional fee information

Students are charged a tuition fee in each year of their course. Tuition fees for students continuing on their course in following years may be subject to annual inflationary increases.
Modern Languages and Comparative Literatures at Birkbeck, University of London - UCAS