Published 2016-17 SGS Calendar for editing purposes only [exported July 28, 2016]
Slavic Languages and Literatures: Introduction
Faculty Affiliation
Arts and ScienceDegree Programs
Slavic Languages and Literatures
MA / Fields:Slavic Linguistics
Slavic Literatures
PhD / Fields:
Slavic Linguistics
Slavic Literatures
Collaborative Programs
The following collaborative programs are available to students in participating degree programs as listed below:- Diaspora and Transnational Studies
- Slavic Languages and Literatures, MA, PhD
- Jewish Studies
- Slavic Languages and Literatures, MA, PhD
Overview
The Graduate Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures offers instruction leading to two degrees—Master of Arts and Doctor of Philosophy—in one of the broadest ranges of Slavic languages and literatures available in a North American university. Courses are offered in the following areas: Croatian and Serbian Languages and Literatures, Czech and Slovak Languages and Literatures, Polish Language and Literature, Russian Language and Literature, Slavic Linguistics, and Ukrainian Language and Literature.Contact and Address
Web:Email:
Telephone: (416) 926-2075
Fax: (416) 926-2076
Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures
University of Toronto
Room 431, 121 St. Joseph Street
Alumni Hall, St. Michael's College
Toronto, Ontario M5S 1J4
Canada
Slavic Languages and Literatures: Slavic Languages and Literatures MA
Master of Arts
Minimum Admission Requirements
- Applicants are admitted under the General Regulations of the School of Graduate Studies. Applicants must also satisfy the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures' additional admission requirements stated below.
- An appropriate bachelor's degree (preferably in a cognate area) with an overall standing equivalent to at least a University of Toronto mid-B in the final year.
- A minimum A- average in all Slavic subjects taken in the final two years is recommended.
- Applicants may be admitted either to the one-year MA or two-year option, depending on their level of preparation.
- For admissions to the one-year program, proficiency in a Slavic language equivalent to at least three full years of language training, and broad familiarity with the literary and cultural history of the applicant's proposed disciplinary area(s) of interest (currently, Czech and Slovak, Polish, Russian, South Slavic, Slavic Linguistics, Ukrainian), as evidenced by undergraduate coursework at the 300 or 400 level, are required.
- For admissions to the two-year program option, intermediate proficiency in a Slavic language, as evidenced by two full years of language training or equivalent, is required.
- Note: All applicants complete the same application process. The department's admissions committee then determines each applicant's suitability for the one-year MA or two-year MA.
Program Requirements
- Depending on their prior preparation, students complete the MA program in either one year or two years.
- All MA students must complete 1.0 FCE as follows: SLA 1104H Introduction to Old Church Slavonic and SLA 1040H Methods of Teaching Slavic Languages. Students who provide evidence of satisfactory completion of equivalent courses may be exempted from these courses.
- In addition, students who intend to major or minor in Slavic linguistics must take SLA 1109H Studies in Old Church Slavonic (0.5 FCE).
One-Year MA Program
- Proficiency in language of major must be demonstrated during first week of the first session in the program. Additional language courses at the undergraduate level may be required. These courses will not count toward the total number of graduate courses required to complete the program. Successful completion of all coursework in the undergraduate language courses is part of a student's good progress in the MA program.
- Students normally complete either:
- coursework—4.0 full-course equivalents (FCEs) as follows:
- SLA 1104H
- SLA 1040H
- as part of the remaining 3.0 FCEs, Slavic Linguistics students must complete SLA 1109H;
- coursework (3.0 FCEs) plus research paper as follows:
- SLA 1104H
- SLA 1040H
- as part of the remaining 2.0 FCEs, Slavic Linguistics students must complete SLA 1109H
- a research paper written in English.
- Normally, a student spends a year in residence.
Two-Year MA Program Option
- Level of proficiency in language of major must be established no later than the first week of the first session in the program to determine required language courses.
- Students normally complete 7.0 full-course equivalents (FCEs) as follows:
- SLA1104H
- SLA1040H
- as part of the remaining 6.0 FCEs, Slavic Linguistics students must complete SLA 1109H.
- Normally, a student spends two years in residence.
Program Length
2 sessions full-time 1-year program (typical registration sequence: F/W)4 sessions full-time 2-year program option (typical registration sequence: F/W/F/W)
Time Limit
3 years full-timeSlavic Languages and Literatures: Slavic Languages and Literatures PhD
Doctor of Philosophy
Minimum Admission Requirements
- Applicants are admitted under the General Regulations of the School of Graduate Studies. Applicants must also satisfy the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures' additional admission requirements stated below.
- An appropriate University of Toronto master's degree with a minimum A- average in graduate courses and demonstrated research competence.
Program Requirements
Students are normally required to:- Demonstrate proficiency in language of major during first week of session. Undergraduate language courses may be required. These are not tabulated as part of graduate program course requirements. Successful completion of all coursework in these remedial undergraduate courses is part of a student's good progress in the PhD program.
- Complete a major and a minor program.
- Complete 9.0 full-course equivalents (FCEs) with at least 0.5 FCE in Slavic linguistics. Advanced standing to a maximum of 3.0 FCEs may be available for work completed in the MA.
- Minor programs should include 2.0 FCEs from any one of Croatian and Serbian Languages and Literatures, Czech and Slovak Languages and Literatures, Polish Language and Literature, Russian Language and Literature, Slavic Linguistics, and Ukrainian Language and Literature or, with departmental approval, from a cognate discipline (e.g., cinema studies, comparative literature, drama, history, philosophy).
- Maintain a minimum annual average of A- to continue in the PhD program. Poor performance in one session (below a B average) may result in the termination of a student's PhD eligibility.
- Demonstrate a reading knowledge of French or German.
- After successful completion of coursework and the French or German language requirement, students must pass written comprehensive examinations in the major field and written and oral comprehensive examinations in the special field. The major field exam cannot be taken if students have any outstanding coursework.
- By the time of their major field exam, students should have chosen their supervisor and the rest of their committee (in consultation with the supervisor).
- Dissertation.
- In Years 1 and 2, students must take courses and be on campus full-time to participate fully in the PhD program's activities.
Field: Slavic Linguistics
Within the PhD program requirements listed above, students studying Slavic linguistics should include:- At least 3.0 FCEs in Slavic linguistics, as well as 2.0 FCEs in theoretical linguistics from cognate disciplines (e.g., linguistics, anthropology). Linguistics students are also strongly advised to complete 1.0 FCE in the literature of their major language.
- Complete at least one course in Slavic languages from each of the three groups: West Slavic, East Slavic, and South Slavic by the end of their third year.
Field: Slavic Literatures
Within the PhD program requirements listed above, students in the field of Slavic literatures must:- Acquire a working knowledge of a Slavic language other than their major language of study or complete at least two approved undergraduate courses in a Slavic language that is different than their major language of study by the end of their third year. A working knowledge is defined as proficiency equivalent to a second-year course. Students must also satisfy departmental requirements for their major language. Students who do not major in Russian most often choose it as their second Slavic language.
Program Length
4 years full-time (many students require 5 years to complete the program)Time Limit
6 years full-timeSlavic Languages and Literatures: Slavic Languages and Literatures MA, PhD Courses
Not all courses are offered every year. Students should consult the departmental handbook for current course offerings.Croatian and Serbian Literatures
SLA 1507H / Modern Croatian Bards in PerformanceSLA 1517H / Modern Serbian Bards
SLA 1547H / South Slavic Folklore
Czech and Slovak Literature
SLA 1600Y / Introduction to Czech and Slovak LiteraturesSLA 1602Y / Czech Style and Syntax
SLA 1604Y / History of Czech Verbal Art from the Early Stages to Baroque
SLA 1606H / Public Places and Private Spaces in Czech Short Story
SLA 1608H / On the Wave of the Avant-garde
SLA 1609H / Karel Capek
SLA 1610H / V. Havel: Thinker, Politician, Writer
Polish Literature
SLA 1304H / Staging God, Man, and History: Polish DramaSLA 1308H / Critical Paradigms in Polish Culture
SLA 1312Y / Modernism and Post-Modernism in Polish Literature
SLA 1315H / Intellectual Traditions, Culture, and Literature: Trajectories in Poland
Russian Literature
SLA 1202H / Gulag LiteratureSLA 1203H / The Self and Other in Russian Prose
SLA 1204H / Contemporary Russian Literature
SLA 1207H / The Imaginary Jew
SLA 1210H / Studies in Medieval Russian Literature
SLA 1211Y / Studies in the Russian Drama: Eighteenth to Twentieth Century
SLA 1215H / Studies in Russian Literature and Criticism in the Eighteenth Century
SLA 1216H / From English to Russian Literature and Back
SLA 1220H / Nineteenth Century Russian Thinkers
SLA 1222Y / Russian Poetry and Poetics
SLA 1226H / Dostoevsky in Literary Theory and Criticism
SLA 1228H / Themes in Russian Realism
SLA 1231H / Russian Modernism
SLA 1233H / Studies in Modern Russian Poets
SLA 1234H / Dostoevsky
SLA 1238H / Chekhov
SLA 1239H / Vladimir Nabokov
SLA 1240H / Tolstoy
SLA 1241H / Narrative and History
SLA 1410H / Gogol
SLA 1411H / Experiments in Art in the Late Russian Empire—Early Soviet Union
SLA 1900H / Russian Nineteenth-Century Poetry (mandatory for MA students)
Slavic Linguistics
SLA 1040H / Methods of Teaching Slavic LanguagesSLA 1041Y / Advanced Training in Slavic Languages I
SLA 1042Y / Advanced Training in Slavic Languages II
SLA 1043H / Advanced Training in Slavic Languages I
SLA 1044H / Advanced Training in Slavic Languages II
SLA 1102Y / Advanced Russian Language Skills
SLA 1104H / Introduction to Old Church Slavonic
SLA 1105H / Russian Phonetics, Phonology, and Derivational Morphology
SLA 1109H / Studies in Old Church Slavonic
SLA 1114H / Russian Inflectional Morphology, Stress, Lexicon, Aspect
SLA 1141H / History of the Ukrainian Language
SLA 1142H / Style and Structure of Ukrainian
SLA 1150H / Russian Since the Revolution
Russian Language
SLA 1101Y / History of the Russian LanguageSLA 1102Y / Advanced Russian Language Skills
Ukrainian Literature/Language
SLA 1141H / History of Ukrainian LanguageSLA 1142H / Style and Structure of Ukrainian
SLA 1402Y / Studies in Ukrainian Modernism
SLA 1403Y / Contemporary Ukrainian Literature
SLA 1404Y / Studies in Ukrainian Poets
SLA 1406Y / Studies in Ukrainian Literary Criticism
SLA 1407H / Aspects of Literary Translation of Ukrainian
SLA 1412Y / Literature of the Ukrainian Diaspora
General Slavic
SLA 1037H / Theatre and Cinema in Extremis: Staging Twentieth Century Aesthetics and PoliticsSLA 1039H / Kyiv-Kiev-Kijow: A City through Cultures and Centuries
SLA 1040H / Methods of Teaching Slavic Languages
SLA 1207H / The Imaginary Jew
SLA 1310H / Theatre in the Twentieth Century
SLA 1421H / Women in East European Fiction
SLA 1521H / Post-Modernity and the Mythopoetic Legacy of Mitteleuropa
SLA 2000Y / Reading and Research
SLA 2001H / One Term Reading and Research
COL 5012Y / Readings in Czech/Russian Literary Theory
COL 5037H / Magic Prague: Question of Literary Cityscapes