Voor de beste ervaring schakelt u JavaScript in en gebruikt u een moderne browser!
Je gebruikt een niet-ondersteunde browser. Deze site kan er anders uitzien dan je verwacht.
The Research Master's in Literary Studies offers you the opportunity to explore your own research interests. While the core courses provide a clear grounding in both literary theory and cultural history, the programme encourages you to determine your own research path. We offer a broad selection of electives and our tutorial set-up allows you to explore topics in-depth and in close collaboration with a small group of students and a Faculty member. The specialist nature of the programme is an excellent preparation for a PhD upon graduation.

Programme overview

The Literary Studies Research Master's programme is anchored in the three core courses, all of which you take in the first three semesters. These core courses introduce you to the two chief orientations that guide research at the faculty: literary theory and cultural history. In addition to the core courses, you will choose an elective and a tutorial each semester. These offer you in-depth knowledge and (methodological) skills in the topics that fascinate you. In the final semester, you will write your thesis and develop a complementary research project.

COURSES SEM 1 SEM 2 SEMESTER 1 SEMESTER 2 EC
  • Key Debates in Literary and Cultural Studies
    Period 1
    Period 2
    12
  • Literature, Context, Historicity
    Period 4
    Period 5
    12
  • Restricted-choice electives: Tutorials and Research School Activities
    Period 1
    Period 2
    Period 3
    Period 4
    Period 5
    Period 6
    12
  • Free-choice electives
    Period 1
    Period 2
    Period 4
    Period 5
    24
Compulsory course
Elective
UvA Course Catalogue: Literary Studies
Copyright: Bob Bronshoff
Literary Studies allows us to make visible what is at stake philosophically and politically in cultural expressions like literature, film, new media, visual art or popular culture. It asks questions about the ways in which people give shape to meaning, and thus how knowledge about contemporary culture is produced. Dr Hanneke Stuit
Frequently Asked Questions