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Italian


Royal Holloway, University of London

Summary

Price
Study method
Classroom
Duration
4 years · Part-time
Qualification
PhD
Awarded by Royal Holloway, University of London
Additional info
  • Exam(s) / assessment(s) is included in price
  • Tutor is available to students

Location & dates

Location
Address
TW20 0EX
United Kingdom

Overview

Research drives the School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures at Royal Holloway. Staff in the School, who all contribute to the teaching in one of the four language areas in which we offer degree-level studies and to the collaborative, interdisciplinary courses in Comparative Literature and Film Studies, are also active researchers with national and international reputations.
Recent publications, all produced in a research environment that encourages collaboration and exchange across traditional disciplinary boundaries, have included numerous original monographs, groundbreaking biographies, widely disseminated articles in peer-reviewed journals, edited and co-edited volumes and yearbooks, and accessible introductions to key fields of study. Our research encompasses areas as varied as literary studies and critical theory, film, history, philosophy, visual and performing arts, and linguistics. We are active in national and international subject associations and learned societies, and frequently speak at, contribute to and help to organise seminars, academic conferences and public symposia around the world. Our strengths were recently confirmed by the results of the Research Assessment Exercise of 2008.

Research available in Dante; Italian and European culture and through in the 13th-century and 14th-century; Michelangelo; Renaissance literature and thought; literature about women of the 15th-century to the 17th-century; 18th-century and 19th-century literature and thought; aesthetic theory; contemporary poetry, novelists, music, cinema, television and cultural and political history; the culture and writers of Sicily; linguistics and sociolinguistics; bilingualism and multilingualism in Europe.

Description

Research drives the School of Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures at Royal Holloway. Staff in the School, who all contribute to the teaching in one of the four language areas in which we offer degree-level studies and to the collaborative, interdisciplinary courses in Comparative Literature and Film Studies, are also active researchers with national and international reputations.
Recent publications, all produced in a research environment that encourages collaboration and exchange across traditional disciplinary boundaries, have included numerous original monographs, groundbreaking biographies, widely disseminated articles in peer-reviewed journals, edited and co-edited volumes and yearbooks, and accessible introductions to key fields of study. Our research encompasses areas as varied as literary studies and critical theory, film, history, philosophy, visual and performing arts, and linguistics. We are active in national and international subject associations and learned societies, and frequently speak at, contribute to and help to organise seminars, academic conferences and public symposia around the world. Our strengths were recently confirmed by the results of the Research Assessment Exercise of 2008.

Research available in Dante; Italian and European culture and through in the 13th-century and 14th-century; Michelangelo; Renaissance literature and thought; literature about women of the 15th-century to the 17th-century; 18th-century and 19th-century literature and thought; aesthetic theory; contemporary poetry, novelists, music, cinema, television and cultural and political history; the culture and writers of Sicily; linguistics and sociolinguistics; bilingualism and multilingualism in Europe.

Department: Modern Languages, Literatures and Cultures

Qualification:

PhD

Qualification Level:

RQF Level 8

Requirements:

Normally an Upper-Second Class Bachelor's degree, or a Master's degree, in a related subject.

Source: the courses data has been supplied by the Universities and Colleges Admissions Service.

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