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Return to: Academic Departments & Interdisciplinary Committees
Go to: Division of Literature and Languages
Faculty
Evgenii Bershtein
Russian Symbolism, the semiotics of Soviet culture, gender and sexuality in Russian culture, Pushkin, Tolstoy, Eisenstein.
Naomi Caffee
Minority and transnational writing in Russian, postcolonial studies, Russian literature and environment, Indigenous literatures, Central Asian studies, literary translation. On sabbatical 2026-27.
Marat Grinberg
Russian-Jewish literature and culture, Soviet poetry, poetics and cinema studies, Russian and European modernism. On leave 2026-27.
Ivan Sokolov
Modern and contemporary Russophone literature and film, gender and sexuality, global (post)modernisms and avant-gardes, translation studies, lyric theory.
Curriculum
With over 250 million speakers spread across all seven continents (including Antarctica), Russian is the eighth most widely spoken language in the world, and it is one of the five most widely spoken languages in the state of Oregon. The Reed College Russian department offers courses on a range of topics related to the diverse literary, cinematic, and cultural traditions of the Russian-speaking world, as well as Russian language instruction from the introductory through advanced levels. The Russian major and Russian minor provide students with robust training in textual analysis, written and oral communication, critical thinking, and intercultural competence. Our graduates have gone on to enroll in top MA and PhD programs in Russian and Slavic studies, Jewish studies, and comparative literature, and pursue successful careers in the fields of diplomacy, law, journalism, translation and interpretation, business, technology, education, and the arts.
The course offerings of the Russian department are designed to meet the twofold objective of providing training in the Russian language and achieving a critical expertise in Russophone literary and cultural traditions from their beginnings to the present. By following the prescribed course of studies, the student majoring in Russian will have acquired the active and passive language skills required for undertaking senior thesis research in the original.
The language courses, from the introductory through the advanced levels, are taught in Russian and offer supplementary drill opportunities through the language laboratory and weekly conversation sections with a native speaker. In the second year, students continue their study of grammar and consolidate their active and passive language skills with reading, discussion, and written commentary on Russian lyrical poetry and texts on Russian cultural history. The third-year level offers extensive reading of the Russian short story, writing, and oral exercises, while continuing formal language training.
Three literature courses are organized by period and genre and survey the development of Russian poetry and prose from the Middle Ages to the present. Three courses (RUSS 371 , RUSS 372 , RUSS 373 ) cover the most important prose texts produced within the thousand-year history of Russian letters, while our poetry courses examine the main figures and movements in nineteenth- and twentieth-century poetry.
Most importantly, the department offers numerous courses on focused topics, the content of which varies from year to year, as well as the opportunity for independent study by special arrangement with the instructor. Course topics in the past have included Russophone Jewish literature; art of political discourse; Soviet and post-Soviet film; Soviet science fiction; Russian culture under Putin; Slavic queer cultures; multiculturalism and identity politics in the Imperial, Soviet, and post-Soviet context; Tolstoy; Dostoevsky; and Eisenstein.
Independent study topics have ranged from introductory Ukrainian and Old Church Slavonic to Russian comix and Russophone queer literature. With the exception of the poetry courses, which are limited to students with a reading knowledge of Russian, the literature, culture, and film offerings have no prerequisites and are also offered for LIT credit. Russian majors as well as students who need RUSS credit for classes taught in English are required to read a selection of texts in the original and to attend an additional weekly discussion section.
Majors are expected to broaden their general background and to enhance their critical skills by pursuing work in the humanities, other literatures, philosophy, history, and the fine arts. The junior qualifying examination in Russian is given to majors at the end of their third year or, with prior consultation with the faculty, at the start of the senior year. The written exam tests the student’s preparation in language and seeks to establish the breadth and depth of experience in Russian literature through a series of broadly conceived essay questions.
The Russian House on campus provides a focal point for extracurricular programs in Russian. Besides housing a small community of learners of Russian, the Russian House hosts social gatherings, sponsors visiting lecturers or Russophone guests, and helps organize the Russian film series. Every year a native Russian language scholar is in residence.
The Russian Old Believer community in nearby Woodburn, Oregon, and a growing number of Russophone immigrants in Portland provide opportunities for students to acquaint themselves firsthand with native speakers. Arrangements can be made for Reed students to provide English lessons in exchange for Russian conversation practice.
Study Abroad
Students are typically encouraged to participate in the immersive study of Russian through study abroad. Both semester-long and summer programs are available. Currently our students to go Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Estonia, Latvia, Georgia, and Armenia to study Russian. Students interested in participating are advised to discuss their plans with the faculty during the semester before application. In addition, students wishing to accelerate their study of the language may enroll in a number of intensive summer programs in the United States. Students should inquire with International Programs as to the current availability of study abroad options.
Program Learning Outcomes
Russian
ProgramsMajorsMinorsCourses- RUSS 111 - First-Year Russian I
- RUSS 112 - First-Year Russian II
- RUSS 211 - Second-Year Russian I
- RUSS 212 - Second-Year Russian II
- RUSS 266 - Russian Short Fiction
- RUSS 267 - Love and Death in Twentieth-Century Russian Short Story
- RUSS 300 - Advanced Russian: Language, Style, and Culture
- RUSS 301 - Advanced Maintenance Russian Through Poetry
- RUSS 325 - Soviet World Literature: International, Multinational, National
- RUSS 364 - Robots, Aliens, Progressors: East European Science Fiction and Beyond
- RUSS 367 - Envisioning Modernity: Central Asia and the Caucasus through Literature, Film, and the Arts
- RUSS 368 - Modern Queer Cultures in Russia, Eastern and Central Europe
- RUSS 370 - Literary Translation
- RUSS 371 - Origins of Russian Literature: From Medieval to Romantic
- RUSS 372 - Russian Literature: Realism
- RUSS 373 - Twentieth-Century Russian Literature
- RUSS 374 - Russian Modernism
- RUSS 378 - Late Tolstoy: From Anna Karenina to a Religious Teaching
- RUSS 379 - The City and Its Myths: St. Petersburg
- RUSS 381 - Fyodor Dostoevsky: Novelist, Nationalist, Prisoner, Prophet
- RUSS 386 - Tolstoy and War
- RUSS 388 - From Lenin to Putin: Soviet Experience and its Aftermath through Film, Literature, & Human Document
- RUSS 392 - Nuclear Literatures: A Comparative Approach
- RUSS 436 - Sergei Eisenstein’s Film Art: Decadence, Revolution, and the Mechanics of Ecstasy
- RUSS 470 - Thesis
- RUSS 481 - Independent Study
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