German Research

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MPhil/PhD, option of joint PhD with Stuttgart/Sorbonne or Humboldt University

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Part Time, Full Time

RESEARCH PROFILE
  • RAE score (2008): Measured by the leading categories of 4-star research and 3-star research, King’s College’s German Department is ranked top in London, second in the UK, with 25 per cent of our research considered ‘world-leading’ and 35 per cent ‘internationally excellent’ in terms of its ‘originality, significance and rigour’. 
  • Research income: Over £1m since 2001.
  • Current number of academic staff: 12.
  • Current number of research students: 11.
  • Recent publications:
    • Béla Balázs: Early Film Theory; 
    • The Racehorse of Genius. Literary and Cultural Comparisons;
    • James Joyce;
    • Goethe;
    • Political Economy of Germany;
    • Brecht in Brechtian Film;
    • The German Bestseller in the Nineteenth Century;
    • Private Lives and Collective Destinies: Class, Nation and the Volk in Gustav Freytag;
    • Crisis and Form in the Later Writings of Ingeborg Bachmann;
    • Bridal Quest Epics in Medieval Germany. 
  • Current research projects: Current PhD students work mainly in: literary studies, film and cinema studies; literary and cultural theory; the history of ideas.
  • Joint PhDs available: Exciting opportunities to gain a joint PhD with the University of Stuttgart/Universite Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV)/Humboldt University Berlin.

KEY FACTS
Student destinations
Academia, finance, media, civil service.
Head of group/division
Professor Erica Carter
Duration
Expected to be: MPhil two years FT, three years PT; PhD three years FT, four-six years PT. Research degree registration may begin in September, January or April.
Location
Strand Campus.
Year of entry 2013
Offered by
School of Arts and Humanities
Department of German
Closing date
None. Students interested in applying to funding should be aware that deadlines for this differ and may be earlier, therefore applicants should view the Graduate Funding Pages at http://www.kcl.ac.uk/study/pg/funding/sources/index.aspx for more information.
Intake
No set number.
Fees
CONTACTS
Contact information
Postgraduate Officer, Centre for Arts & Sciences Admissions (CASA)
tel: +44 (0) 20 7848 2736
fax: +44 (0) 20 7848 7200
Email Website

RESEARCH DESCRIPTION

Our current research students work mainly in literary studies from the Reformation to the present day; film and cinema studies; theatre studies; literary and cultural theory; and the history of ideas. In the field of literary and cultural studies, applications are further welcome from students with interests in the study of nation, identity and memory; gender; realism and modernism; the classical tradition; and comparative literature. The Department's links with European Studies also provide an important focus for research on migrant communities; post-1945 political movements; gender and politics; international relations; European identities and German history.

Joint PhDs available: Exciting opportunities to gain a joint PhD with the University of Stuttgart/Universite Paris-Sorbonne (Paris IV)/Humboldt University Berlin.



Staff interests associated with the research programme and its research groups

Interests:
Relationship between immigrant communities and German political movements after 1945; German sub-cultures
Tel:
+ 44 (0)20 7848 2127
Fax:
+ 44 (0)20 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Early modern German literature; 19th- and 20th-century German literature; reception of classical mythology.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2125
Fax:
+44 (0)20 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Representations of European revolution (1848) and German unification (1871); concepts of nation, identity, memory; censorship; Realism; post-1989 literature and film; the politics of memorialisation.
Tel:
+ 44 (0)20 7848 2053
Fax:
+ 44 (0)20 - 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:

German cinema; early film theory (Béla Balázs); gender and consumption in cultural history; transnationalism in film and cultural history; European colonialism.

Tel:
+44 (0) 20 7848 2124
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
European literature of the 18th and early 19th centuries; literature and the human sciences (psychology and anthropology); melancholy; the classical tradition; Goethe
Tel:
020 7848 2131
Fax:
020 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:
19th- and 20th-century German & comparative literature; literary theory; contemporary German literature; James Joyce.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2090
Fax:
+44 (0)20 7848 2089
Email:
Website:

ACADEMIC ENTRY REQUIREMENTS
General entry advice

Normally a first class or 2:1 first degree in German or a relevant subject and preferably also a taught MA programme. Students applying from Germany would be expected to have completed six semesters of study.


APPLYING TO KING'S
To apply for graduate study at King's you will need to complete our graduate online application form. Applying online makes applying easier and quicker for you, and means we can receive your application faster and more securely.
King's does not normally accept paper copies of the graduate application form as applications must be made online. However, if you are unable to access the online graduate application form, please contact the relevant admissions/School Office at King's for advice.

APPLICATION PROCEDURE
We encourage you to discuss research possibilities with the department prior to application - please do get in touch with us directly. A research proposal (one to two pages) must be submitted with your application. You may also be asked to submit samples of your written BA work, relevant projects or MA dissertation. Admission to our research programmes will initially be for the MPhil but we expect students to transfer to the PhD after an appropriate period, by agreement with their supervisor and the Departmental Postgraduate Research Committee.

PERSONAL STATEMENT & SUPPORTING INFORMATION
No information required.

FUNDING
Graduate School and School of Arts & Humanities studentships and bursaries, self-funded.


Student profiles

German Research MPhil/PhD, option of joint PhD with Stuttgart/Sorbonne or Humboldt University
Under the supervision of Professors Erica Carter and Ginette Vincendeau, my research focuses on transnational popular cinema and its limitations, and my thesis investigates the reception of Hollywood cinema in Europe.

My particular interest is in how the romantic comedy genre, which targets female audiences throughout the world on the premise that they form a homogeneous spectator category, is received in three different European countries. Through an examination of critical and audience reception of romantic-comedy films, I seek to investigate how and to what extent discrepancies in reception can be explained by national differences.

In particular, my project seeks to investigate how the notion of femininity enshrined in globally distributed American romantic comedies ‘translates’ to other national audiences. King’s high academic profile and dynamic role within the European research community makes it the ideal place to pursue my research.

Thanks to the College’s numerous links with partner institutions around the world, I will be able to pursue field work in both Germany and France in my second year. Moreover, King’s unique location at the heart of London makes it an ideal place for film students, with easy access to the multiple cinemas of the West End, and the British Film Institute and its library.

The academic and financial support I have received from the College has been incredible. I am the fortunate recipient of an AHRC Studentship, which has enabled me to focus solely on my research. Moreover the German and Film Departments as well as the College’s Research Development Program organize regular seminars and workshops, which have enabled me to develop the skills necessary to pursue my research, as well as to broaden my knowledge of current research within and outside of my discipline.
German Research MPhil/PhD, option of joint PhD with Stuttgart/Sorbonne or Humboldt University
I originally studied German with Dutch at the University of Sheffield (2006-2010). After graduating I spent a year teaching English in Basel, Switzerland, before returning to Sheffield to complete my MA in Germanic Studies, focusing on Friderich Dürrenmatt.

My project looks at contemporary, avant-garde theatre in German-speaking Switzerland, the so-called freie Szene. The core of my project will address the individuals and groups active in the Swiss freie Szene, and the centres which promote and host their work. After looking at the 'why' and the 'what' of the avant-garde, I will investigate the development of independent theatre in Switzerland. This will focus in part on the political and socio-economic factors affecting practitioners today. This information will form the background for an extensive exploration of the freie Szene, which aims to synthesise dramatic and performance analysis.

Through the texts produced and used by the freie Szene in the last 30 years, and the performances currently being staged in Switzerland, it is hoped that any literary or performance bias will be avoided, and that a deep understanding of the aesthetic, thematic and political concerns of the Swiss avant-garde will be achieved.

Thus far King's has been an excellent place to conduct my research. Not only is my supervisor, Dr. Ben Schofield, extremely enthusiastic, but his knowledge of German theatre has been invaluable. Additionally, I have been able to take full advantage of King's English Department's expertise in the area of Theatre and Performance Studies.

The research facilities at King's are first-rate; not only do King's students have access the college's collections at the Maughan Library, but we are also able to conduct research at the University of London library and the British Library, amongst others.

In addition to the academic support I receive at King's, the financial support I receive is incredible. I was awarded a King's scholarship, which covers not only my full fees for three years, but also provides me with a living allowance. Additionally, all students are able to apply to one of the college's research studentships to cover research abroad.

London is an excellent place to study the theatre; not only are the West End and venues such as the National Theatre and the Old Vic a stones throw from King's, but there are countless smaller spaces in which high-quality, innovative theatre and performance is taking place. What's more, the German Department has a strong theatrical tradition, staging both classic and modern plays from all over the German-speaking world. We're always looking for more performers!