The German Graduate Program offers curricula leading to the master of arts and the doctor of philosophy degrees in German.

German Graduate Program

Welcome to the German Graduate Program

Located within GNS, the German Graduate Program is a place of lively and collegial intellectual exchange. The program is especially strong in its breadth: our students complete coursework in literary studies, linguistics, and second language acquisition before specializing. Graduate students participate in interdisciplinary training and professional development through close mentoring relationships with faculty members, many of whom have been recognized with national or international awards in their research fields. Despite the difficult Humanities job market, the program continues to place graduate students in competitive positions, and we work with UW initiatives and other groups to mentor students for careers beyond academia. The program is also home to dynamic and committed teachers: a number of faculty and graduate students have been honored by the university for excellence in teaching. Faculty and graduate students present regularly at national and international conferences (for which our students receive financial support), in addition to the Wisconsin Workshop and German and Dutch Graduate Student Association conferences organized annually by the program that bring together scholars at all levels and across disciplines for in-depth discussion and collaboration.

The German Graduate Program offers curricula leading to the master of arts and the doctor of philosophy degrees in German.

The M.A. degree in German requires 30 credits of course work at the graduate level (10 courses) approved by the graduate advisor and the Masters examination.

The Ph.D. requires an additional eight courses (24 credits) for a total of 18 courses (54 credits) [for students entering with an M.A. from another institution: a total of 12 courses/36 credits, of which up to two can be transfer courses as allowed by graduate advisor], an external doctoral minor, proof of proficiency in another foreign language, and a preliminary qualifying exam in preparation for writing a Ph.D. thesis. Students must pass the Goethe Certificate C1 (German-language proficiency) before advancing to the doctoral preliminary examination.

The department offers a broadly inclusive and flexible curriculum in the entire range of medieval through contemporary literature and culture, a full spectrum of linguistics and philology, and a program in Dutch language, literature, and culture. The program is unsurpassed in comprehensive representation of the entire field of the study of German through individual faculty members’ specializations and research publications, including: early modern and medieval studies; film and media studies; multicultural literature and cosmopolitanism; Gegenwartsliteratur; literary and cultural theory; Holocaust studies; poetics, stylistics, and narratology; 18th-century studies; literature in its sociocultural context; literary and cultural theory; Dutch literature and linguistics; historical and synchronic linguistics; applied linguistics, second language acquisition, and foreign language education. Offerings include interdisciplinary areas such as literature and other arts (especially image/text, visual culture, and literature/music), German-Americana, literature and philosophy, and German–Jewish relations.

Graduate students are encouraged to pursue inter- and multidisciplinary work beyond the German Program in such areas as art history, communication arts/cinema, comparative literature, history, linguistics, musicology, Scandinavian studies, visual studies, and women and gender studies. The department cooperates closely with the interdepartmental programs in European studies, medieval studies, Jewish studies, and second language acquisition.  For more information and details on degrees, please contact our Graduate Coordinator.