Home / LSA Students / Academics & Requirements / Majors & Minors / Slavic Languages and Literatures /
Slavic Languages and Literatures Faculty listing
3040 Modern Languages Building | 812 East Washington Street | (734) 764-5355 (phone) | (734) 647-2127 (fax) | www.lsa.umich.edu/slavic | e-mail: slavic@umich.edu
Associate Professor Herbert Eagle, Chair
Academics and Requirements
Professors
Michael Makin, Russian literature of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, Russian language
Omry Ronen, Historical and descriptive poetics of Russian literature of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, metrics, Russian Formalism and Structuralism, popular sub-genres
Jindrich Toman, Slavic linguistics, Czech literature
Associate Professors
Herbert Eagle, Russian and East European literature and film, literary and film theory
Andrew Herscher, Modern and contemporary architecture, urbanism, and visual culture in Central and Southeastern Europe
Mikhail Krutikov, Jewish literature, Jewish-Slavic relations
Olga Maiorova, Nineteenth-century Russian literature, culture, and history
Assistant Professors
Tatjana Aleksić, Literary Theory, Postmodern Fiction, Contemporary Balkan literature with an emphasis on Serbian and Modern Greek fiction, Nationalism, Postcolonialism, Exile, Issues of Identity, Balkan Folklore, and Oral Poetry
Sofya Khagi, Nineteenth ad Twentieth Century Russian Poetry, Russian and European Romanticism, Russian and Western Dystopia, Existentialist Thought, East European Literary Theory, Post-Soviet Literature and Culture, Contemporary Baltic Cultures
Benjamin Paloff, Polish, Russian and Czech modern literatures, literary theory, poetics, and translation theory and practice
Lecturers
Alina Makin, Russian language
Ewa Malachowksa-Pasek, Polish language, Czech language
Svitlana Rogovyk, Language pedagogy, Russian and Ukrainian languages
Marija Rosic, Bosnian, Croatian, Serbian languages
Nina Shkolnik, Russian Language
Piotr Westwalewicz, Polish Language and Culture
Professors Emeriti
Bogdana Carpenter, Polish language, literature, and culture; comparative literature
Assya Humesky, Russian poetry, drama, and stylistics; Ukrainian language and literature
Ladislav Matejka, Slavic Linguistics, literary theory, Czech language and literature
Vitaly Shevoroshkin, Russian morphology and phonology
Benjamin A. Stolz, Slavic linguistics, Serbo-Croatian language, literature and folklore
