51ÁÔÆæ

About the Programme

Overview

Welcome to the MEAS home page! Here you'll find everything you need to know about Modern East Asian Studies at Frankfurt's 51ÁÔÆæ.


During the course of this two-year MA programme, you will become an expert on modern East Asia, its historical roots, and the economic, legal, political and social issues encountered in this dynamic region.

You'll also improve your language skills: the programme itself is taught in English and you'll take beginners' or advanced language classes in either Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese or Korean. This will allow you to work with original sources and texts in your term papers and MA thesis.

Along the way you'll develop your methodological and theoretical skills as you attend lectures and take electives on a range of core disciplines, including history, law, management and political sciences.

MEAS is affiliated with 51ÁÔÆæ's Interdisciplinary Centre for East Asian Studies (IZO). It is a collaborative programme created by four different university faculties: ; Law; ; and Social Sciences.

The result? An exciting, international programme that offers you the chance to choose from a truly unique range of languages and disciplines and learn from distinguished professors in the field.


Looking to the future, this interdisciplinary, research-orientated MA programme will prepare you for doing your PhD and pursuing an academic career relating to East Asia – or for a professional career in this field, working in an international enterprise or organisation.

So, what's in store for you if you decide to enrol in Modern East Asian Studies at 51ÁÔÆæ?

YOUR FIRST YEAR  (PDF download)

There will be four main components to your first year: language classes, core lectures, a research skills module and electives.

Language Classes


Depending on your academic background and language level, you'll take beginners' or advanced language classes in either Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese or Korean.

Core Lectures

We offer one core module consisting of four sub-modules - known as 'core lectures' - within the programme, of which you'll choose and take two. These lectures will help you develop your methodological knowledge of two core disciplines and learn to apply the concepts, theories and methods from these social-scientific fields to East Asian countries.

Each core lecture relates to one of our four main social science disciplines:

History: China's Great Transformations (Prof. Dr. Iwo Amelung)

Law: Theoretical Approaches to Law in East Asia (Prof. Dr. Moritz Bälz, LL.M.)

Management: Institutions and Innovation (Prof. Dr. Cornelia Storz)

Political Sciences: Democracies, Autocracies, and In-Betweens: Comparing State-Society Relations in East Asia (Prof. Dr. Heike Holbig)


Research Skills

In preparation for writing your MA thesis in your second year, you will also take a research skills module, made up of the following two elements:

Young Scholars Forum (YSF): Alongside fellow MEAS students, you will discuss papers on a fascinating range of topics, such as gender, sustainability and mobility in East Asia, from different disciplinary perspectives.

Skills & Competences (S&C): In these seminars, you will deepen your knowledge of the different methods used in social sciences and East Asia-related humanities.


Electives

There are also optional modules, known as 'electives'. You'll take two electives if you're a beginner in the language you're studying or four if you're an advanced language learner.

In these electives, you'll consider empirical phenomena relating to one East Asian country from a social-scientific perspective. Per semester, there is at least one elective for each of the four countries/regions covered by the programme. Take a look at  'Who We Are' to find out more about the broad range of research and teaching interests of our professors and lecturers.


YOUR SECOND YEAR

In your third semester, you will follow one of three possible pathways, known as 'study tracks' (see below). In your fourth semester, you will work on your MA thesis, culminating in an MA colloquium.


Download the MEAS Study Regulations (2021 version, in German), a legally non-binding translation of the study regulations, and the list of module convenors.

Link to the (you can switch to past semesters and to the English on the top right):

Vorlesungsverzeichnis / Course Overview

Weitere Studienangebote /Other Courses

Interdisziplinäres Zentrum für Ostasienstudien

Master Modern East Asian Studies

Developing your language skills is a core aspect of the MEAS programme because we want you to be able to read source texts and conduct interviews in the language you're studying.


Our language classes are either taught in English or in the target language.

Beginners' courses are designed for absolute beginners. Should you have some prior knowledge of the language, please contact the MEAS coordinator as early as possible for a first assessment of whether attending the course is an option in your specific case. We do not offer intermediate courses in any of the four languages. Intermediate learners who plan to improve their level of proficiency prior to enrolment to attend advanced language courses in the MEAS programm, may be interested in some of the courses listed here.

To take an advanced language course, you will need to have achieved the following (or equivalent):

  • Chinese: HSK4, 260 points or above
  • Indonesian: BA in Southeast Asian Studies (at least 200 hours of Bahasa Indonesia)
  • Japanese: JLPT N3
  • Korean: TOPIK3
Please note that if you speak Chinese, Indonesian, Japanese or Korean as your native language, you cannot enrol in an advanced language course in that language. If you have already reached a higher level in a language than we offer, you will have the chance to take beginners' classes in a new East Asian language.

Adaptations, Remakes and Transmedia Storytelling in East Asia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Adoption and Transfer of Foreign Legal Concepts in Japan (winter semester 2023/2024)

Advising on Global Business Deals (winter semester 2024/2025)

Berühmte japanische Gerichtsentscheidungen (winter semester 2023/2024, 2022/2023; in German)

Canons and Canonization in China Past and Present (winter semester 2020/2021)

China and the UN Sustainable Development Agenda (summer semester 2021)

China and Its Environment: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives (winter semester 2020/2021)

China-Taiwan Cross-Strait Relations (summer semester 2024, 2023)

China's Financial System (winter semester 2023/2024, 2021/2022)

China's Foreign and Security Policy: Concepts and Structures (winter semester 2022/2023)

Chinese Aid and International Development Cooperation (summer semester 2022)

Chinese Business Law (winter semester 2020/2021)

Chinese Legal Culture and the Rule of Law (winter semester 2022/2023)

Chinese Property Law (summer semester 2024, 2023, 2021)

Civil Society and Philanthropy in East Asia (winter semester 2021/2022, 2020/2021)

Concepts of Sustainability: Circular Economy, Sustainable Development, Environmental Change and Corporate Strategies (winter semester 2024/2025)

Conflict and Law in Late Imperial and Republican China (winter semester 2021/2022)

Confucianism and Korean Philosophy (summer semester 2022)

Contemporary Art in Southeast Asia (summer semester 2024, 2025)

Contemporary Politics in Indonesia - Mediatisation, Polarisation and Identity Politics (summer semester 2024)

Contemporary Politics in South Korea (summer semester 2022)

Corporate Governance in Japan (summer semester 2023)

Courts and Judges in Japan (summer semester 2025)

Critical Reflections on the Rise of China (winter semester 2024/2025)

Current Issues and Research in Southeast Asian Studies (every winter semester)

Digitalization of Politics in China (winter semester 2020/2021)

Disasters and Disaster Relief in China, Past and Present (summer semester 2023)

Defining (Hybridized) K-Pop: History, Politics and Social Issues in the Korean Idol Industry (winter semester 2023/2024)

Digital Politics in East Asia (summer semester 2023)

Diversity in Korea (summer semester 2025)

Documentary Practices in the Sinosphere: Screen, Stage, and Beyond (winter semester 2024/2025)

Economic and Social Change in Southeast Asia (every summer semester since 2021)

Environmental Issues and Political Ecologies in Southeast Asia (summer semester 2023, 2022, 2025)

Ethnography of South Korea (winter semester 2022/2023)

Family and Gender: Reading and Analysing Korean Webtoon (summer semester 2021)

Gender, Family, and Law in Japan (summer semester 2024)

Gerichte, Richter und Entscheidungen im japanischen Recht (winter semester 2021/2022; in German)

High/Elite Structures vs. Popular Cultures in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Housing in China: Market dynamics, state policies and socio-economic positions (summer semester 2025)

Humiliation, Paper Tigers and Hurt Feelings. How Chinese Perceptions of Chinese Identity and China's Past are Shaping China's Foreign Policy (and Increasingly Other Areas as Well) (winter semester 2022/2023)

Innovation in China: Applied Economic Perspectives (summer semester 2022)

Is there a Chinese "Democracy"? (winter semester 2022/2023)

Islam and Modernity in Indonesia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Islam and Modernity in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2024/2025)

Issues in the Two Koreas Today (summer semester 2023)

Japan and migration: a field in flux (summer semester 2025)

Japanese Contract Law (summer semester 2021)

Japanese Law: Constitution and Society (winter semester 2024/2025)

Korean Migration in the South (winter semester 2022/2023)

Korean Screen Culture in Diversity (summer semester 2024)

Korean Youth Abroad (winter semester 2023/2024)

Media and Power in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2022/2023)

Media in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2021/2022)

Media, Politics and Economy in Southeast Asia (every summer semester since 2021)

Migrants in Japan: Shining a Spotlight on Vulnerable Groups and Social Inequality (winter semester 2021/2022)

Migration in Korea and Korean Immigration in the World: History and Social Challenges (summer semester 2023)

Modern Art of Southeast Asia: Historical Developments, Contemporary Discourses (winter semester 2024/2025, 2022/2023)

Museums, Archaeology and Ideology in 20th and 21st Century China (summer semester 2024)

Music in K-Dramas (winter semester 2024/2025)

Nation and Gender: Lives of Korean Women in South and North Korea (winter semester 2024/2025)

North-Korean Popular Culture (winter semester 2021/2022)

Peking: History and Present of an Iconic Capital City (winter semester 2023/2024)

Placing China in the World. New Approaches to Understanding Chinese History (summer semester 2022)

Placing China in the World. The importance of historiography for understanding present day China (summer semester 2025)

Political Economy in China (winter semester 2023/2024)

Politics of North and South Korea (summer semester 2025)

Public Policy in China (summer semester 2024, 2023)

Responsibility and (China's) International Relations (winter semester 2021/2022)

Schutz des Schwachen im japanischen Recht (winter semester 2020/2021, in German)

Screencultures in Indonesia and beyond (summer semester 2025)

Screencultures in Southeast Asia (summer semester 2023)

Staat - Nation - Armee: Zivil-militärische Beziehungen in der Volksrepublik China (winter semester 2021/2022; in German)

Strategic Management - Japanese Companies and "Western" Theories? (winter semester 2022/2023m summer semester 2021)

The Belt and Road Initiative: Global Visions, Local Effects (winter semester 2022/2023)

The Mobility Turn in Southeast Asian Studies (summer semester 2023)

The Politics of Corruption and Anti-Corruption in East Asia (summer semester 2022)

The Ubiquity of History: Representations of the Past in Modern China (winter semester 2024/2025)

Transnational North Korea: Crossing and Dwelling of North Korean Migrants (winter semester 2021/2022, 2020/2021)

Un/commoning Southeast Asia - from extractive regimes to digital commons (summer semester 2025)

Urbanization and City Life in (South) Korea (summer semester 2023, 2021)

White Collar Crime and Corporate Scandals in Japan (summer semester 2022)


“Research Track only" Electives:

Advanced Management (every semester)

Compensation and Benefits (most winter semsters)

Corporate Development Strategies (most winter semesters)

Research Training Part 1 & 2: Ideological Change in the People's Republic of China (summer semester 2025)

Strategic Market Management (every winter semester)

Academic Writing (every summer semester until 2024)

Alternative Voices in Contemporary China: Reading Course (summer semester 2023)

Chinese Scientific Translation Techniques (every winter semester, taught in German)

Classic Mongolian I (summer semester 23); Classic Mongolian II (winter semester 2023/2024)

Colloquium: Comparative Politics (summer semester 2025)

Critical Evaluation of Chinese Scientific Sources I (every winter semester) and II (every summer semester), examples:

  • Vietnamese Migrants in Taiwan (winter semester 2024/2025)
  • Kindheit aus Sicht chinesischer Erwachsener (winter semester 2023/2024, in German)
  • Die Verbreitung von Xi Jinpings ‚Sozialismus chinesischer Prägung für eine neue Ära' (winter semester 2022/2023, in German)
  • Quellen zur chinesischen Familienpolitik (winter semester 2021/2022, in German)
  • Readings on the Taiwan Republic (Taiwan Minzhuguo) (winter semester 2020/2021)
  • Modernism and Realism in Taiwan (summer semester 2020)

Doing Research on Korea: Research Methods and writing (summer semester 2025, 2024, 2021, 2025)

Doing Social Research: Design, Methods and Philosophical Traditions (winter semester 2021/2022)

Fundamentals of Econometrics (every winter semester)

Interview-based research in the social sciences (summer semester 2025)

Introduction to Law (winter semester 2022/2023)

Old Javanese I (winter semester 2021/2022)

Online Databases and Research Tools for Modern East Asian Studies (summer semester 2022)

Principal Component Analysis and Correspondence Analysis (summer semester 2021, winter semester 2020/2021)

Reading Courses Accompanying the Chinese Knowledge Culture Elective (every semester)

Reading Course in Advanced Japanese:

  • Japanese Society and Culture (summer semester 2024)
  • Business Japanese Communication (winter semester 2023/2024)

Research Design: Comparative Case Studies (every winter semester)

Research Design: Statistical Inference and Causality (summer semester 2024, 2023)

Thai – Beginners I (every winter semester starting from 2023/2024); Thai – Beginners II (every summer semester starting from 2024)

Theories and Methods in Southeast Asian Studies (every winter semester)

Vietnamese for Beginners I (every winter semester starting from 2023/2024); Vietnamese for Beginners II (every summer semester starting from 2024)

Wenyanwen (Classical Chinese) I (every winter semester), Wenyanwen (Classical Chinese) II (every summer semester)

Approaching Distribution: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (winter semester 2024/2025)

Digital Transformation in East Asia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Sustainability in East Asia (winter semester 2022/2023)

Gender in East Asia (winter semester 2021/2022)

Fieldwork in East Asia (winter semester 2020/2021)

Adaptations, Remakes and Transmedia Storytelling in East Asia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Adoption and Transfer of Foreign Legal Concepts in Japan (winter semester 2023/2024)

Advising on Global Business Deals (winter semester 2024/2025)

Berühmte japanische Gerichtsentscheidungen (winter semester 2023/2024, 2022/2023; in German)

Canons and Canonization in China Past and Present (winter semester 2020/2021)

China and the UN Sustainable Development Agenda (summer semester 2021)

China and Its Environment: Historical and Contemporary Perspectives (winter semester 2020/2021)

China-Taiwan Cross-Strait Relations (summer semester 2024, 2023)

China's Financial System (winter semester 2023/2024, 2021/2022)

China's Foreign and Security Policy: Concepts and Structures (winter semester 2022/2023)

Chinese Aid and International Development Cooperation (summer semester 2022)

Chinese Business Law (winter semester 2020/2021)

Chinese Legal Culture and the Rule of Law (winter semester 2022/2023)

Chinese Property Law (summer semester 2024, 2023, 2021)

Civil Society and Philanthropy in East Asia (winter semester 2021/2022, 2020/2021)

Concepts of Sustainability: Circular Economy, Sustainable Development, Environmental Change and Corporate Strategies (winter semester 2024/2025)

Conflict and Law in Late Imperial and Republican China (winter semester 2021/2022)

Confucianism and Korean Philosophy (summer semester 2022)

Contemporary Art in Southeast Asia (summer semester 2024, 2025)

Contemporary Politics in Indonesia - Mediatisation, Polarisation and Identity Politics (summer semester 2024)

Contemporary Politics in South Korea (summer semester 2022)

Corporate Governance in Japan (summer semester 2023)

Courts and Judges in Japan (summer semester 2025)

Critical Reflections on the Rise of China (winter semester 2024/2025)

Current Issues and Research in Southeast Asian Studies (every winter semester)

Digitalization of Politics in China (winter semester 2020/2021)

Disasters and Disaster Relief in China, Past and Present (summer semester 2023)

Defining (Hybridized) K-Pop: History, Politics and Social Issues in the Korean Idol Industry (winter semester 2023/2024)

Digital Politics in East Asia (summer semester 2023)

Diversity in Korea (summer semester 2025)

Documentary Practices in the Sinosphere: Screen, Stage, and Beyond (winter semester 2024/2025)

Economic and Social Change in Southeast Asia (every summer semester since 2021)

Environmental Issues and Political Ecologies in Southeast Asia (summer semester 2023, 2022, 2025)

Ethnography of South Korea (winter semester 2022/2023)

Family and Gender: Reading and Analysing Korean Webtoon (summer semester 2021)

Gender, Family, and Law in Japan (summer semester 2024)

Gerichte, Richter und Entscheidungen im japanischen Recht (winter semester 2021/2022; in German)

High/Elite Structures vs. Popular Cultures in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Housing in China: Market dynamics, state policies and socio-economic positions (summer semester 2025)

Humiliation, Paper Tigers and Hurt Feelings. How Chinese Perceptions of Chinese Identity and China's Past are Shaping China's Foreign Policy (and Increasingly Other Areas as Well) (winter semester 2022/2023)

Innovation in China: Applied Economic Perspectives (summer semester 2022)

Is there a Chinese "Democracy"? (winter semester 2022/2023)

Islam and Modernity in Indonesia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Islam and Modernity in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2024/2025)

Issues in the Two Koreas Today (summer semester 2023)

Japan and migration: a field in flux (summer semester 2025)

Japanese Contract Law (summer semester 2021)

Japanese Law: Constitution and Society (winter semester 2024/2025)

Korean Migration in the South (winter semester 2022/2023)

Korean Screen Culture in Diversity (summer semester 2024)

Korean Youth Abroad (winter semester 2023/2024)

Media and Power in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2022/2023)

Media in Southeast Asia (winter semester 2021/2022)

Media, Politics and Economy in Southeast Asia (every summer semester since 2021)

Migrants in Japan: Shining a Spotlight on Vulnerable Groups and Social Inequality (winter semester 2021/2022)

Migration in Korea and Korean Immigration in the World: History and Social Challenges (summer semester 2023)

Modern Art of Southeast Asia: Historical Developments, Contemporary Discourses (winter semester 2024/2025, 2022/2023)

Museums, Archaeology and Ideology in 20th and 21st Century China (summer semester 2024)

Music in K-Dramas (winter semester 2024/2025)

Nation and Gender: Lives of Korean Women in South and North Korea (winter semester 2024/2025)

North-Korean Popular Culture (winter semester 2021/2022)

Peking: History and Present of an Iconic Capital City (winter semester 2023/2024)

Placing China in the World. New Approaches to Understanding Chinese History (summer semester 2022)

Placing China in the World. The importance of historiography for understanding present day China (summer semester 2025)

Political Economy in China (winter semester 2023/2024)

Politics of North and South Korea (summer semester 2025)

Public Policy in China (summer semester 2024, 2023)

Responsibility and (China's) International Relations (winter semester 2021/2022)

Schutz des Schwachen im japanischen Recht (winter semester 2020/2021, in German)

Screencultures in Indonesia and beyond (summer semester 2025)

Screencultures in Southeast Asia (summer semester 2023)

Staat - Nation - Armee: Zivil-militärische Beziehungen in der Volksrepublik China (winter semester 2021/2022; in German)

Strategic Management - Japanese Companies and "Western" Theories? (winter semester 2022/2023m summer semester 2021)

The Belt and Road Initiative: Global Visions, Local Effects (winter semester 2022/2023)

The Mobility Turn in Southeast Asian Studies (summer semester 2023)

The Politics of Corruption and Anti-Corruption in East Asia (summer semester 2022)

The Ubiquity of History: Representations of the Past in Modern China (winter semester 2024/2025)

Transnational North Korea: Crossing and Dwelling of North Korean Migrants (winter semester 2021/2022, 2020/2021)

Un/commoning Southeast Asia - from extractive regimes to digital commons (summer semester 2025)

Urbanization and City Life in (South) Korea (summer semester 2023, 2021)

White Collar Crime and Corporate Scandals in Japan (summer semester 2022)


“Research Track only" Electives:

Advanced Management (every semester)

Compensation and Benefits (most winter semsters)

Corporate Development Strategies (most winter semesters)

Research Training Part 1 & 2: Ideological Change in the People's Republic of China (summer semester 2025)

Strategic Market Management (every winter semester)

Academic Writing (every summer semester until 2024)

Alternative Voices in Contemporary China: Reading Course (summer semester 2023)

Chinese Scientific Translation Techniques (every winter semester, taught in German)

Classic Mongolian I (summer semester 23); Classic Mongolian II (winter semester 2023/2024)

Colloquium: Comparative Politics (summer semester 2025)

Critical Evaluation of Chinese Scientific Sources I (every winter semester) and II (every summer semester), examples:

  • Vietnamese Migrants in Taiwan (winter semester 2024/2025)
  • Kindheit aus Sicht chinesischer Erwachsener (winter semester 2023/2024, in German)
  • Die Verbreitung von Xi Jinpings ‚Sozialismus chinesischer Prägung für eine neue Ära' (winter semester 2022/2023, in German)
  • Quellen zur chinesischen Familienpolitik (winter semester 2021/2022, in German)
  • Readings on the Taiwan Republic (Taiwan Minzhuguo) (winter semester 2020/2021)
  • Modernism and Realism in Taiwan (summer semester 2020)

Doing Research on Korea: Research Methods and writing (summer semester 2025, 2024, 2021, 2025)

Doing Social Research: Design, Methods and Philosophical Traditions (winter semester 2021/2022)

Fundamentals of Econometrics (every winter semester)

Interview-based research in the social sciences (summer semester 2025)

Introduction to Law (winter semester 2022/2023)

Old Javanese I (winter semester 2021/2022)

Online Databases and Research Tools for Modern East Asian Studies (summer semester 2022)

Principal Component Analysis and Correspondence Analysis (summer semester 2021, winter semester 2020/2021)

Reading Courses Accompanying the Chinese Knowledge Culture Elective (every semester)

Reading Course in Advanced Japanese:

  • Japanese Society and Culture (summer semester 2024)
  • Business Japanese Communication (winter semester 2023/2024)

Research Design: Comparative Case Studies (every winter semester)

Research Design: Statistical Inference and Causality (summer semester 2024, 2023)

Thai – Beginners I (every winter semester starting from 2023/2024); Thai – Beginners II (every summer semester starting from 2024)

Theories and Methods in Southeast Asian Studies (every winter semester)

Vietnamese for Beginners I (every winter semester starting from 2023/2024); Vietnamese for Beginners II (every summer semester starting from 2024)

Wenyanwen (Classical Chinese) I (every winter semester), Wenyanwen (Classical Chinese) II (every summer semester)

Approaching Distribution: Interdisciplinary Perspectives (winter semester 2024/2025)

Digital Transformation in East Asia (winter semester 2023/2024)

Sustainability in East Asia (winter semester 2022/2023)

Gender in East Asia (winter semester 2021/2022)

Fieldwork in East Asia (winter semester 2020/2021)

During your third semester, you'll follow one of three possible pathways, known as 'study tracks'. Each of these tracks offers you an exciting and enriching experience that will help further your career.

The Research Track is taught entirely in Frankfurt, whilst for the Language Track and the Professional Track you will spend time in one of the East Asian countries covered by the programme. To give you maximum flexibility and allow you to tailor your time abroad to your specific academic interests, you will organise and fund it yourself.


Research Track (PDF download)

Are you contemplating an academic career? Would you be excited to engage with the newest research topics in East Asia-related fields and hone your skills in both research and academic thinking and writing? If so, the Research Track is for you.

You will spend your third semester in Frankfurt, where you will analyse and conduct empirical research, take additional electives and research skills modules, attend events at IZO and undertake a small-scale research project in preparation for your MA thesis and any future academic work.


Language Track (PDF download)

Can you imagine going to an East Asian country and studying at a university there? Would you like to be fully immersed in the language you're studying? If so, then you might want to consider the Language Track.

You will spend your third semester taking at least 200 hours of classes at an East Asian university. These classes should be taught in the language you're studying in Frankfurt. The MEAS coordinator will provide you with basic information and advice, and after that you'll have the freedom to organise and finance an overseas study experience that is right for you.


Professional Track
(PDF download)

Are you keen to get some work experience under your belt? Can you imagine working in East Asia? If you can, then the Professional Track could be the right choice.

You will spend your third semester doing an internship of at least 720 hours (or 20 weeks full time) – preferably in East Asia. The MEAS coordinator will provide you with basic information and advice, and then you'll organise and finance the trip and internship yourself, so that it fits your specific interests and disciplinary background.
Career paths of MEAS alumni are manifold. Many MEAS graduates work in the areas of marketing, human Resources, research and sales as well as in banks and in some cases in the areas of IT or law. Moreover, a substantial number of graduates hold academic positions in Germany and abroad or work in political institutions, non-governmental organizations and science management.

MEAS Career Orientation Event organized by the MEAS Student Council, June 2024

Copyright: MEAS Student Council


Quick Access


Student assistant positions are open on an irregular basis. MEAS and IZO accept unsolicited applications for these positions. If you are interested, please send your application to the MEAS and IZO coordinators.

Contact

MEAS Coordinator:
Mirjam Tröster

SKW, 5th floor, room 05.B137
Rostocker Straße 2, 60323 Frankfurt/Main
Mailing address:

51ÁÔÆæ Frankfurt
Sinology/MEAS, FB09 - Linguistics, Cultures, and Arts
Mirjam Tröster/SKW
60629 Frankfurt

Tel. +49 (0) 69-798-28795
Email: m.troester[at]em.uni-frankfurt.de


MEAS Administration:


W.-Adorno-Platz 4
RuW, Room 4.242
60323 Frankfurt/Main
Tel. +49 (0) 69-798-34809
Email: kiradjieva[at]em.uni-frankfurt.de

IZO Coordinator:


Email: izo[at]uni-frankfurt.de


Student Assistant:

N.N.

Email:
Image credits (left to right, top to bottom): Iwo Amelung (Museum); Moritz Bälz (Law); Clemens Büttner (Innovation); Fabio Niepel (Streetview Tokyo); Clemens Büttner (Political Slogan); Uwe Dettmar, 51ÁÔÆæ Frankfurt (Study Tracks)