Home

Undergraduate Programs in Comparative Literature and Comparative Arts

What is Comparative Literature?
Comparative Literature offers a broad range of perspectives on the human cultural heritage. Individual comparatists choose areas of study from an immense field: they study literary works written in any of the ancient or modern languages and from any historical period; comparatists also explore the relationships between literature and the other arts and the areas shared by literary study and other disciplines. Specifically, comparatists contrast as well as compare. We may look for similarities and differences between:

  • literature written in two or more languages
  • the literatures of several nations or cultures
  • multicultural relations within one nation, or within a geographical area
  • literary works written at widely separated historical periods (such as ancient and modern lyric poems, plays by Shakespeare and Sophocles, 19th-century novels
  • recurring themes (feminist issues, for example, or the role of the artist) in literature from several parts of the world, or from various historical periods
  • literature and other disciplines--philosophy, psychology, history, science, anthropology
  • literature and the other arts--music, drama, dance, the visual arts, film

 

Why Major in Comparative Literature?

  • Read the most exciting writing from around the world
  • Explore other cultures through their writings and arts
  • Study other languages in order to expand your own experience
  • Discover correlations between literature, the arts, and other fields of knowledge
  • Learn analytical and critical skills useful in interpreting texts of all sorts, from political speeches to religious classics as well as literary work
  • Understand your own culture from new perspectives
As the study of literature has become an ever more international project, the perspectives of comparative study, particularly literary theory, inform to an ever greater extent the critical analyses of literary scholars in a variety of departments across the Washington University campus, not only in the Humanities (the other literature departments) but also among the Social Sciences as well. The insights you gain from the critical reading of literary texts can also inform your reading in areas such as Art History and Anthropology.

 

A Major in Comparative Literature Offers Many Possibilities
Comparative Literature majors find internships and jobs--in the United States and abroad--where they do research, write and edit, or teach, while gaining experience and learning about fields as diverse as the environment and the record industry.

Majors in Comparative Literature can enter degree programs in professional fields including Journalism, Law, Librarianship, and Business. You can study Education, to become certified to teach literature or languages in a high school. Or you can pursue a graduate degree in Comparative Literature or a national literation in preparation for a career in teaching and research at a college or university, in a language and literature, Comparative Literature, or English department.

 

A.B. in Comparative Literature or Comparative Arts at Washington University

Requirements
  • Courses in Comparative Literature and in one or more national literatures
  • Advanced study in one or more languages besides English
  • For students majoring in Comparative Arts, courses in fine arts, dance, drama, music, or creative writing
Flexibility to Design Your Program
Because comparatists must make choices about which languages and which national literatures they will study, you will find that the requirements for both majors encourage students to plan individualized programs of study in consultation with their advisors.

Help Making Your Choices
Course programs are planned by you and your faculty advisor, who will help you decide which literature courses to take, whether to start a third language, and where you would like to go if you study abroad. Your advisor will also help make arrangements for study abroad, get you together with other students who have studied abroad or are going to do so in order to share the experience.

Language Study
At Washington University you can take courses for four years in these languages:

  • Arabic
  • Chinese
  • French
  • German
  • Greek
  • Italian
  • Japanese
  • Latin
  • Modern Hebrew
  • Persian
  • Russian
  • Spanish
You can also take courses in Dutch, Korean, and Swahili.
Study Abroad
All majors in Comparative Literature and Comparative Arts are encouraged to study abroad for periods of time ranging from a summer to a full calendar year. Washington University offers Study Abroad programs in these countries:
  • Chile
  • China
  • Egypt
  • England
  • France
  • Germany
  • Greece
  • Israel
  • Italy
  • Japan
  • Kenya
  • Netherlands
  • Russia
  • Spain
  • Taiwan
By special arrangement our students may study in other countries as well (a recent graduate spent a summer in Iran, and study in Korea can be arranged).

Senior Honors
If you choose to work toward Honors, you will have the opportunity during your Senior year to do research and write a long essay on a topic that interests you. You will work under the guidance of a professor whose field of specialization includes your topic. Recent topics that majors have chosen include:

  • Audiences of Shakespeare's Globe
  • Hamletmachine by Heiner Müller
  • Paradox and Dualism in Don Quixote and the Satires of Lucian
  • Thema (Omaggio a Joyce): A Reading by Luciano Berio
  • Carnival Aspects in Ulysses and De donde son los cantantes

 

For Additional Information, contact:
Harriet Stone, Interim Chair, hastone@wustl.edu or 314-935-4473
Emma Kafalenos, Director of Undergraduate Studies emkafale@wustl.edu or 314-935-7613
 

 

 

Links

 

Contacts