Comparative literature is the study of literature across cultural and national frontiers, time periods, languages and genres, even across the boundaries between literature and the other arts.You can study Comparative Literature as a single subject or alongside a whole range of other subjects and you may want to consider studying it with a foreign language to further expand your horizons.PROGRAMME STRUCTUREDefined most broadly, comparative literature is the study of ‘literature without walls’.
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Comparative literature is the study of literature across cultural and national frontiers, time periods, languages and genres, even across the boundaries between literature and the other arts.
You can study Comparative Literature as a single subject or alongside a whole range of other subjects and you may want to consider studying it with a foreign language to further expand your horizons.
PROGRAMME STRUCTURE
Defined most broadly, comparative literature is the study of ‘literature without walls’. The comparative or cross-cultural study of literatures is, in some ways, an idealistic academic discipline: it assumes that people from different cultures, times, places and languages can communicate with each other, understand (if not fully share) each other’s traditions, and benefit from such contacts.
The comparatist needs to have intellectual curiosity, an open mind and the courage to confront unknown cultures and unfamiliar writers and texts. A degree in Comparative Literature at Glasgow also gives you the opportunity to include the study of a foreign language (even as a beginner) as part of your curriculum. Comparative Literature is available as a single honours degree, meanig you can take it as your only subject, or as a joint degree, meaning you will study another subject alongside it.
CAREER PROSPECTS
Our graduates have gone on to pursue rewarding careers in the media, teaching, journalism, tourism, translating and interpreting, and the Civil Service, as well as business, commerce and marketing.