

MA Comparative Literature and Greek
About this course
Comparative literature is a discipline that refuses to treat any single national literary tradition as self-contained or complete. It reads across languages, cultures, periods, and genres, asking how texts from different parts of the world speak to each other, influence each other, and produce meaning in ways that only become visible when you look across boundaries. Combining it with Greek, one of the world's oldest and most influential literary languages, connects you to a tradition of poetry, philosophy, tragedy, and prose that has shaped Western thought for more than two and a half thousand years. At the University of St Andrews, this four-year full-time degree allows you to pursue both disciplines in combination. The comparative literature strand opens literary study across any genre, period, and culture, with texts read in English translation, drawing on the expertise of the School of Modern Languages and exposing you to literatures and critical approaches from across the globe. You will develop the skills to read without borders, pushing the boundaries of textual analysis and examining the relationships between literary traditions that span different languages and historical moments. The Greek strand provides rigorous language training alongside deep engagement with the classical literary and philosophical tradition, from Homer and Sophocles to Plato and Thucydides. A year abroad gives you the opportunity to pursue your studies in an international academic context, broadening your exposure to different scholarly traditions. The combination of comparative literature and Greek develops exceptional skills in reading, interpretation, and argument, along with a breadth of cultural and historical knowledge that is unusual at undergraduate level. Graduates go on to careers in academia, publishing, journalism, translation, education, the cultural sector, and the civil service. Many continue to postgraduate study in classical studies, comparative literature, or translation, building specialist expertise for research and professional roles. The analytical and communicative skills the degree develops are valued across virtually every professional context that requires sophisticated engagement with language and ideas.
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