

MA Comparative Literature/Classics
About this course
Comparative literature is the study of literary texts across the boundaries of national tradition, language, historical period, and genre. Where literary study in a single national tradition focuses depth within one culture, comparative literature offers breadth across many, asking what happens when you read Dante alongside Kafka, Homer alongside contemporary fiction from Africa or East Asia, or poetry from one century in dialogue with drama from another. The discipline develops not just knowledge of a wide range of literatures but the critical tools to understand what comparison itself reveals about how meaning is made and how human experience is represented in language. At the University of Glasgow, combining comparative literature with classics opens up an exceptionally rich intellectual space. Classical studies brings you into contact with the ancient Greek and Roman traditions that have shaped Western literature from their first appearance to the present, and that remain points of reference for writers and artists across many cultures. You will work with texts in translation and, where possible, in the original languages, developing the sensitivity to linguistic and cultural nuance that makes comparative study genuinely illuminating. The year abroad is an integral part of this part-time programme, giving you the opportunity to study literature in a different national academic context and to encounter texts and scholarly traditions that are less familiar in the UK. Graduates from comparative literature and classics programmes develop exceptional skills in close reading, cultural analysis, extended argumentation, and the ability to synthesise material from across different traditions and periods. Careers in publishing, education, journalism, translation, cultural diplomacy, museums, and the civil service are all natural destinations. The analytical precision and interpretive breadth the degree develops also transfer well into law, policy research, and management. Further study at postgraduate level in comparative literature, classics, literary theory, or translation is a well-established route for those wishing to pursue specialist academic or professional careers.
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