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MA Comparative Literature/English Language
About this course
Comparative literature is the study of literary works across national borders, languages, historical periods, and genres, examining what texts share and how they differ, and what those comparisons reveal about human experience, cultural identity, and the nature of storytelling itself. Where English literature focuses on a single language and tradition, comparative literature asks bigger questions about what makes a work canonical, how translations mediate between cultures, and how literature relates to other art forms and to the social and political contexts in which it is produced. Pairing it with English Language gives you the linguistic and analytical tools to examine how language itself shapes literary meaning. At the University of Glasgow, this four-year full-time degree brings these two disciplines into productive dialogue. You will study literary works from multiple traditions, reading across languages and cultural contexts, while also developing your understanding of how English language works at the levels of grammar, discourse, and meaning-making. You will engage with literary theory, translation studies, and the history of literary forms, developing both a wide cultural range and a precise analytical vocabulary. The programme includes a year abroad, an experience that enriches the comparative dimension of the degree by situating you within a different literary and cultural environment. You will develop sophisticated reading, interpretive, and critical writing skills, alongside the capacity to think across disciplinary and cultural boundaries. These are capacities that employers in many fields value, particularly those where complex communication and nuanced thinking about language and culture are required. Graduates move into careers in publishing, translation, journalism, education, the cultural sector, the civil service, and international business, among many others. The combination of literary analysis and linguistic knowledge is particularly valuable in postgraduate study in comparative literature, translation studies, linguistics, or literary theory. Many graduates also pursue careers in teaching, cultural diplomacy, or research.
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