

High Drop-out Rate Alert
20% of students drop out or transfer from this specific course. Consider asking why on an open day.
MA Comparative Literature/French
About this course
Comparative literature is the study of literary texts across national boundaries, language traditions, historical periods and generic forms, asking what literature shares and what divides it when you move from one cultural context to another. At the University of Glasgow, combining comparative literature with French over five years of full-time study means you develop the breadth of cross-cultural literary understanding that defines the discipline alongside the deep linguistic and cultural fluency in French that distinguishes a language graduate. The programme includes a sandwich year and a work placement, grounding an intellectually ambitious academic education in real professional experience. A typical tariff of around 232 points reflects the competitive nature of this programme. In the comparative literature strand, you will read widely across traditions in English translation and in the original languages you develop, encountering fiction, poetry, drama and critical theory from across European and world literary cultures, studying how texts travel between languages and contexts and what is gained and lost in translation. The French strand builds your linguistic competence to a very high level while also developing your engagement with French and Francophone literature from the medieval period to the contemporary. Glasgow's department is internationally recognised in both areas, and the programme benefits from teaching by researchers active at the frontier of both fields. The five-year duration allows for depth and maturity of engagement that shorter degrees cannot match. Graduates pursue careers in academic research and teaching, literary translation, publishing, journalism, cultural diplomacy, arts administration, broadcasting and the creative industries. The combination of comparative literary training and high-level French is valued wherever deep engagement with texts, ideas and cultural contexts matters. Many graduates proceed to doctoral research in comparative literature, French studies or related disciplines, or to postgraduate study in translation, cultural management or journalism.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 55 respondents (86% response rate)
Similarly Ranked Alternatives
What comes next? π
Choosing the right university starts with choosing the right school. Explore transparent, data-driven school profiles powered by official DfE statistics.
Explore Schools on WhatSchool.ai β