

MA Comparative Literature/German
About this course
Comparative literature and German together form a combination that allows you to engage with literary traditions across cultural and national boundaries while also developing genuine linguistic fluency and cultural depth in one of Europe's great languages. 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. It asks you to read widely and to develop the critical vocabulary to understand what is distinctive about particular literary traditions when set against others. German brings you into direct contact with one of the richest literary and philosophical traditions in the world, from Goethe and Schiller through Mann, Brecht, and Sebald to contemporary writing, alongside the linguistic competence to engage with that tradition in the original. At the University of Glasgow, this five-year full-time programme combines comparative literature with German study and includes a sandwich year and work placement opportunities, giving you the chance to develop your professional skills in a relevant working context alongside your academic studies. The five-year structure allows you to develop both the breadth of comparative literary study and the depth of language acquisition that German requires, building your fluency alongside your critical understanding. You will develop skills in close reading, literary analysis, cultural history, translation, and independent research, working across languages and literary traditions in ways that few degree programmes allow. The combination of comparative literary knowledge and German language skills is valued by employers across a wide range of sectors. Graduates pursue careers in publishing, translation and interpreting, arts administration, cultural journalism, teaching, the civil service, international business, and organisations with interests in German-speaking Europe. The analytical and communication skills developed by both disciplines transfer well into law, public affairs, and management consultancy. Postgraduate study in comparative literature, German studies, translation, European cultural studies, or related fields is a natural progression for those wishing to specialise or pursue academic research.
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