

MA Comparative Literature/Music
About this course
Comparative literature and music are disciplines that share a concern with artistic expression across time and culture, asking how literary and musical works are made, what they communicate and how they relate to the societies that produced them. Comparative literature is the study of literary texts across national and cultural boundaries, examining how themes, forms and traditions travel, transform and resonate across different languages and contexts. Music encompasses the analysis, history and cultural study of musical traditions from multiple periods and parts of the world. Together they develop an unusually broad and sensitive engagement with human creativity. At the University of Glasgow, this part-time programme includes a year abroad, allowing you to engage with literary and musical culture in a different academic environment and to broaden your comparative perspective directly through experience rather than only through study. The part-time structure gives you the flexibility to pursue these studies alongside other commitments. You will study literature from multiple national traditions, encountering works in translation as well as in their original languages where possible, and examining how different cultures have imagined human experience. The music strand explores harmony, counterpoint, musical analysis, the history of music across periods and traditions, and the relationship between music and the broader cultural contexts in which it is made and heard. Both disciplines develop close reading and listening, analytical precision and the ability to communicate interpretive arguments persuasively. Graduates go on to careers in education, arts administration, cultural journalism, publishing, broadcasting, music organisations, literary agencies, the civil service and heritage. Some continue to postgraduate study in comparative literature, musicology, cultural studies or related disciplines, including doctoral research. The combination of literary sensitivity and musical understanding is valued across many fields where communication about culture and creative work is important.
Syllabus & Modules
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