Students
Tuition Fee
Not Available
Start Date
Not Available
Medium of studying
Not Available
Duration
Not Available
Details
Program Details
Degree
Bachelors
Major
Comparative Literature | English Literature | Literature
Area of study
Humanities
Course Language
English
About Program

Program Overview


Comparative Literary Studies Program

The Comparative Literary Studies (CLS) Program is an interdepartmental, interdisciplinary program for the study of literature across national and linguistic lines. Those who work in the field of comparative literature are committed to the proposition that language is not an indifferent medium of expression but an integral dimension of every expressive act. Drawing on faculty from the various literature departments as well as from other disciplines (such as art history, film studies, music, and philosophy), the CLS program reflects the belief that literary texts can best be understood within the context of diverse literary traditions and other cultural phenomena. CLS encourages students not only to read and interpret works of literature but also to reflect on the assumptions, methods, and goals that shape literary and other humanistic studies.


Program Description

In contrast to literature departments in which students trace the development of one literature in a particular culture over a specific time period, CLS juxtaposes literatures of different cultures and epochs in a variety of ways. Comparative literature studies the themes, conventions, and movements shared by distinct literary traditions as well as the features that differentiate them. Though the field has traditionally dealt with the canonical texts of Western literature, Northwestern’s CLS program strongly encourages students to explore literatures outside the European and American canon (especially those of Africa and Asia) as well as expand the Western canon to include the literatures of excluded or marginalized groups.


Interdisciplinary Approach

CLS students also examine literary theories and critical approaches to literature. In considering texts ranging from the classics of ancient Greek and Roman civilizations to contemporary critical theory, students not only learn to understand specific literary works but also to raise questions about their relations to other forms of discourse (e.g., historical, scientific, and philosophical) and about the nature of literature itself. To this end, the CLS program emphasizes both the study of various types of specifically literary theory (such as structuralist, poststructuralist, psychoanalytic, sociopolitical, and New Historical) and the examination of the theoretical and methodological concerns of other disciplines (such as anthropology, history, philosophy, gender studies, and sociology).


Relationship to Other Arts

Finally, comparative literary studies considers literary texts in relation to other forms of creative production. The relationship of literature to other arts such as music, the fine arts, and new media is an important focus of interest in many comparative literature courses, and students of comparative literary studies are also encouraged to take courses in other fields and disciplines.


Undergraduate Program

  • First-Year Focus
  • Learn more about Comp Lit (FAQs)
  • Courses
  • The Major
  • World Literature Minor
  • Study Abroad
  • BA/MA
  • Awards & Prizes

Graduate Program

  • Application
  • Requirements
  • Graduate Funding
  • Courses
  • Interdisciplinary Cluster Initiative
  • Graduate Student Placements
  • Resources
  • Summer Institute of Psychoanalysis

People

  • Core Faculty
  • Affiliated Faculty
  • Graduate Students
    • Alumni
  • Visiting Faculty
  • Faculty On Leave
  • Staff

Interdisciplinary Partners

  • African Studies
  • Asian Languages & Cultures
  • Black Studies
  • Classics
  • Critical Theory
  • English
  • French & Italian
  • Gender & Sexuality Studies
  • German
  • Jewish & Israel Studies
  • Middle East and North African Studies
  • Philosophy
  • Poetry & Poetics Colloquium
  • Slavic Languages & Literatures
  • Spanish & Portuguese
See More