|
Chair: Andrea Goulet
Program Coordinator: JoAnne Dubil
The undergraduate program in Comparative Literature welcomes students
interested in the study of more than one national literature viewed
within the context of criticism and theory, interdisciplinary and
multicultural perspectives, and philosophic modes of thought. The
program fosters the study of literature and culture from a
cross-national and global perspective. The core courses teach
students to appreciate the variety of meanings texts acquire in
different social, cultural, institutional and creative contexts, among them law,
medicine, art and music, and different social contexts, such as gender,
ethnicity, race and class. Advanced courses branch out from this
beginning, from further explorations into literary theory to specific
investigations of literary genres and periods within particular
national and cultural traditions.
Comparative Literature is a challenging major given
its theory and language requirements but it is also a very flexible
program, allowing students to take courses in a variety of departments
in the College. Students with interdisciplinary interests in literature
and other fields such as philosophy, history, political science, art,
film, or music, will find the requirements very congenial and well
suited for a double major. The program provides students with a
cosmopolitan intellectual background that will be increasingly in
demand in an era of globalization. Comparative literature graduates have gone
on to graduate studies and careers in an impressive variety of fields.
The minor in Comparative Literature mirrors the
concentrations of the major, thus allowing students to take a wide
range of courses that combine well with various majors in The College.
, Program Coordinator
720 Williams Hall
Philadelphia, PA 19104
phone: 215-898-6836
fax: 215-573-9451
|