

MA Comparative Literature and French and German
About this course
Comparative literature is the study of texts across linguistic, cultural, and national boundaries. It is a discipline that refuses to treat any single literary tradition as normative or complete, instead asking what happens when you read literatures in relation to each other: what patterns, differences, and unexpected resonances emerge when you place a medieval Japanese narrative alongside a nineteenth-century European novel, or a post-colonial poem from the Caribbean alongside a classical text from North Africa. Combining this with French and German gives you not just a theoretical framework for reading across boundaries but the practical linguistic tools to engage with two of the richest literary traditions in Europe in their original languages. At St Andrews this four-year full-time programme includes a year abroad, spent in an environment where one or both of your languages are spoken. Comparative literature at St Andrews is designed to open literary study across genres, periods, and languages, drawing on expertise from across the School of Modern Languages. The comparative element allows you to read texts from any tradition, in English translation, pushing at the boundaries of textual analysis in ways that a single-tradition degree cannot. The French and German components develop practical linguistic training alongside deep engagement with the literature, thought, and cultural history carried in each language. The combination of comparative theoretical frameworks, linguistic depth in two major European languages, and the international experience of the year abroad makes this a distinctively rich degree. Graduates of comparative literature programmes with language qualifications find careers in publishing, translation, journalism, cultural diplomacy, education, and the arts sector. The analytical rigour, linguistic versatility, and ability to work across cultural frameworks that the degree develops are also valued in law, consultancy, international business, and the civil service. Many graduates continue to postgraduate study in comparative literature, translation studies, European studies, or creative writing, and the degree provides strong preparation for academic research careers in the humanities.
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