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BA Comparative Literature
About this course
Comparative literature is the study of literary texts across national, cultural and linguistic boundaries, asking what happens when you read works from different traditions alongside each other and what insights emerge that single-tradition study cannot produce. Rather than treating English, French or Spanish literature as separate national traditions to be understood within their own boundaries, comparative literature asks how stories travel, how meaning shifts across languages and cultures, how genres and forms evolve through contact between traditions, and what universal dimensions of human experience literature reveals when approached with genuinely wide-ranging curiosity. At King's College London you will study for three years full-time in an intellectually stimulating environment in central London, taught by leading experts and engaging with a curriculum that embraces ten languages and five continents, spanning more than 2,500 years of literary production. The focus extends well beyond European literature to include the Americas, the Middle East, South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa, giving you an engagement with world literature that is genuinely global rather than implicitly Eurocentric. You will develop skills in close reading, critical theory, translation and cross-cultural analysis that transfer across a wide range of professional and intellectual contexts. Comparative literature graduates work in publishing, journalism, translation, arts administration, broadcasting, cultural policy, education, research and a wide range of professional roles in the cultural and creative sectors. The combination of linguistic range, critical rigour and cultural breadth is valued in international organisations, diplomatic and cultural institutions, and any context where the ability to engage with ideas across cultural and linguistic boundaries is an asset. Many graduates pursue postgraduate study in comparative literature, literary theory, translation studies or a specific national literature, developing specialist expertise on the broad international foundation the undergraduate degree provides.
Syllabus & Modules
Typical curriculumStudent Satisfaction
National Student Survey - 15 respondents (72% response rate)
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