Comparative Literature

Program Highlights

  • Combines courses from several national literatures.
  • Draws on interpretive methods from adjacent disciplines concerned with cultural discourses, languages, and representations, such as philosophy, history, religion, classics, Africana studies, feminist and gender studies, anthropology, music, and the history of art.

Sample Career Fields

  • Arts publicity
  • Film and television
  • Journalism
  • Marketing
  • Museum Studies
  • Publishing
     

 

Comparative Literature

Why study comparative literature at Geneseo?

This major situates literary and cultural production in an international perspective, focusing on particular works of literature, broadly defined, and literary history and theory. Studying texts of diverse cultures teaches students to put themselves in the shoes of people who see and experience the world very differently from their own perspectives. 

Students develop a critical understanding of the ways literature functions in its social, cultural, and historical context. They’ll also learn to think across national, linguistic, and cultural boundaries in innovative, rigorous and productive ways, making them particularly well suited for today’s increasingly globalized world.

Program Options

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Sample Courses

  • French Intermediate Grammar, Culture, and Communication
  • German Intermediate Grammar, Culture, and Communication
  • Reader and Text
    Reading Transnationally
  • Spanish Intermediate Grammar, Culture, and Communication

Popular Electives

  • Black British Literature and Culture
  • French-Canadian Literature
  • Intro to Film Studies
  • Latin American Literature
  • Literary Theory
  • Medieval Studies
  • Philosophy of Language

Contact Info

Lytton Smith, Professor of English and Comparative Literature Program Director
smithlj@geneseo.edu
Welles Hall 230
585-245-5273 

English dept

english faculty

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