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The Global and Comparative Literature program enables students to examine diverse literary works and cultural media within their historical and social frameworks. This major emphasizes dual literary traditions, requiring engagement with texts in their native languages. Students in this cross-disciplinary field can investigate intersections between literature and various domains including philosophy, political science, artistic expression, and cinematic arts.
Housed within Georgetown University's Faculty of Languages and Linguistics, the Global and Comparative Literature program provides undergraduates with distinctive opportunities to master multiple linguistic and cultural traditions while analyzing their interconnections. The curriculum cultivates advanced analytical, interpretive, and composition abilities through customizable coursework aligned with each student's scholarly objectives. This field encourages transnational literary exploration across languages, cultures, and historical periods, while considering literature's dynamic relationship with other creative expressions. The program's comparative methodology facilitates deep inquiry into literature's essence and function by examining diverse creative outputs, tracing thematic links and distinctions among works, authors, and genres, and establishing interdisciplinary conversations with fields ranging from history and political science to visual arts, musicology, and film theory.