Course Catalog 2020-2021 [ARCHIVED CATALOG]
Comparative Literature
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Anuradha (Anu) Needham, Donald R. Longman Professor of English; Program Director
Anna Levett, Visiting Assistant Professor
Stiliana Milkova, Assistant Professor, Comparative Literature
Kirk W. Ormand, Professor of Classics and Comparative Literature
Sheera Talpaz, Assistant Professor of Comparative Literature and Jewish Studies
Sevinç Türkkan, Visiting Assistant Professor
Visit the department webpage for up-to-date information on department faculty, visiting lecturers and special events.
Comparative literature (CMPL) is the study of literature, theory, and criticism across the boundaries of language, nation, culture, artistic medium, genre, and historical period. Faculty in Oberlin’s program are drawn from across the humanities, arts, and social sciences, and the curriculum emphasizes these important areas of the discipline:
- Literary Theory
- Literature and the Other Arts
- World Literature
- Asian and European Languages and Literatures
- Translation
Comparative literature enables students to integrate their studies in more than one discipline. Because the major requires a combination of depth, breadth, and creativity, students consult with advisors to create individualized curricular pathways. Majors must demonstrate advanced proficiency in at least one language other than English and write a capstone or honors project.
Program alumni have attended top graduate programs, received numerous Fulbrights and other fellowships, and gone on to successful careers in academia, journalism, film, theater, translation, non-profits, publishing, libraries, the arts, and teaching at all levels.
Curriculum Overview
Comparative literature offers coursework for the major and minor. Because many departments contribute courses to comparative literature, students with an interest in the discipline should consult with their advisor and the program director to define an individual area of emphasis. For example, several courses presented for the major might focus on a specific period or movement (the Renaissance, modernism), a genre (tragedy, lyric poetry), a problem (literature and the other arts, translation) or an approach (feminism, post-structuralism).
Students must take at least one 400-level course in a foreign language taught in a language other than English. For the following four languages, the required level is 300: Greek, Latin, Chinese, or Japanese. Outside of the classroom, majors and others may attend our annual Translation Symposium that brings prominent comparatists to campus. We encourage students to study abroad for a semester or a year in one of the many Oberlin-affiliated programs.
See information about Research, Internships, Study Away and Experiential Learning (RISE).
Explore Winter Term projects and opportunities.
Majors and Minors
Courses- CMPL 200 - Introduction to Comparative Literature
- CMPL 202 - Women,Sex,Taboos ME Cine & Lit
- CMPL 203 - Polycentrics Modernism
- CMPL 204 - Introduction to Literature and Music
- CMPL 206 - Modern Chinese Literature and Film
- CMPL 208 - Queer Beginnings: 1990
- CMPL 210 - Music in Literature
- CMPL 215 - Literary and Visual Cultures of Protest in Japan
- CMPL 220 - Travel and the Idea of Home
- CMPL 222 - Ovid in the Middle Ages
- CMPL 225 - The Existentialist Imagination in Russia and Europe
- CMPL 230 - Introduction to Literature and the Visual Arts
- CMPL 233 - The Literature of Decadence: The Art of Sensation
- CMPL 235 - The Arabian Nights beyond “East” and “West”
- CMPL 236 - Cultural and Intellectual History of Istanbul
- CMPL 240 - Gender, Power, and Desire in Middle Eastern and North African Literatures
- CMPL 247OC - Shakespeare in the Colonies
- CMPL 250 - Introduction to Literary Translation: Theory, History, Practice
- CMPL 265 - Anglophone Postcolonial Literatures
- CMPL 266 - Forgotten Orientalisms: Alternative Views of the East
- CMPL 271 - Italian Lit in Translation
- CMPL 272 - Literature and Human Rights
- CMPL 277 - Israel/Palestine in Literature and Film
- CMPL 278 - Jewish/Jew-ish Literatures
- CMPL 279 - Poetry and Political Activism
- CMPL 291 - Topics & Forms: The OULIPO & Constraint
- CMPL 302 - Femmes Fatales: Narratives of Feminine Evil, Sexuality, and Perversity
- CMPL 304 - Shakespeare and Metamorphosis
- CMPL 305 - The Global Phenomenon of Elena Ferrante
- CMPL 316 - Surrealistas en M
- CMPL 320 - Guest, Host, Stranger: Hospitality in the Mediterranean World
- CMPL 327 - Surrealism Narrative from Center to Margins
- CMPL 330 - Literature, Architecture, and Real Estate
- CMPL 342 - Religion and Disenchantment in 20th-century Literature
- CMPL 347 - Sophistications: Queer Postwar New York-Paris Connections
- CMPL 350 - Advanced Translation Workshop: Poetry
- CMPL 351 - Advanced Translation Workshop: Prose and Drama
- CMPL 364 - Orhan Pamuk and the Politics of World Literature
- CMPL 365 - Love and Death: Jewish Literature and Culture of the Americas
- CMPL 366 - Love and Death: Jewish Literature and Culture of the Americas LxC
- CMPL 367 - The French Joyce
- CMPL 368 - French Joyce LxC
- CMPL 370 - Seminar: Itineraries of Postmodernism
- CMPL 372 - Contemporary Literary Theory: Post-Modernity and Imagination
- CMPL 375 - Franco-Arab Encounters
- CMPL 376 - Realism, 1800 to the Present: The Mirror Up to Nature
- CMPL 377 - Migrant Subjects and the Postcolonial Novel
- CMPL 391 - European Modernism & World
- CMPL 400 - Senior Capstone Project
- CMPL 401 - Tango: Politics & Poetics LxC
- CMPL 402 - Avant-Garde in Am
- CMPL 404 - Autonomy and Economics in Literature of the Américas
- CMPL 410 - Tango: The Politics and Poetics of a National Icon
- CMPL 419 - Big Old Funny Books: Cervantes, Rabelais, Sterne
- CMPL 430 - Literature and Music of Heartbreak
- CMPL 440 - Music, Orality & Literature
- CMPL 441 - Plague Narratives: Narratology and Immunology
- CMPL 471 - Medicine, Literature, Biopower LXC
- CMPL 472 - Medicine, Literature, Biopower
- CMPL 501 - Honors Project
- CMPL 502 - Honors Project
- CMPL 995F - Private Reading - Full
- CMPL 995H - Private Reading - Half
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