
Requirements
Previously, the Department required Ph.D. students first to obtain an M.A. before proceeding in the Ph.D. program. There is no longer an M.A. requirement, and the procedure of the second year review is in place. All students in the program are admitted to work toward the Ph.D. All applicants apply to the Ph.D. program (either Ph.D. only, or M.A./Ph.D.), and cannot apply directly to a terminal master’s program. Please see Section II below for more information about the second year review and M.A. degree.
The Ph.D. program is designed to provide familiarity with one literature in
comprehensive historical and critical ways and the demonstrated ability to do comparative
work in three literatures. The Ph.D. is awarded upon the successful completion of a
doctoral dissertation.
The Ph.D. program requires:
- A minimum of 10 courses taken at Berkeley distributed as follows:
- Comparative Literature 200 OR one course from the C.L. 202 series
- Three additional graduate courses in Comparative Literature
- Four graduate courses in the major literature
- One graduate course in each of the two minor literatures.
Students admitted from graduate programs elsewhere will have their courses evaluated by
an advisor and approved by the Vice Chair for credit towards the ten course requirement
and "coverage."
- Completion of the second year review. No later than the fourth semester, students
meet with a committee of three faculty members to review progress toward the degree and
plan the remaining work required for the Ph.D. For those students who wish a terminal M.A.
degree or for those who wish to continue in the Ph.D. program with a formal Master's
title, a Master's examination is required at this time.
- Historical coverage in the major literature as demonstrated by coursework or
inclusion of items on the Ph.D. reading list.
- Knowledge of at least three foreign languages other than English.
- A Qualifying Examination for which the student prepares reading lists for one major
literature and two minor literatures and indicates an area of focus via a statement of
interest. The examination consists of both a written and an oral portion.
- A doctoral dissertation based on a prospectus presented the semester following
successful completion of the Qualifying Examination.
Progress toward the Degree
The U.C. Berkeley Graduate Division has established a "normative time" of
seven years for completion of the Ph.D. degree in Comparative Literature. Following is a
recommended timetable:
- Second year review (or M.A. coursework and examinations) completed by end of fourth
semester
- Ph.D. coursework and Qualifying Examination completed by the end of the eighth semester
- Dissertation completed by the end of the fourteenth semester.
While students are urged to stay within this timetable, the department also recognizes
that there are legitimate reasons for deviating from it. Students are required to review
their progress with their advisors during the enrollment period each semester, as progress
toward the degree is an important factor weighed by the department when making fellowship
evaluations and hiring Graduate Student Instructors.
Fellowships and Financial Aid
A limited number of fellowships are awarded each year to new and continuing graduate
students in the University fellowship competition. Qualified students in certain
literatures may also apply for Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) fellowships.
Students interested in other award sources are encouraged to read the literature issued by
the Fellowship Office of the Graduate Division, which describes various restricted
fellowships and outside grants, e.g., Chancellor's Dissertation Year Fellowships,
Fulbrights, etc. In addition, the Comparative Literature Department has instituted a
program, funded by the Mellon Foundation, to support students in the initial stages of
writing doctoral dissertations.
The Department receives a limited number of out-of-state tuition waivers which it uses
each year to assist students who are not California residents with the out-of-state
portion of their registration fees.
The Office of Financial Aid (201 Sproul Hall) provides information on Federally Insured
Student Loans, University Loans, and Emergency Loans, as well as on Grants-in-Aid, the
National Direct Student Loan Program, College Work-Study and Educational Fee Deferments.
Employment of Graduate Students
U.C. Berkeley allows half-time teaching appointments for periods of up to four years
for graduate students making good progress toward their degrees. Comparative Literature
employs continuing graduate students (i.e., those who have completed at least one year in
the program) as Teaching Assistants and Instructors to staff undergraduate reading and
composition courses. Students are also occasionally employed by other language and
literature departments on the Berkeley campus. Incoming graduate students interested in
teaching their first year at Berkeley should contact the appropriate departments directly.
Research assistantships and reader positions are also available in Comparative Literature
and other departments.