
The Concept of Comparative Literature:
No single definition of Comparative Literature would easily satisfy any
two scholars associated with the discipline. Not surprisingly, then, students
considering a major in this department often have diverse conceptions
of the kind of study they are embarking upon. Indeed, comparative literature
is a complex discipline in large part because of the diversity of interests
of the people engaged in it. As a major in the department, you will be
asked to do a number of different things which reflect the complexities
behind the concept of Comparative Literature.
1. You will be asked to familiarize yourself with literature from at
least two different national traditions, studied in their original languages.
In its most obvious sense, Comparative Literature might be seen to start
here. By studying different literary traditions, you will begin to be
able to imagine what might constitute differences or similarities between
those literatures.
2. You will be asked to think about literature not only from differing
national traditions, but from widely separated historical periods as well.
Thus Comparative Literature might also involve imagining what
historical differences in the conception of literature teach us about
its own nature or its function.
3. You will be asked to think about what the verb compare means when
applied to a specific group of authors or texts from different literatures
(Comparative Literature 190). What do you compare when you compare authors,
or literature, or specific works of literature? What theoretical problems
do various acts of comparison raise?
4. You will be asked to think theoretically about the idea of literature
itself, about, for example, some of the following questions. How and why
is literature divided into different genres or different periods? How
is literature situated within a given society? How is literature different
from other domains such as philosophy or psychoanalysis or politics? Students
interested in literary theory will find much in the study of comparative
literature to interest them, for example the challenge of confronting
Western literary theory with previously unexplored non-Western literatures.
Why Comparative Literature?
One of the advantages of a major in such a field as Comparative Literature,
formed out of a variety of different concerns about literature, is that
it allows a student, within a set of general requirements, to follow a
program of study which contains a great deal of freedom, a program which
can be greatly shaped by the student's own interests. If you are interested
in relations between various literatures, in literatures not often studied
or not studied in conjunction, in literature studied in relation to philosophy
or politics or the other arts or other disciplines, or in the relationship
between film and literature, you may be able to design a program within
the Department of Comparative Literature which will help you to pursue
your interests.
If you are thinking of continuing your education in a professional school
of some sort, a Comparative Literature major can both give you an excellent
general education in the humanities and leave you the flexibility to pursue
your other fields of interests -- in the Sciences or Social Sciences,
for example. Majors in Comparative Literature at Berkeley usually experience
no difficulty in preparing themselves for graduate study in Law, Business,
Librarianship, and other professional curricula.
A Comparative Literature major is also excellent preparation for an academic
career. Graduates from the Department of Comparative Literature at Berkeley
currently teach English, Latin, and modern foreign languages at the the
high school level. Comparative Literature majors are also well prepared
for graduate study and research in both Comparative Literature and the
literatures in which they have specialized. Holders of graduate degrees
in Comparative Literature teach in Departments of English, Classics, Modern
Foreign Languages, Near Eastern Studies, Oriental Studies, and Comparative
Literature at various colleges and universities.
Who May Major in Comparative Literature?
Anyone who is interested in literature and has the linguistic aptitude
to pursue the study of a foreign language beyond the sophomore level may
major in Comparative Literature at Berkeley. The major program is especially
suitable for those students who have the preparation necessary to undertake
junior or senior work in more than one department of instruction.
How to Major in Comparative Literature:
If you are thinking of majoring in Comparative Literature, you should
meet with a departmental major adviser at your earliest opportunity, and
tentatively map out a program for yourself within the major. You will
probably discover that the requirements are flexible enough to suit you,
and may find it to your advantage to ask the departmental adviser to suggest
relevant freshman and sophomore courses.
Majors must see the Student Affairs Officer or a faculty adviser each
semester to plan a program for the coming year, and to obtain their AC
(Adviser Code) numbers in order to pre-enroll via TeleBEARS. Before
calling upon your adviser, please familiarize yourself with the basic
requirements listed below. Keep in mind that most of these requirements
must be interpreted according to literatures in which you plan to work
and your own long-range plans: you are strongly advised to read everything
in this pamphlet before deciding what requirements apply to you and what
course of study seems most suitable to your aims and aptitudes.
Major Requirements in Various Literatures:
1. Only one of the various series of major field requirements
(see Checklist of Requirements) applies
to you; keep in mind that it refers to the literature which you have chosen
as a major field within your program in Comparative Literature and in
which you must complete 4 or more upper-division courses in the original
language. The minor field in Comparative Literature consists
of 2 upper-division literature courses of your choosing, in the original
language.
2. Although all reading in courses in foreign literatures which
you count in satisfaction of major and minor requirements must be done
in the original language, you may wish to select courses where the lectures
are given in English rather than in the foreign language. Since the entries
in the General Catalog are not always clear in this respect, you are advised
to inquire from individual instructors.
3. Whereas each year Berkeley offers instruction in all the relevant
areas of the literatures most frequently elected as major fields of Comparative
Literature (e.g., English, French, Italian, Latin), the same thing is
not always true of the literatures less commonly studied. If the General
Catalog shows that only one or two professors offer instruction in the
literature which you plan to emphasize within your program in Comparative
Literature, you should consult the appropriate professor or professors
to ascertain that enough courses or tutorial instruction will be available
to ensure your graduation at the end of your senior year. In some cases,
you may have to enroll in a graduate course to satisfy a requirement for
which no upper-division course or tutorial instruction is available during
a given year: make sure that the instructor will admit you, and remember
that graduate courses demand more work and intellectual commitment than
their undergraduate counterparts.
4. With the permission of your adviser and the appropriate instructor,
you may occasionally be allowed to substitute a graduate course for an
upper-division course. With your adviser's permission, a lower-division
course may occasionally be accepted in satisfaction of a specific requirement,
but it may never count in satisfaction of any of the 33 upper-division
units required in literature.
5. Some departments find it convenient to grant upper-division credit
for elementary or intermediate language courses: unless otherwise indicated
below, these courses may not be counted as part of the minimum 4 upper-division
courses required in your major literature.
Special Studies Courses: H195, 199
In accordance with a rule of the Academic Senate, a student who wishes
to pursue an individual study project under these course numbers should
submit a detailed proposal including the purpose of the course, a description
of the subject and method, and a reading list to the Director of Undergraduate
Studies. To enroll in H195, complete and submit the Honors Prospectus
Form. A decision will then be made whether to allow the student to take
the course. Each proposal will be evaluated on its intellectual and educational
merits. Projects which could be carried out within the framework of regularly
scheduled courses will not be approved for special-studies courses. The
student should discuss the feasibility of his project with the proposed
course director before submitting it for approval.
|