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Comparative Studies in Literature & Culture

As a CSLC major, you will study how different literatures and languages, in combination with various other forms of cultural expression (music, art, philosophy, the sciences), structure a given culture’s experience of the world—as well as how they shape our own.

As a major and department almost entirely unique to Occidental, Comparative Studies in Literature and Culture allows you to investigate the ways in which literature uses all the devices and resources of a given language not simply to “entertain”, but more fundamentally, to open its readers and listeners up to the manifold possibilities of their world—to make (and remake) the horizons of intelligibility within which the speakers of a common language ordinarily dwell. To adapt the words of Henry David Thoreau, to study in CSLC is nothing less than to explore how the shape of our words can “affect the quality of the day”, how they “carve and paint the very atmosphere and medium” in we which move, live, think, and breathe.

Literature and language, of course, do not operate in isolation from a myriad of other aspects (intellectual, physical, emotional) of a culture. CSLC thus invites its students to develop, in consultation with department faculty, a collaboratively designed and fully interdisciplinary major that engages at least one specific literature and language, and one specialized external discipline, of the student’s own choosing. You might elect, for example, to study German literature in relation to music or painting, Ancient Greek literature in relation to biology or economics, Chinese prose and poetry in relation to film; alternatively, students might wish to compare the literary and cultural forms of different language groups—Roman epic in relation to Spanish or Russian novel, or Persian love lyric in relation to Japanese song.

The department offers courses in subjects such as German, Russian, Arabic, Ancient Greek, Latin, Persian and Nahuatl (Aztec). With the permission of their home department, students may also petition to study French and Spanish as part of their CSLC major.

As an interdisciplinary major that seeks to articulate the connection between all major forms of human cultural expression—literature, language, art, science, philosophy—CSLC provides an excellent preparation for all manner of graduate studies, and has successfully prepared students for careers in fields as diverse as education and computer gaming, law and medicine, business administration and the creative arts.

Գٲ’s major allows you to combine the study of either two foreign languages or a language and linguistics.

Meet Our Faculty

What Our Graduates Are Doing

Ph.D. program in classics, Stanford University

Alyson Melzer
2011

MFA program, acting, London Academy of Music & Dramatic Arts

Cassie Dutton
2023

Ph.D., Near Eastern Studies, Johns Hopkins University

Mason Wilkes
2009

Post-Baccalaureate program in Classics, UCLA

Emma Denend
2023

Ph.D., English & Comparative Lit, Princeton University

Lisa Kraege
2011

Founder, Goest Perfumes

Jacqueline Steele
2011

Ph.D., Comparative Literature, Yale University

Sydney Mitsunaga Whitten
2011

Ph.D. program in comparative lit, Johns Hopkins University

Marshall Meyer
2018

Fulbright English Teaching Assistantship

Bia Pinho
2023
Contact Comparative Studies in Literature & Culture
Johnson Hall 407