|
NOTICE - This edition of the Catalog of Studies is provided as a courtesy to students who may be attending classes under these degree requirements. If you are a prospective student, or are attending class under a different set of degree requirements, please visit http://catalogofstudies.uark.edu/ to find your class year catalog. |
![]() |
![]() |
|
|
COMPARATIVE LITERATURE (CPLT) Mark Cory, Chair of Studies, 518 Kimpel Hall, (479) 575-5939
Comparative Literature Committee: For names of faculty teaching Comparative Literature courses, see English and foreign language faculty lists. Degrees Conferred: M.A., Ph.D. (CPLT)
The Departments of English and of Foreign Languages and Literatures offer programs designed to provide academic training for teaching courses in two or more literary fields and for teaching world literature and comparative literature courses. Through an agreement with the Academic Common Market, residents of certain southern states may qualify for graduate enrollment in some of these degree programs as in-state students for fee purposes. See Appendix A for details. Areas of Concentration: Master of Arts-classics, English, German, French, Arabic, and Spanish. Doctor of Philosophy-classics, English, German, French, Arabic, Spanish, and world literature. Prerequisites to Degree Program: The following materials must be submitted to the Chair of Studies in Comparative Literature:
Requirements for the Master of Arts Degree: The candidate must take a minimum of 36 hours of courses to be selected from offerings in the fields of classics, English, German, Arabic, French, and Spanish, under the following guidelines:
Requirements for the Doctor of Philosophy Degree: The doctoral program in comparative literature is designed so that it may be based upon a master's degree either in comparative literature or in any single field of concentration. The candidate must take a minimum of 66 graduate hours (including credit offered for the M.A. degree but excluding dissertation credit) under the conditions listed below. Candidates must have a 3.00 grade-point average in each of their fields.
COURSES: WORLD LITerature (WLIT) WLIT4123 Survey of Russian Literature from Its Beginning to the 1917 Revolu tion (IR) The instructor will discuss the historical and cultural backgrounds while focusing on major writers and will deal with literature as an outlet for social criticism. There will be textual analysis. It will be taught in English. (Same as RUSS 4123) WLIT4133 Survey of Russian Literature Since the 1917 Revolution (IR) The instructor will discuss the historical and cultural backgrounds while focusing on major writers and will deal with literature as an outlet for social criticism. There will be textual analysis. It will be taught in English with readings in English. (Same as RUSS 4133) WLIT4213 Literature and Eros (IR) Survey of important works from the classical Greeks to contemporary literature which deal with the erotic experience. Study of various theories and cultural definitions of eroticism, especially as distinct from clinical sexuality and romantic sentimentality. (Same as ENGL 3233) WLIT4273 Literature of India and the Near East (IR) Leading works and genres of the ancient civilizations, the Moslem world and India, and their contribution to the Western literary tradition. WLIT4293 Literature of China and Japan (IR) Survey of the literary works of the Far East, and of its contribution to the Western Tradition. WLIT4913 Literary Reflections of the Holocaust (IR) Drawing on fiction, poetry, autobiography, and drama from works written originally in French, Polish, German, Dutch, English, and Yiddish, this course introduces students to the Holocaust through literature. Deals with the adequacy of imaginative literature in the face of atrocity, the comparative effectiveness of fiction versus autobiography, and the dangers of exploitation and trivialization. (Same as HUMN 4913) WLIT4923 Modern World Drama (IR) Drama from Ibsen to the 1930s. (Same as ENGL 4923) WLIT4963 Contemporary World Drama (IR) Drama since the 1930s. (Same as ENGL 4963) WLIT4993 African Literature (IR) A study of modern African fiction, drama, poetry, and film from various parts of Africa in their cultural context. Works are in English or English translation. (Same as ENGL 4253) WLIT5193 Introduction to Comparative Literature (IR) Literary theory, genres, movements, and influences. (Same as ENGL 5193) Prerequisite: WLIT 1113. WLIT5233 Form and Theory of Translation (IR) An examination of the principal challenges that confront translators of literature, including the recreation of style, dialect, ambiguities, and formal poetry; vertical translation; translation where multiple manuscripts exist; and the question of how literal a translation should be. (Same as ENGL 5233) WLIT5483 Germanic and Celtic Backgrounds of Medieval Literature (IR) Literary traditions of Old and Middle English, of Germany, Ireland, Scandinavia, and Wales. (Same as ENGL 5483) WLIT5593 The Renaissance (IR) Italian forms and writers of the late 15th and 16th centuries and the spread of the Renaissance tradition in Spain, Portugal, France, and Northern Europe up to 1660. WLIT5623 The English Bible (SP) The several translations of the Bible; its qualities as great literature; its influence upon literature in English; types of literary forms. (Same as ENGL 5623) WLIT5793 The Enlightenment (IR) Literature of the late 17th and 18th centuries, especially in France and Germany. WLIT5963 Twentieth-Century Continental Novel (IR) Survey of the continental novel from 1900 to the present. (Same as ENGL 5963) WLIT600V Master's Thesis (1-6) (FA, SP, SU) WLIT603V Special Studies in Comparative Literature (1-6) (IR) WLIT690V Seminar (1-6) (IR) WLIT699V Master of Fine Arts in Translation Thesis (1-6) (FA, SP, SU) WLIT700V Doctoral Dissertation (1-12) (FA, SP, SU) |
[Jump back to the top of this page][Go back to the 01-02 Graduate Catalog Home]