USC Catalogue 2023-2024 [ARCHIVED CATALOGUE]
Comparative Literature
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Comparative Literature seeks out and encourages transnational and transcultural experiences and perspectives. Our students are trained to ask broader and better questions about the many forms of cultural production surrounding them. Comparatists study the nature of literature and other media across and between different languages and cultures. They gain a broad knowledge of different cultural traditions representing writers and artists of diverse origins and from many historical periods. In addition to cross-linguistic and cross-cultural literary studies, the undergraduate program explores literature in social, political, intellectual, and historical context and the relationship of literature to other arts, philosophy, and media, including digital media. The Department of Comparative Literature offers both a major and minor in comparative studies.
Students in Comparative Literature work with emergent and established scholars at the cutting edge of their various fields and disciplines. Our undergraduates are encouraged to adopt comparative study and literary theory not only as integral elements of interdisciplinary academic work but as crucial tools of democratic citizenship in global contexts. The department has strengths in critical theory and in both Western and non-Western literary and cultural traditions, including United States, Latin American and Caribbean, Western European, Middle Eastern, East Asian and South Asian. The broad scope of scholarly expertise represented in the department enables students to reflect critically, across their course of studies, on the ways in which globalization affects the creation, dissemination, and consumption of culture and to analyze literature, arts, and media as sites of resistance to and rethinking of this globalization.
Our undergraduate program is more broadly conceived than at many other universities. While we offer traditional comparative literature courses that cross the boundaries of national literatures and study literary periods, movements, and genres, our courses also allow students to explore literature in its interaction with philosophy, to discover the relation of literature to other arts and media, and to reflect on practices of translation as themselves modes of transcultural exchange and production. The strong non-Western component in the undergraduate program encourages our students to think with nuance and complexity about the place of literature in wider social and political contexts.
Taper Hall of Humanities 161
(213) 740-0102
FAX: (213) 740-8058
Email: complit@dornsife.usc.edu
dornsife.usc.edu/colt
Chair: Julián Gutiérrez Albilla, PhD
Faculty
University Professor, Aerol Arnold Chair of English and Professor of English, American Studies and Ethnicity, and Comparative Literature: Viet Thanh Nguyen, PhD* (English)
University Professor and Professor of English and Comparative Literature: David St. John, MFA (English)
University Professor, The T.C. Wang Family Endowed Chair in Cinematic Arts, Professor of Cinema and Media Studies, Comparative Literature, and East Asian Languages and Cultures: Akira Mizuta Lippit, PhD (Cinema and Media Studies)
USC Associates Chair in Humanities and Professor of English, American Studies & Ethnicity and Comparative Literature: John Rowe, PhD (English)
Gender Studies Professor in Media and Gender and Professor of English, Comparative Literature and Gender Studies: Joseph A. Boone, PhD (English)
Professors: Erin Graff Zivin, PhD (Latin American and Iberian Cultures); Julian Gutierrez-Albilla, PhD (Latin American and Iberian Cultures); Aniko Imre, PhD (Cinema and Media Studies); David E. James, PhD (Cinematic Arts); Margaret Rosenthal, PhD* (French and Italian); Hilary M. Schor, PhD (English); Alexander Zholkovsky, PhD* (Slavic Languages and Literatures)
Associate Professors: Gian-Maria Annovi, PhD (French and Italian); Brian Bernards, PhD (East Asian Languages and Cultures); David T. Bialock, PhD (East Asian Languages and Cultures); Roberto Ignacio Díaz, PhD* (Latin American and Iberian Cultures); Devin Griffiths, PhD (English); Olivia C. Harrison, PhD (French and Italian); Heather James, PhD* (English); Neetu Khanna, PhD*; Natania Meeker, PhD*, Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes Academiques; (French and Italian); Panivong Norindr, PhD (French and Italian); Samuel Steinberg, PhD (Latin American and Iberian Cultures); Antonia Szabari, PhD (French and Italian)
Assistant Professors: Natalie Belisle, PhD (Latin American and Iberian Cultures); Sarah Rebecca Kessler, PhD (English); Ronald Mendoza-de Jesus, PhD (Latin American and Iberian Cultures); Veli N. Yasin, PhD; Mlondolozi Zondi, PhD
Professor (Teaching): Jason Webb, PhD
Associate Professor (Teaching): Mia Du Plessis, PhD
Emeritus Professors: Vincent Farenga, PhD* (Classics); Peggy Kamuf, PhD, Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes Academiques (French and Italian); Gloria Orenstein, PhD; Albert Sonnenfeld*, PhD, Chevalier de l’Ordre des Palmes Academiques (French and Italian); William G. Thalmann, PhD* (Classics)
*Recipient of university-wide or college teaching award.
Graduate Degrees
The MA and PhD in comparative literature are offered through the Comparative Studies in Literature and Culture program, as described .
Bachelor’s Degree
Minor
Graduate Certificate
Comparative Literature
- • COLT 101gp Masterpieces and Masterminds: Literature and Thought
- • COLT 102g On Location: The Place of Literature in Global Cultures
- • COLT 250g Cultures of Latin America
- • COLT 251g Modern Literature and Thought of the West Since 1800
- • COLT 255gw Southeast Asian Literature and Film
- • COLT 264gp Asian Aesthetic and Literary Traditions
- • COLT 302 Introduction to Literary Theory
- • COLT 303 Globalization: Culture, Change, Resistance
- • COLT 311 Epic
- • COLT 312 Heroes, Myths and Legends in Literature and the Arts
- • COLT 324 Women in Medieval and Renaissance Europe
- • COLT 331g The Black Atlantic: Narratives of Migration and Travel
- • COLT 335 Decadence and Modernity
- • COLT 345 Realist Fiction
- • COLT 346 Fictions of the First Person
- • COLT 347g Modern Arab Culture and Literature
- • COLT 348 Modernist Fiction
- • COLT 354 Revolutions in Theater
- • COLT 357 The Avant-Garde
- • COLT 360gp Fictions of Africa
- • COLT 365 Literature and Popular Culture
- • COLT 370 Leaders and Communities: Classical Models
- • COLT 372gp Medicine, Health and the Body in Literature and Culture
- • COLT 373 Literature and Film
- • COLT 374gm Women Writers in Europe and America
- • COLT 375 Latin American Cultural and Literary Theory
- • COLT 377 Gender and Sexuality in Literary Theory
- • COLT 379 Nationalism and Postcolonialism in Southeast Asian Cinema
- • COLT 381 Psychoanalysis and the Arts
- • COLT 382gw Zen and Daoism in Asian Literature
- • COLT 385 Literature and Justice
- • COLT 390 Special Problems
- • COLT 391 Literary Criticism from Plato to Postmodernism
- • COLT 393 Seminar in French Thought and Theory
- • COLT 395w Urban Crossroads: Budapest
- • COLT 415 Queer Cinema, Literature and the Visual Arts
- • COLT 420 The Fantastic
- • COLT 426 Utopias
- • COLT 437 Arabic Autobiography: Writing and Interpreting the Self
- • COLT 445 Europe and the Writing of Others
- • COLT 447 Traveling Genres: Politics/Poetics of Modern Arabic Prose
- • COLT 448 Multilingual Encounters
- • COLT 449g Dante
- • COLT 451 Opera and Cultural Theory
- • COLT 453 Bildungsroman in Modern East Asia
- • COLT 454 Aesthetic Philosophy and Theory
- • COLT 460 Love, Self and Gender in Japanese Literature
- • COLT 462 Soundtracks of Our Lives
- • COLT 470 Literature and Media in Latin America
- • COLT 471 Literature, Theory, History
- • COLT 472 Los Angeles Crime Fiction
- • COLT 474 Desire, Literature, Technology
- • COLT 475 Politics and the Novel
- • COLT 476 Narrative and the Law
- • COLT 478 Family in Theory and Literature
- • COLT 480 Dada and Surrealism
- • COLT 485 The Shoah (Holocaust) in Literature and the Arts
- • COLT 486 Deconstructive Thought
- • COLT 487 Critical Image
- • COLT 490x Directed Research
- • COLT 495 Senior Honors Thesis
Other Courses
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