The Master of Arts in Comparative Literature at the University of Michigan encourages exploration across cultures, genres, and historical periods. With a strong focus on critical theory, translation studies, and global literary analysis, students develop nuanced approaches to literature and interdisciplinary scholarship.
Translating Trauma: Representations of Memory in Post-War Literature
Intersections of Myth and Modernity in Global Epic Narratives
Colonial Displacement in Francophone and Lusophone Literature
Comparative Study of Feminist Voices in Arabic and Latin American Fiction
The Role of Exile in Identity Construction Across Diasporic Texts
Eco-criticism and the Environment in Contemporary Asian Fiction
Intertextuality in the Works of Borges and Calvino
Postcolonial Rewritings of Canonical British Novels
Multilingualism and Literary Identity in 21st Century Europe
Cultural Memory and Holocaust Representation in Comparative Texts
Romanticism Reimagined in Transcultural Poetic Dialogues
Narratives of Migration in South Asian and African Diasporic Literature
Comparative Aesthetics in Eastern and Western Poetic Traditions
The Role of the Translator as Author: Case Studies in Literary Translation
Mythical Structures and Storytelling Across Indigenous Literatures
Hybridity in Graphic Novels from the Global South
Autobiographical Fiction in Comparative Perspective
Digital Literature and the Future of Transnational Narratives
Comparing Magical Realism in African and Latin American Prose
The Politics of Language in Post-Independence Literature
This program equips students with comparative and analytical tools to study literature across borders, fostering critical awareness of language, history, and power.
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