Classical Studies & Comparative Literature

Bachelor's degree

In London

£ 9,250 + VAT

Description

  • Type

    Bachelor's degree

  • Location

    London

Overview
The Classical Studies & Comparative Literature BA is an opportunity to discover the relationship between the great works of classical antiquity and subsequent works of literature. In addition to studying the ancient world and its legacy, you will receive training in the practices, methodologies and theories of comparative study. Your time will be split equally between the Classics and Comparative Literature departments.
The course information sheet is a printable version of the information on this web page, which you can download here.
Key benefits
Classics
One of the best Classics departments in the country, renowned for its quality of teaching, student experience and cutting-edge research.
King’s Department of Classics is one of the largest in the UK, with unique coverage from the Bronze Age to Modern Greece.
Central location offers collaborations with the British Museum and the Museum of London, which are incorporated into undergraduate teaching.
Our course combines focus and flexibility, allowing students to pursue their interests.
You will acquire analytical and presentational skills valued by employers, leading to careers in heritage-related professions, the media, education, civil service and the performing arts.
Comparative Literature
Our course draws on the teaching and research expertise of some of the highest ranked literature departments in the UK.
The Department of Comparative Literature at King’s covers 12 languages and six continents. It spans over 2,500 years and extends beyond the modern works of literature of Europe to the Americas, Australia, China, the Middle East, South Asia and Sub-Saharan Africa.
Central location offers students the opportunity to benefit from London’s unique cultural resources.

Facilities

Location

Start date

London
See map
Strand, WC2R 2LS

Start date

On request

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Reviews

Subjects

  • Greek
  • Latin
  • Works
  • Teaching
  • Classics
  • Art
  • University
  • Comparative Literature
  • Poetry
  • Prose

Course programme


Year 1

Year 1

King's reviews its optional modules on a regular basis, in order to continue to offer innovative and exciting programmes. Therefore, we cannot guarantee that any particular optional course will run in a given year and the options listed below are subject to change.

Courses are divided into modules. Each year you will normally take modules totalling 120 credits.

Required Modules

Classical Studies

There are no required Classics modules in Year 1

Comparative Literature

You are required to take the following Comparative Literature modules:

  • What is Comparative Literature? Conceptions and Methods (15 credits)
  • Comparative Literature: Theoretical Foundations (15 credits)
Optional Modules

Classical Studies

You will choose 60 credits from a wide range of optional Classics modules (of which a maximum of 30 credits may be language modules) which may typically include:

  • Greek Language 1 (30 credits)
  • Greek Language 2 (30 credits)
  • Greek Language 3 (30 credits)
  • Latin Language 1 (30 credits)
  • Latin Language 2 (30 credits)
  • Latin Language 3 (30 credits)
  • Art & Archaeology of Greece & Rome (30 credits)
  • Introduction to Ancient History (c. 1200 BC - AD 600) (30 credits)
  • Greek & Latin Literature: An Introduction (30 credits)
  • Introduction to Ancient Philosophy (30 credits)
  • Working with Greek & Latin Literary Texts: An Introduction (30 credits)
  • Introduction to Byzantium & Modern Greece: The Greek-speaking world from 330 AD to today (15 credits)
  • Receptions of the past: The Hellenic world from antiquity to today (15 credits)

Comparative Literature

Additionally, You will take 30 credits from a range of optional Comparative Literature modules that may typically include:

  • The Writer in the Text (15 credits)
  • Forms of Shorter Narrative (15 credits)
  • Genres of World Literature (15 credits)
  • The Novel in 18th Century Europe (15 credits)
  • Reading Modern Poetry Comparatively: Greek & English (15 credits)


Year 2

Year 2

You have the opportunity to study abroad for either the second semester of the second year or for the whole of the second year. Partner institutions currently include:

  • University of Auckland
  • University of Melbourne
  • University of Toronto (Full year only)
  • University of California
  • University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill
  • University of Sydney
Required Modules

Classical Studies

There are no required Classics modules in Year 2.

Comparative Literature

You are required to take 30 credits from the following selections:

  • Literature and Empire (15 credits) and Ideas of Nation (15 credits)

or

  • The Book in the Modern World (15 credits) and The Canon (15 credits)
Optional Modules

You are required to take 60 credits from a wide range of Classics modules which may typically include:

  • Greek Language 1 (30 credits)
  • Greek Language 3A (30 credits)
  • Latin Language 1 (30 credits)
  • Latin Language 3A (30 credits)
  • Roman Britain (30 credits)
  • Art & Power in the Age of Alexander (Hellenistic Art I) (15 credits)
  • Introductory Greek Texts: Prose (15 credits)
  • From Sulla to Caesar: the fall of the Roman Republic (15 credits)
  • Early Greece from Troy to Marathon (15 credits)
  • Pompeii: History & Society (15 credits)
  • Introductory Latin Texts: Prose (15 credits)
  • Homer (15 credits)
  • Myth and Literature: ancient stories, modern meanings (15 credits)
  • Death in Greek literature (15 credits)
  • Virgils’s Aeneid (15 credits)
  • The Art of Acquisition: Conquest, Collection & the Rise of Rome (Hellenistic Art II) (15 credits)
  • Building Greece (15 credits)
  • Constantinople: Imperial Capital – Medieval Metropolis (15 credits)
  • Introductory Greek Texts: Verse (15 credits)
  • Democracy, Empire & War: Greece 446-338 BC (15 credits)
  • The Late Roman World, AD 337-425 (15 credits)
  • Introductory Latin Texts: Verse (15 credits)
  • Wisdom and the Divine: ancient Greek philosophy & religion (15 credits)
  • Ancient Sexuality I (15 credits)
  • Ancient Sexuality II (15 credits)
  • Latin Lyric Poetry (15 credits)
  • The Novels of Nikos Kazantzakis & the Ancient World (15 credits)


Year 3

Year 3 Required Modules

Classical Studies

There are no required Classics modules in Year 3.

Comparative Literature

  • Dissertation (10,000 words) (30 credits)
Optional Modules

Classical Studies

You are required to take at least 45 credits from a range of optional Classics modules that may typically include:

  • Minoans & Mycenaeans (30 credits)
  • The Classical Art of the Body: Greek Sculpture (30 credits)
  • The Art of Making: Craft Production from Classical Antiquity to Today (30 credits)
  • Augustus: Power & Propaganda (30 credits)
  • The History & Theory of Ancient Slavery (30 credits)
  • Greek Religion (30 credits)
  • Pagans, Christians & Jews in the Roman Empire (30 credits)
  • Streetwise: narrating the city in classical literature (30 credits)
  • Neronian Literature & Culture (30 credits)
  • Plato’s myths: the soul, desire & the Beyond (30 credits)
  • Living for ever: fame & glory from Homeric heroes to Roman emperors (and beyond) (30 credits)
  • An Introduction to Classical Reception Studies in Sixteen Encounters (30 credits)
  • Dissertation (30 credits)
  • Greek Texts: Prose (15 Credits)
  • Persian Kings & their Territory in the Achaemenid Empire (15 Credits)
  • Latin Texts: Prose (15 Credits)
  • Descent to the Underworld: transformations of a myth (15 Credits)
  • Romanticism & Revolution: Byron, the Shelleys & Greece (15 Credits)
  • Origins of Nations & Nationalism: Identity in the Hellenic world (15 Credits)
  • Venice: history & art (15 Credits)
  • Greek Texts: Poetry (15 Credits)
  • Latin Texts: Poetry (15 Credits)

Comparative Literature

You are also required to take at least 15 credits from a range of optional 15-credit Comparative Literature modules which may typically include:

  • Surrealism (15 Credits)
  • Imaginary Geographies (15 Credits)
  • From Opium to Maximum City: Narrating political economy in India & China (15 Credits)
  • The French Revolution Effect (15 Credits)
  • Listening Across the Channel: Sound & Literature (15 Credits)
  • Modern Arabic Literature (15 Credits)
  • Testimony: The Holocaust & Rwanda (15 Credits)
  • Literature, Solidarity, & the Humanitarian Turn (15 Credits)

You may also take up to 30 credits from approved optional modules offered by the Faculty of Arts & Humanities.

King’s College London reviews the modules offered on a regular basis in order to provide up-to-date, innovative and relevant programmes of study. The optional modules offered may therefore change. We suggest that you keep an eye on the course finder on our website for updates.

Classical Studies & Comparative Literature

£ 9,250 + VAT