The Major
              
	
	
				
				Students select one of the following track options:
General Languages and Literature
- 6 courses in Comparative Literature (up to 2 may be at the 200 level, or 1 at the 100 level and 1 at the 200 level)
 
- 4 upper-level courses in your choice of a 1st language (this is often English)
 
- 3 upper-level courses in a 2nd language
 
Advanced Language and Literature with Work in a Third Language
Either:
- 6 courses in Comparative Literature (up to 2 may be at the 200 level, or 1 at the 100 level and 1 at the 200 level)
 
- 4 upper-level courses in the 1st language
 
- 2 upper-level courses in a 2nd language
 
- 2 courses or 6 credits of elementary work in a 3rd language
 
Or:
- 6 courses in Comparative Literature (up to 2 may be at the 200 level, or 1 at the 100 level and 1 at the 200 level)
 
- 3 upper-level courses in the 1st language
 
- 2 upper-level courses in a 2nd language
 
- 2 upper-level courses in a 3rd language
 
Literature and a Related Discipline
- 6 courses in Comparative Literature (up to 2 may be at the 200 level, or 1 at the 100 level and 1 at the 200 level)
 
- 3 upper-level courses in the 1st language
 
- 2 upper-level courses in a 2nd language
 
- 4 upper-level courses in the department of a related discipline of your choice
 
For a full description of film study or translation study as a related discipline, see Film Concentration and Translation Concentration
What counts as an "upper-level course"?
In language and literature departments:
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 French, Italian, German, Swedish, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, and Polish: 
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 Courses numbered 240 and higher count towards the Comp Lit major. 
When possible, most of these courses should focus on literature, film, or a related topic (i.e. not language or conversation). 
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 Chinese and Japanese: 
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 Courses numbered 200 and above count towards the major. 
Chinese and Japanese 246 (6-credit intensive courses) each count as one course. 
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 English: 
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 Courses numbered 200 and above count towards the major. 
One creative writing course may also be counted towards the major. 
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 Arabic: 
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 Intermediate courses and above count towards the major (numbering varies). 
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 Other languages: 
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 Check with the Undergraduate Program Director. 
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 In the Related Discipline:
- Any course that counts towards the major in the Related Discipline will count in this category.
 
- Film Concentration: Any film class, taken in any department, may count towards the Related Discipline component of the major.
 
- Translation Concentration: Any translation class, taken in any department, may count towards the Related Discipline component of the major.
 
Which Comparative Literature courses should I take?
- All Comp Lit courses numbered 300 and above count towards the major.
 
- One 100-level CL course and one 200-level CL course or two 200-level CL courses may be counted towards the major.
 
- The 4-credit Integrative Experience course “Literary Theory and Criticism” (CL394TI) is required for all majors. It is typically offered in the Spring.
 
- Students are strongly encouraged to take courses that focus on diverse geographical and/or linguistic regions, historical periods, and genres or media.
 
- No more than 6 Independent Study credits may be counted towards the major.
 
- The Junior Year Writing requirement is fulfilled by CL357 (“Writing Matters”), offered every Fall. This course fulfills a General Education requirement and does not count towards the major.
 
G.P.A.
- A minimum G.P.A. of 2.0 is required in all courses counting toward the major.
 
- No courses counting toward the major may be taken pass/fail. Exceptions may be made for courses taken pass/fail during the Covid-19 pandemic.
 
Honors
For information about Honors in Comp Lit, please contact the Comparative Literature Honors Coordinator, Professor Don Levine (delevine@llc.umass.edu).
Related Programs at UMass
Center for Latin American, Caribbean and Latino Studies • Interdepartmental Program in Film Studies • Medieval Studies Certificate • Translation Center