
Minor information
This field is known for crossing boundaries, so courses span multiple departrments. You'll study fiction, literary nonfiction, poetry, and drama, plus visual and digital media. You'll customize your path, pursue intellectual and aesthetic connections, and develop critical thinking and cross-cultural understanding.
Minor credits: 24
What can I do with a degree in Comparative Literature?
What can I do with a degree in Comparative Literature?
The Comparative Literature minor is adaptable - and valuable - leading to many different fields and fulfilling careers. Here are a few popular paths, but a Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ degree can take you anywhere.
- Publishing
- Law
- Journalism
- Education
$44,459 Average salary 5 years post graduation
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After Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ
After Âé¶¹ÊÓÆµ
Gusties who minor in Comparative Literature are prepared for a variety of jobs and graduate programs at other top-tier organizations. Here's where some recent grads have landed and what they're doing:
- Saint Paul School District
- Red Line Editorial
- Public Relations Manager
- Associate Professor

Course Examples
Interested in pursuing a Comparative Literature Minor? Here are some of the key courses offered within these programs.
ENG 140 Global Films
This course will introduce you to global and foreign films. We will discuss film terminology, international film history, film theory, national and regional film, international markets, audiences, and distribution channels. We will examine films from multiple countries, including Senegal, Korea, Algeria, Hong Kong, France, the United Kingdom, Iran, Brazil, Ecuador, and Mexico. Some covered themes include globalization, colonialism, gender/sexuality/national culture, ecology, dystopia, technology, and history.
GWS 248 Gender, Knowledge, Reality
An exploration of central issues in historical and contemporary feminist philosophy. The focus of the course will vary, and may be drawn from social and political philosophy, ethics, or epistemology. It will generally consider such issues as: ""woman"" as a socially-constructed category; the nature of women's oppression; and the relations between gender, race, and class as they function as structures of domination.
SCA 250 Crime Fiction in Scandinavia
This course explores the crime fiction genre (literature, television, and film) from the Nordic countries. The course will focus on the political and social critique embedded in crime stories, the values of the societies represented, and the function of the crime fiction genre as a critique of ideologies and institutions. Starting in the 1970s with Sjöwall/Wahlöo and ending in the present day, the class will cover a variety of themes in the Nordic context: Marxism, the welfare state, immigration, the EU and the Third World, feminism, racism, neoliberalism, and global capitalism. It will also introduce students to typically Nordic perspectives on crime prevention and punishment.
ENG 124 U.S. Women Writers
This course is a historical survey of women writers in the U.S. We will examine multiple genres of autobiography, poetry, fiction, drama, and the essay, and trace a tradition of women's writing concerned with both national issues and women's experiences. The course will pay particular attention to the ways in which women's literature resists patriarchal oppression, and engages with liberation and empowerment of women. U.S. Women's literature offers valuable insights into U.S. gender construction, feminist thought, and intersectional identities. This course counts toward the Gender, Women, and Sexuality Studies major/minor.

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