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2016-2017 Graduate Studies Bulletin (Archived Copy) 
    
 
  Mar 29, 2024
 
2016-2017 Graduate Studies Bulletin (Archived Copy) [Archived Catalog]

Comparative Literature, Ph.D.


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Learning Outcomes

  • Students will demonstrate basic mastery of the history of literary theory.
  • Students will develop advanced linguistic competence in at least one foreign language.
  • Students will demonstrate reading competence in a second foreign language.
  • Students will demonstrate a mastery of three literatures, or two literatures and one outside area.
  • Students will demonstrate an understanding of a broad literary culture.
  • Students will comprehensively evaluate previous scholarship in their field. 
  • Students will produce a piece of original research and write at a professional level. 
  • Students will analyze texts. 
  • Students will complete the PhD program in a timely manner, and will pursue tenure-track job placement as appropriate. 

Admission

Applicants should have a minimum 3.00 GPA in their undergraduate major and 3.50 GPA in graduate course work. They should have minimum GRE scores of 500/153 on the verbal section and 4 on the analytical section (or scores of 400/146 and 3.5, respectively, for non-native English speakers). An applicant whose native language is not English is required to submit a satisfactory score on the TOEFL or the IELTS Intl. Academic Course Type 2 exam. The minimum acceptable score on the TOEFL is 80 (iBT), or 570 (paper-based). The minimum acceptable overall band score on the IETLS Intl. Academic Course Type 2 exam is 6.5. Applicants are asked to submit a writing sample of 3,000 words and a statement of purpose (300 words maximum).

Application procedure:

  • Students are invited to go to the Graduate School site and apply online. Paper applications are no longer available. All material should be sent to the graduate school in one packet. This material includes the following:
    • 3 letters of recommendation from instructors familiar with the student academic work, each sent in a sealed official envelope with the recommender’s signature across the seal
    • an undergraduate transcript
    • a 250 word statement of purpose: explain the connection between USC’s programs and your personal goals
    • a writing sample (in the relevant language; English for non-natives of the English language) of between 1000 and 2500 words. This could be a paper written for an undergraduate course or an essay prepared specifically for the application.
  • A five-minute sample of your spoken French, German, or Spanish is required of non-native speakers. Non-natives of English must also demonstrate proficiency in this language by a speech sample. The speech sample should be saved as an mp3 file on a CD.
  • Applicants who wish to be considered for an assistantship must apply by January 15.
  • Candidates WHO DO NOT WISH TO REQUEST FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE should complete the application process no later than June 1.
  • Applications submitted to the Department after June 1 will not be processed for the Fall semester but for the following Spring.

Degree Requirements (30 Post Masters Hours)

Candidates for the Ph.D. degree are required to take 63-66 graduate hours beyond the baccalaureate degree (30 - 33 graduate hours beyond the master’s degree), including graduate-level course work in at least one foreign language, and demonstrate reading knowledge in two foreign languages. Each candidate must study three or more national literatures, although students may substitute an outside area for their third literature with the approval of the graduate director. Each student will pass a three-hour qualifying examination in two equal parts: an essay on literary theory and an explication of a passage in the student’s first foreign literature. The comprehensive examination will consist of three two-hour written exams on each of three reading lists that the student will draw up in conjunction with the committee, followed by a one-hour oral exam. Students whose first literature is not English may write one of their essays in the language of that literature. Each student will write a dissertation on a topic chosen in conjunction with the committee and the graduate director.

1. Comparative Literature: 15 hours


5 graduate courses to include:

2. Primary Literature: 18 hours


  • 6 graduate courses

3. Second Literature: 12 hours


  • 4 graduate courses

4. Third Literature: 6 hours


  • 2 graduate courses

5. Foreign Languages: 3 hours


Required of all graduate teaching assistants

6. Dissertation: 12 hours


Note:


Requests for further information should be addressed to Director, Comparative Literature Program, University of South Carolina, Columbia, SC 29208.

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