专业详情
Through advanced literary study, students grapple with the thought and creative vision of the world’s most remarkable minds: rediscover and master classic texts while exploring exciting, contemporary works, diverse genres, and cutting-edge ideas in narrative form and interpretation. This broad and stimulating intellectual challenge improves the ability to analyze complex information, challenge assumptions, weigh competing considerations and reach effective conclusions. Graduates of the MALit program are well prepared for application to PhD programs and for success in diverse professional areas from advertising to law. Secondary-school teachers develop a competitive edge by deepening their subject-area knowledge — a key distinction between the MALit program and more general graduate programs in education.
Program Goals
MALit graduates benefit from an interdisciplinary program that:
- Exposes students to Northwestern University’s distinguished and world class instructors.
- Provides students with countless opportunities to engage with others who are passionate to rediscover and master classic texts while exploring exciting, contemporary works, diverse genres and cutting-edge ideas in narrative form and interpretation.
- Engages students in advanced literary study, which improves critical assessment and problem solving skills which translate to work, personal and intellectual life.
- Sharpens analytical and writing abilities, which can help prepare students for application to PhD programs.
Curriculum
Students must complete nine courses to complete their Master of Arts in Literature degree. Students must complete one core course (LIT 410 Introduction to Graduate Study), seven elective courses and a capstone project. Students can take elective courses that cover such topics as comparative literary studies, English, French and Italian, Slavic languages and literatures, and theatre.
Students sign up for the final course in the program during the term in which they start their master’s thesis. The capstone project for the MALit program is an essay of 40 to 60 double-spaced pages written under the supervision of an approved faculty member. The project presents an opportunity to research and explore a topic thoroughly. Students often elect to expand a seminar paper from a previous course. With the approval of the program director, students may create an interdisciplinary final project rather than a traditional thesis.
Current students should refer to Literature Curriculum requirements in place at time of entry into the program.
Courses
Explore Literature Courses. You can narrow your course search by day, location or instructor.
MA in Literature Specializations
Students who wish to lend more structure to their experience can elect to complete a MA in Literature Specialization. A specialization may be especially beneficial to educators, students who are thinking of going on to a PhD program, or anyone who wants to focus their literary study more precisely. Students complete four thematically linked courses for a specialization. Choose from the five subjects below.
- American literature
- British literature
- Comparative and world literature
- Film, literature, and visual culture
- Interdisciplinary studies