Discipline ID
06a6acf3-73c3-4ed3-9f03-6e1dafb7e2cb

COURSE DETAIL

LITERATURE AND CINEMA
Country
Spain
Host Institution
University of Alicante
Program(s)
University of Alicante
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Film & Media Studies English Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
125
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
LITERATURE AND CINEMA
UCEAP Transcript Title
LITERATURE & CINEMA
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

This course analyzes the symbiotic relationship between the two arts of literature and cinema. The objective is to distinguish the literary and artistic components of cinema within their complex interdependent relationship, to conduct a comparative analysis of films by identifying their literary elements, and to relate both discourses through connections considering 20th-century film theories. Additionally, the course introduces key bridging elements between the two, such as adaptation and screenwriting. This course strengthens comparative methodology by articulating discourses that range from linguistic to audiovisual and prepares students for the analysis of texts that lie at the intersection of both disciplines, while also offering insight into the historical audiovisual tradition rooted in literature.

Language(s) of Instruction
Host Institution Course Number
31850
Host Institution Course Title
LITERATURA Y CINE
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Degrees in Catalan, English, French, and Spanish
Host Institution Department
Spanish Philology, General Linguistics and Theory of Literature
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

GENRE STUDIES: READING AND WRITING GENRE FICTION
Country
Korea, South
Host Institution
Yonsei University
Program(s)
Yonsei University
UCEAP Course Level
Lower Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
75
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
GENRE STUDIES: READING AND WRITING GENRE FICTION
UCEAP Transcript Title
GENRE FICTION
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This topical Genre Studies course covers reading and writing genre fiction. The Spring 2026 offering of the course explores the genres of fairytales and folktales, science fiction (speculative fiction, from fantasy and dystopian fiction to its cousin, post-apocalyptic fiction), and ends with the horror genre.  

The course discusses the elements and possibilities of each genre, and students spend the majority of the semester studying works of literature in both their conformity to and departure from the genre.  

The goals are to read and write like a writer, with discipline, over the course of the semester; to be imaginative and bold with your stories but also pay equal attention to language, character, and world building; and to try different genres and forms of writing and take risks 

Recommended (but not required): a basic knowledge of fiction/creative nonfiction writing or previous course experience. 

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
UIC3620
Host Institution Course Title
GENRE STUDIES: READING AND WRITING GENRE FICTION
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

CONTEMPORARY ENGLISH LITERATURE
Country
Spain
Host Institution
University of Alicante
Program(s)
University of Alicante
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
114
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
CONTEMPORARY ENGLISH LITERATURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
20/21C ENGLISH LIT
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

This course focuses on English literature and its internalization from the end of the Second World War to the present day, and the critical analysis of literary discourses and specific texts from that period. Students engage with the historical and cultural foundations of British society between the 20th and 21st centuries and topics include the analysis, criticism, creation, editing, and publication of texts.

Language(s) of Instruction
Spanish
Host Institution Course Number
31014
Host Institution Course Title
LITERATURA INGLESA CONTEMPORÁNEA
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Degree in English Studies
Host Institution Department
English Philology
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

ENGLISH RENAISSANCE LITERATURE
Country
Spain
Host Institution
University of Alicante
Program(s)
University of Alicante
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
120
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
ENGLISH RENAISSANCE LITERATURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
RENAISSANCE LIT
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

This course introduces students to the literature of the English Renaissance through a combination of close reading and contextualization in the cultural, social and political milieu. It focuses on the study and analysis of the most significant authors and works, particularly those by William Shakespeare. In working with texts from this period, students build on critical and discursive skills developed in previous courses, as well as increase their literary and historical knowledge.

Language(s) of Instruction
Host Institution Course Number
31036
Host Institution Course Title
LITERATURA DEL RENACIMIENTO INGLÉS
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Degree in English Studies
Host Institution Department
English Philology
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

KOREAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE FOR CONTENT CREATION AND CURATION
Country
Korea, South
Host Institution
Yonsei University
Program(s)
Yonsei University
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Korean Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
127
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
KOREAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE FOR CONTENT CREATION AND CURATION
UCEAP Transcript Title
CONTENT CREATION
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course cultivates social innovation capacity by approaching K-content as a single bowl of bibimbap. Just as bibimbap blends diverse ingredients while preserving their distinct flavors, this course places classical and contemporary Korean literature, web novels and webtoons, dramas and games into one bowl and reads them together. K-content is treated not merely as a collection of stories but as an experimental apparatus for thinking about and testing future societies. 

In this process, students examine the tensions and collisions produced as generation and class, gender and region, and platform cultures intertwine, and to treat this hybridity not as proof of “Koreanness,” but as a starting point for social innovation. Through the course, students discover social problems that have not yet been named and learn to nurture them as both citizens and creators who can articulate those problems through new narrative forms. 

By observing specific idol, drama, game, or webtoon fandoms, recording their voluntary care practices, informal rules, and conflict mediation methods, and translating these organizational forms into prototypes for small-scale civic projects or public campaigns, students approach fandom not as a mere consumer group but as a hybrid governance model capable of experimenting with social innovation 

Furthermore, this course does not stop at reading K-content as an object of cultural consumption. It operates as an “imagination workshop” that uses SF imagination and speculative social design to experimentally envision future societies. Students analyze narrative worlds while also engaging in creative practices that design possible social institutions, technologies, and forms of community.  

Topics include What does Science Fiction imagine, Worldbuilding and reading worlds, Speculative imagination, Korean SF and K-content, Transitioning social problems into SF, K-webtoons and platform SF, K-movies and future societies, K-pop and narrative universes. 

Language(s) of Instruction
Korean
Host Institution Course Number
KOR4604
Host Institution Course Title
KOREAN LANGUAGE AND LITERATURE FOR CONTENT CREATION AND CURATION
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

MODERN BRITISH DRAMA
Country
Korea, South
Host Institution
Yonsei University
Program(s)
Yonsei University
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
128
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
MODERN BRITISH DRAMA
UCEAP Transcript Title
MODERN UK DRAMA
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course explores the development of modern British drama from the late 19th century to the present, focusing on major playwrights and their works. We approach the history of British drama in three parts: the emergence of modern drama (Oscar Wilde & Bernard Shaw) at the turn of the twentieth century, two major trends in postwar Britain (John Osborne & Samuel Beckett), and the political and experimental theatre of the late 20th century onwards (Harold Pinter, Tom Stoppard, Sarah Kane, Caryl Churchill). Keeping in mind that dramatic texts are realized on stage, we pay attention to theatrical elements and genres, including melodrama, social realist drama, the theatre of the absurd, the comedy of menace, the play of ideas, in-yer-face theatre, and political theatre. Films and other visual materials are used to enhance students’ understanding and engagement with the plays.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ELL3308
Host Institution Course Title
MODERN BRITISH DRAMA
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

WAYS OF READING: FILM, LITERATURE, AND CULTURE
Country
Hong Kong
Host Institution
University of Hong Kong
Program(s)
University of Hong Kong
UCEAP Course Level
Lower Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
45
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
WAYS OF READING: FILM, LITERATURE, AND CULTURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
READ FILM LIT CULTR
UCEAP Quarter Units
5.00
UCEAP Semester Units
3.30
Course Description

This first year course introduces fundamental terms and strategies for reading deeply into literature, film, and other texts. Basic theories of literary criticism, film, visual and culture studies are introduced. Students explore different approaches and reading strategies and learn how to apply critical tools to a diverse range of texts and mediums. Topics include the following: Basic and extended definitions of text, author, and reader; cinema, modernity, urban culture; gendered readings; race and ethnicity; popular culture; visuality and materiality; photography; ecocriticism and narratives of travel and migration. Writing assignments are designed to help students secure their knowledge of the vocabulary and tools of analysis necessary for more complex work in the field of comparative literary and cultural studies.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
CLIT1008
Host Institution Course Title
WAYS OF READING: FILM, LITERATURE, AND CULTURE
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Comparative Literature
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

NOBEL LAUREATES IN LITERATURE
Country
Ireland
Host Institution
Trinity College Dublin
Program(s)
Trinity College Dublin
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
127
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
NOBEL LAUREATES IN LITERATURE
UCEAP Transcript Title
NOBEL LAUREATES LIT
UCEAP Quarter Units
10.00
UCEAP Semester Units
6.70
Course Description

This course considers the most prestigious literary award in the world: the Nobel Prize in Literature. Starting with an overview of the award’s history and the way in which it has been administered, the course then examines the contemporary cultural contexts of Great Britain, Ireland, the United States, Russia and Czechia. The Nobel Prize in Literature, first awarded in 1901, has been intended for ‘the person who shall have produced…the most outstanding work of an ideal tendency’. Engaging with the literary scenes of the five countries under review, the course discusses the work and legacy of some of these ‘persons’ – including W. B. Yeats (who received the Prize in 1923), Alexander Solzhenitsyn (1970), William Golding (1983), Jaroslav Seifert (1984), Toni Morrison (1993), and others. It considers these outstanding literary artists’ most significant works, evaluating their contribution to the world of letters, and to humankind. The course concludes with an informed discussion about the relationship between literature and society, and the role of literature in our contemporary world.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
CPU33004
Host Institution Course Title
NOBEL LAUREATES IN LITERATURE
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
School of Languages, Literatures, and Cultural Studies
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

UNDERSTANDING THE CULTURE OF MODERNITY: THE FATE OF RELIGION IN THE WESTERN WORLD
Country
Korea, South
Host Institution
Yonsei University
Program(s)
Yonsei University
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
112
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
UNDERSTANDING THE CULTURE OF MODERNITY: THE FATE OF RELIGION IN THE WESTERN WORLD
UCEAP Transcript Title
MODRN CULTR&RELIGIO
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This course introduces one interpretive key to the understanding of modernity and its relationship with postmodernity: the cultural process of secularization and the mental and social changes that secularization brought with it. 

The course searches for deeper insight on our contemporary world and examines the necessary elements to judge some of its cultural trends.  

Students conduct independent research on folklore in addition to reading works of modern literature, and consider how myth and religion continue to affect the ways modern people engage in political activity as well as influence their understanding of how the world works. Students also explore what stories are the most meaningful in their lives or in the lives of their friends and contemporaries. 

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
CLC4713
Host Institution Course Title
UNDERSTANDING THE CULTURE OF MODERNITY: THE FATE OF RELIGION IN THE WESTERN WORLD
Host Institution Course Details
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026

COURSE DETAIL

LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY: THE ORIGINS OF DRAMA
Country
Egypt
Host Institution
American University in Cairo
Program(s)
The American University in Cairo
UCEAP Course Level
Upper Division
UCEAP Subject Area(s)
English Comparative Literature
UCEAP Course Number
115
UCEAP Course Suffix
UCEAP Official Title
LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY: THE ORIGINS OF DRAMA
UCEAP Transcript Title
ORIGINS OF DRAMA
UCEAP Quarter Units
4.50
UCEAP Semester Units
3.00
Course Description

This literature and philosophy interface explores the origins of drama as theorized by two major thinkers, Friedrich Nietzsche and René Girard, and then moves on to test their hypotheses by reading major plays in the dramatic canon. The first part of the course explores Nietzsche’s interpretation of the Dionysian origins of Greek drama and René Girard’s belief that early drama attempted to resolve a metaphysical crisis with reference to a surrogate victim. The arguments for and against the role of the god, Dionysos, in the dramatic tradition are taken up in theory and practice. Dramatists read include Euripides, Shakespeare, Dryden, and Camus. This course, which combines seminar and lecture, is intended for majors in English and Comparative Literature but should also interest students in philosophy, psychology, and the social sciences.

Language(s) of Instruction
English
Host Institution Course Number
ECLT 3014
Host Institution Course Title
LITERATURE AND PHILOSOPHY: THE ORIGINS OF DRAMA
Host Institution Campus
Host Institution Faculty
Host Institution Degree
Host Institution Department
English & Comparative Literature
Course Last Reviewed
2025-2026
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