RESEARCH PROFILE
- RAE results 2008: When measuring work rated as ‘world class’ and ‘internationally excellent’ (4* and 3*), thirteen out of fourteen departments are ranked amongst the top six departments nationwide.
- Research supervision: Coordinated by the Postgraduate and Research Committee, it links some of the highest-rated literature teaching departments in the country.
- Current number of academic staff: 15 from different departments in the School.
- Current research projects:
- Theory of poetic language;
- Prison writing;
- European surrealism;
- The tradition of melancholy from antiquity to 1800;
- Legacies of French theory since 1968;
- Verse translation;
- Religion and literature;
- History of the novel since antiquity;
- Erotic poetics;
- The concept of literature in the late medieval and early modern periods;
- The apocalypse in European literature.
- Partner organisations: ongoing co-operation in research and student exchange takes place between the programme and the Department of English and Comparative Literature at the University of North Carolina Chapel Hill (www.unc.edu/depts/english) and Jawaharlal Nehru University, New Delhi. Provision for joint PhD supervision exists within the international PhD-Net "Internationalisation of Literature and Science since the Early Modern Period" with the University of Stuttgart.
KEY FACTS
Student destinations
This is a relatively new research programme, but we expect our students to continue in academia or work in the cultural sector.
Head of group/division
Professor Javed Majeed
Duration
Expected to be PhD (initial registration for MPhil), three years FT, four-six years PT.
Location
Strand Campus.
Year of entry 2013
Offered by
School of Arts and Humanities
Department of Comparative Literature
Closing date
None. Students interested in applying to funding should be aware that deadlines for this differ and may be earlier, therefore applicants should view the Graduate Funding Pages at
http://www.kcl.ac.uk/study/pg/funding/sources/index.aspx for more information.
Intake
No set number.
Fees
CONTACTS
Contact information
Postgraduate Officer, Centre for Arts & Sciences Admissions (CASA)
tel: +44 (0) 20 7848 2736
fax: +44 (0) 20 7848 7200
Email
Website
RESEARCH DESCRIPTION
We welcome applications from students with research interests in any area of modern or medieval and classical literature in the western European languages. Special research focuses include: the classical tradition, postcolonial literatures; and relations between modern literature and the visual arts.
Current PhD topics include:
- Embodiment in literature and theory;
- The temporality of touch;
- Mythic time in the novel;
- Metonymy in Ancient Greek and German poetry.
Staff interests associated with the research programme and its research groups
Interests:
Literature & visual arts of early 20th-century Europe.
Tel:
+44 (0) 20 7848 1363
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Early modern German literature; 19th- and 20th-century German literature; reception of classical mythology.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2125
Fax:
+44 (0)20 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Tel:
+ 44 (0)20 7848 2053
Fax:
+ 44 (0)20 - 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Spanish and Latin American drama; cultural transmission & translation; Spanish American Women's writing
Tel:
020 7848 2605
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
17th- and 18th-century French and comparative literature; literary representations of the city in the Ancien Régime; economics and literature; Québécois literature and film in relation to biculturalism; literary theory
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 1182
Fax:
+44 (0)20 7848 2720
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Greek poetry in the 19th- and 20th- centuries; verse translation; classical tradition.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2663
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Australian literature.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 7394
Fax:
020 7848 2052
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Medieval and early modern literature and theory; cultural studies; gender criticism.
Tel:
+44 (0) 20 7848 2206
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
18th- and early 19th-century German and European literature; Goethe; comparatve literary studies; literature and psychology; melancholy; neo-classicism
Tel:
020 7848 2131
Fax:
020 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2627
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Romanticism; literature and medicine; psychoanalysis.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 1541
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Critical theory.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2547
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Early modern English literature; prison writing.
Tel:
020 7848 2175
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Modern German literature 1750 to the present; European Comparative Literature; literary theory; World Literature; James Joyce.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2090
Fax:
+44 (0)20 7848 2089
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Modern Greek; history of the novel.
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2517
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
the novel in nineteenth-century Europe; literary geography, the idea of space in narrative; the Romantic myth of Italy; modern Italian literature
Tel:
+44 (0)20 7848 2141
Fax:
Email:
Website:
Interests:
Poetry, ancient and modern; music and literature.
Tel:
020 7848 2353
Fax:
Email:
Website:
ACADEMIC ENTRY REQUIREMENTS
General entry advice
An MA at distinction level (or equivalent) in a subject in which the study of literature plays a significant part; a good reading knowledge of one of the European languages offered in a department at King's.
APPLYING TO KING'S
To apply for graduate study at King's you will need to complete our graduate online application form. Applying online makes applying easier and quicker for you, and means we can receive your application faster and more securely.
King's does not normally accept paper copies of the graduate application form as applications must be made online. However, if you are unable to access the online graduate application form, please contact the relevant admissions/School Office at King's for advice.
APPLICATION PROCEDURE
You should send us a 600 word research project outline with your graduate application form, together with a sample of your previous written work (typically, your MA dissertation). Admission to our research programmes will initially be for the MPhil but we expect students to transfer to the PhD after one year, by agreement with their supervisor and the Departmental Postgraduate and Research Committee.
PERSONAL STATEMENT & SUPPORTING INFORMATION
No information required.
FUNDING
The main source of funding is the AHRC, but students have also been successful in the competitions of the School of Arts & Humanities and the Graduate School.
Student profiles
Comparative Literature Research MPhil/PhD
I came to King’s from Australia with pretty clear ideas about what I wanted to achieve, and from the first day of my PhD those ideas have been nurtured, sometimes challenged and always invigorated. I’ve worked with brilliant academics and had amazing opportunities for travel, leadership, research and teaching. I’ve led a programme of research skills lunches in the English Department, founded a poetry reading group and helped manage a groundbreaking teaching initiative. I’ve also benefited from access to first rate libraries (including the Foyle Special Collections, King’s, and the British Library). King’s has encouraged me to achieve well, and helped me develop the skills and courage to do it.
For me, the benefits of living in London include access to travel, and the fact that every touring dance, theatre and music company comes here. I’ve also spent many happy weekends exploring towns, great houses and parks just outside of the city. As a contemporary Constantinople, London inspires and challenges me to see differently, understand more, and consider people in new ways.
Comparative Literature Research MPhil/PhDI am lucky enough to be involved in one of King’s joint PhD partnership programmes (Internationalisation of Literature and Science since the Early Modern Period Research with University of Stuttgart), and will be spending my second year at the University of Stuttgart under the supervision of Dr. Sandra Richter, whilst my first and third year will be spent in London under the supervision of
Dr. Robert Weninger.
My PhD thesis seeks to plot the movement known as existentialism onto literature produced in the aftermath of the Second World War and the Nazi period. It also provides a dual consideration of existentialism as both a philosophical and a theological movement. By engaging the core maxims of existentialist philosophy and twentieth-century Christian theology as the principal methodological backdrop, my dissertation provides a contrastive survey of German religious and existentialist literature that came to fruition following the collapse of the Third Reich. I am looking, in particular, at the existentialist writing of Max Frisch, Arno Schmidt and Alfred Andersch, and the religious fiction of Elisabeth Langgässer and Heinrich Böll.
King’s College London has proven to be an exceptional institution in which to undertake a PhD. Firstly, the quality of supervision is second to none. I have close contact with my first supervisor, whose vast expertise and proficient and encouraging approach are extremely helpful. Secondly, the university awards a number of scholarships and bursaries to doctoral students. Having been lucky enough to receive a full scholarship, I can verify the benefits of such generous financial support. Thirdly, in support of my research on existentialist philosophy, the German Department gave me the opportunity to attend a French language class to assist me with my research on Jean-Paul Sartre.
Finally, King’s offers an invaluable range of library facilities, which include the Maughan Library, the Franklin-Wilkins Library and the University of London Library. All of these attributes reaffirm the status of King’s College London as an outstanding university for doctoral study.