At Hofstra University, the Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics explores the connections between world literatures, languages, and cultures. By studying texts and traditions across cultures, you gain an interdisciplinary foundation that enriches your academic journey.
Our programs offer flexibility and depth, making it easy to pair a major in Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics with another field of study in the Hofstra College of Liberal Arts and Sciences or in one of Hofstra’s other schools.
Through this program, you will strengthen essential skills in reading, writing, and speaking. These abilities not only prepare you for success in a wide range of careers but also enrich your personal and professional life.
About the Department
The Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics at Hofstra University offers a wide array of courses in world languages—including American Sign Language, Ancient Greek, Arabic, Chinese, German, Hebrew, Japanese, Latin, and Russian—as well as in comparative and world literatures (both in translation and the original), linguistics, interdisciplinary studies, and literary theory.
The department is also home to Hofstra’s interdisciplinary Asian Studies and Greek and Roman Studies programs, the dual-degree program in Linguistics, and the graduate programs in Linguistics, including the nationally recognized concentration in Forensic Linguistics.
With such breadth and depth of study, the department provides all students with opportunities to explore courses and degree programs that can enrich and complement their academic journeys.
Mission Statement
The mission of the Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics is to foster in students an appreciation of both languages and literatures of the world (both Western and non-Western) through the acquisition of multiple languages and the close analysis of literary texts and other cultural documents, to promote an interest in the way different literatures relate to one another across national and cultural boundaries, and to enter into dialogue with other disciplines, media, or forms of art. We study works of literature through literary and artistic movements, and in different historical periods (from ancient to contemporary). This study entails critical awareness of the necessity of translations of literature from the original languages.
The department supports the vision of the ACLA to "promote the study of intercultural relations that cross national boundaries, multicultural relations within a particular society, and the interactions between literature and other forms of human activity, including the arts, the sciences, philosophy, and cultural artifacts of all kinds."
The language programs in the department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics endeavor to develop the comprehension and communicative skills of all its students from the introductory level through advanced language study in accordance with the performance descriptions of language use in the Proficiency Guidelines of the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL). In addition, through the study of language, literature, and linguistics, students will enhance their understanding of cultures not their own and of their own identities as global citizens.
The department prepares students for the BA in Asian Studies, Chinese, Greek and Roman Studies, Comparative Literature, German, Japanese, Linguistics, and Russian and Post-Soviet Studies. The department prepares students for undergraduate minors in Arabic, Asian Studies, Chinese, Greek and Roman Studies, Comparative Literature, German, Modern Hebrew, Japanese, Linguistics, Russian and Post-Soviet Studies, and World Literature. The department also administers Hofstra University’s graduate programs in Linguistics: Forensic Linguistics.
Goals and Learning Objectives
- Learning Goal: Writing Skills
Objectives: Students should be able to:- write grammatically coherent sentences;
- write about linguistic and literary phenomena with scholarly and disciplinary-appropriate terminology;
- document primary and secondary sources responsibly and correctly;
- defend their thesis statements with literary and linguistic evidence.
- Learning Goal: Speaking Skills
Objectives: Students should be able to:- express their ideas clearly before an audience;
- talk about linguistic and literary phenomena with scholarly and disciplinary-appropriate terminology;
- incorporate visual technology in the presentation of their ideas.
- Learning Goal: Linguistic Skills
Objectives: Students should be able to:- demonstrate grammatical aptitude in the target language;
- interpret a range of meanings of individual words and phrases in context.
- Learning Goal: Cultural Sensitivity and Familiarity
Objectives: Students should be able to:- describe intelligently the culture(s) of the target language or text;
- demonstrate sensitivity to cultural differences.
- Learning Goal: Critical Thinking
Objectives: Students should be able to:- evaluate evidence and sources rationally and/or scientifically;
- develop a sound thesis and persuasive argument.
Note from the Chair
Welcome to the Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics at Hofstra University. Our department houses many innovative and challenging programs, including Asian Studies, Chinese, Greek and Roman Studies, Comparative Literature, German, Hebrew, Japanese, Linguistics, Russian and Post-Soviet Studies and World Literature. The department also has a combined BA/MA in Linguistics/Forensic Linguistics. Students in our programs receive training in modern and classical languages and cultures, as well as in comparative literature and linguistics. We offer the opportunity to double major in Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics and departments in Hofstra’s College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, School of Business, School of Communication, and School of Education.
Our students have had success in many areas after graduation. Many are in graduate school, as well as law school, business school, and medical school. Others have found employment in various fields in New York and around the world.
WHY STUDY LANGUAGES AND LITERATURE?
Knowing another language will enrich your personal life and provide you with an expanded range of professional opportunities. At Hofstra, you can choose to continue with a language you have already studied, to begin a new language, or both. The benefits of language study are tremendous. With language study, you can:
- Improve your career prospects in an increasingly globalized world. Not only will fluency in a specific language help you find employment, language study provides many indirect benefits too, including improved problem-solving skills and improved communication skills.
- Enrich and transform your life. Since language is a key to the human mind, the study of language is life enriching. It helps provide expanded understanding of culturally rooted behaviors and attitudes, including those that stem from one's own language. You will gain greater appreciation for the cultural products (literature, film, poetry, anime) of your own and other countries.
- Use what you learn. You may have the opportunity to study abroad, an experience that provides you with firsthand experience of the relationship between language and culture. Internships, both in foreign countries and domestically, often require fluency or competency in another language.
- Explore linguistics. Linguistics is the scientific study of language. Linguistics helps provide us with a vision of how human language works. Students of linguistics develop skills in data analysis, problem solving, and logical thinking that can be applied to many fields. Increasingly, linguistics is being used as a tool by legal professionals, corporations, law enforcement, governments, and by the intelligence community.
After exploring the links to our various programs, feel free to contact the Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics to find out more about our programs.
Call or visit our offices for more information about the various courses and majors in Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics.
John Krapp
Department Chair
Associate Professor of Comparative Literature
In the Classroom
Our Programs
The Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics offers BA majors in Asian Studies, Chinese, Greek and Roman Studies, Comparative Literature, German, Japanese, Linguistics, and Russian and Post-Soviet Studies. It offers minors in these areas as well as in Arabic, Hebrew, and World Literature. We also offer a combined BA/MA in Linguistics, and an MA in Linguistics: Forensic Linguistics.
Get Experienced
Experiential Learning
Hofstra’s proximity to New York City means students in the Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics have numerous opportunities to expand upon their core undergraduate education through an internship or other professional level activities.
Your Future
Career Potential
Each of the modern languages taught in the Department of Comparative Literature, Languages, and Linguistics is a major language, spoken by millions of speakers. Achieving fluency in one of these languages is a highly-regarded, professional asset.
Our Offices
322 Calkins Hall
Phone: 516-463-5434
Fax: 516-463-7082
Office Hours: Monday-Friday, 9 a.m.-5 p.m.
Student Advisement
John Krapp
Associate Professor of Comparative Literature
312C Calkins Hall
516-463-5843
Social Media
Department Chair
John Krapp
Associate Professor of Comparative Literature
312C Calkins Hall
516-463-5843