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The Literature
Concentration
The Literature
Concentration is one of four
concentrations open to PPE
students. It is an intensive
program of five courses
designed for students who
seek to gain a broad
familiarity with arts and
letters. This concentration
equips students with a
firsthand knowledge of great
works of literature and
allows those works, as much
as possible, to speak for
themselves.
From the beginning of
recorded human history,
literature has been the
primary means by which
people reflected on the
world’s perplexities—its
richness, disasters,
comedies, and defeats.
Religious aspiration,
profound questioning,
lighthearted merriment, and
sober reconsideration
comprise its texture, as
much as artistic ambition
and the thrill of hearing
something elusive made
beautifully clear.
Literature is thought and
language in pursuit of
powerful intuitions about
how the world is or how it
might be. Even when it seems
to tell a plain tale, it
draws on the mysterious
power of metaphor, which
allows us to hear one thing
and see another.
Partly because all truly
educated people have some
command of literature, and
because all truly effective
leaders understand the power
of language to shape worlds
and worldviews, the
Literature Concentration is
an important option for PPE
students. Each course in the
Literature Concentration is
also available to students
as an elective.
The Literature Concentration
begins in the fall of the
sophomore year with
Classical Literature, which
surveys the literary
heritage of classical Greece
and Rome. In the spring
semester, Literature
students take Shakespeare,
which covers the full range
of Shakespeare’s writing,
including his sonnets,
narrative poems, and
plays—comedies, histories,
and tragedies. In the fall
of their junior year,
students take English and
American Poetry, an
immersion in great poems but
also an exploration of how
poetry can summon, define,
and persuade people about
how to live, how to think,
and what to aspire for. In
the spring of their junior
year, students take American
Literature, which focuses
mainly on the American novel
and its double legacy of
narrative realism and
idealistic yearning. The
final course in the
Literature Concentration is
British and European Novels
in the senior year, which
gathers together great
authors such as Miguel de
Cervantes, George Eliot,
Victor Hugo, and Fyodor
Dostoyevsky, who have
quickened the moral sense as
well as the imaginations of
generations of readers.
The PPE Literature
Concentration differs from
many college literature
programs in significant
ways. First, it is focused
almost entirely on reading
original works by great
writers. We are not using
literature to advance any
political or ideological
point. Second, the
Literature Concentration
focuses on literature, not
on contemporary theories
about literature or the
nature of language. Third,
the Literature Concentration
emphasizes deep familiarity
with literary works.
Students are required, for
example, to memorize and
recite some of the poems
they study, and to enact
scenes from Shakespeare’s
plays.
The Literature Concentration
offers students a way to
approach the imaginative
horizons surrounding the key
social institutions that are
the central focus of the PPE
program.
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