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World Literature

World Literature

World Literature surveys the major literary traditions of the globe from ancient Mesopotamia and Greece through medieval Islamic and Japanese prose, the European novel, Latin American magical realism, and contemporary African and Asian voices, building cross-cultural reading skills and comparative literary analysis.

Who Should Take This

Ideal for high school students in grades 9-12 taking a world literature or comparative literature course and for any reader who wants a systematic introduction to the global canon beyond the English-language tradition. No prior literary study is required.

What's Included in AccelaStudy® AI

Adaptive Knowledge Graph
Practice Questions
Lesson Modules
Console Simulator Labs
Exam Tips & Strategy
13 Activity Formats

Course Outline

1Ancient Epics and Oral Traditions
9 topics

Identify the defining features of the epic genre including the invocation of the muse, in medias res opening, the heroic code, extended similes, epithets, and the journey as structural backbone

Apply analysis of the Epic of Gilgamesh examining the friendship between Gilgamesh and Enkidu, the quest for immortality, the flood narrative's relationship to biblical parallels, and what the epic reveals about Mesopotamian concepts of mortality and divine order

Apply analysis of Homer's Iliad and Odyssey examining the Trojan War's moral ambiguity, Achilles' rage and its consequences, Odysseus's cunning versus honor, the gods' interventions, and the nostos theme as a meditation on homecoming and identity

Describe the Mahabharata's central narrative arc including the Pandava-Kaurava conflict, the Bhagavad Gita embedded within it, the concept of dharma (righteous duty), and the epic's status as a living religious and cultural text in South Asian traditions

Analyze how ancient epics across cultures — Mesopotamian, Greek, and Sanskrit — use the hero's journey, divine intervention, and the confrontation with mortality to negotiate the relationship between human aspiration and cosmic limitation

Identify the conventions of Greek tragedy as described in Aristotle's Poetics including hamartia, catharsis, peripeteia and anagnorisis, the three unities, and the function of the chorus

Apply analysis of Sophocles's Oedipus Rex and Antigone examining dramatic irony, fate and free will, the transgression of boundaries (human/divine, family/state), and the tragic hero's recognition of his own downfall

Apply analysis of Virgil's Aeneid as a Roman epic that consciously rewrites Homer's tradition — repurposing the Odyssean wandering and Iliadic battlefield for a national myth of Rome's providential destiny — and examine Aeneas's subordination of personal desire to pietas

Describe the Ramayana as the second great Sanskrit epic including Rama as dharmic ideal king, Sita's test of fidelity as a contested cultural legacy, the role of Hanuman, and the epic's living presence across South and Southeast Asian cultures through performance and vernacular retellings

2Religious and Philosophical Texts
6 topics

Apply analysis of the Bhagavad Gita examining Krishna's instruction to Arjuna on the battlefield, the concept of nishkama karma (action without attachment to results), the three yogas, and the text's continuing influence on Hindu ethics and world literature

Identify the central teachings of the Tao Te Ching including wu wei (non-action), the paradoxical nature of the Tao, the feminine as a principle of strength, and how Laozi's aphoristic style enacts the ineffability of ultimate truth

Describe the literary features that distinguish sacred and philosophical texts as literary works — aphorism, parable, allegory, dialogue, poetry — and explain how these forms make abstract spiritual concepts accessible and memorable

Analyze how the Bhagavad Gita and the Tao Te Ching offer contrasting responses to the problem of right action in a morally complex world, and evaluate how each text's literary form reinforces its philosophical argument

Describe the Book of Job from the Hebrew Bible as a literary text examining the structure of the divine wager, Job's undeserved suffering as a theodicy problem, the inadequacy of the three friends' conventional answers, and the whirlwind speech's reframing of justice in cosmic rather than moral terms

Apply analysis of how the Confucian Analects use the dialogue and aphorism form to present a coherent moral philosophy of ren (benevolence), ritual propriety, and the rectification of names as the foundation of a well-ordered society

3Medieval World Literature
7 topics

Apply analysis of Dante's Inferno examining the allegory of the journey through hell, the contrapasso principle (punishments that mirror the nature of sins), Virgil as reason's guide, and the poem's synthesis of classical and Christian traditions

Describe the One Thousand and One Nights including the frame narrative of Scheherazade and Shahryar, the embedded story structure, the narrative as a performance of survival and feminine agency, and the collection's Persian, Arabic, and Indian sources

Apply analysis of Murasaki Shikibu's The Tale of Genji examining the concept of mono no aware (the pathos of things), Heian courtly aesthetics, the fragmented narrative structure, and the novel's claim to being the world's first psychological novel

Analyze how medieval world literature — the Divine Comedy, One Thousand and One Nights, and The Tale of Genji — each invented new narrative forms suited to their cultural contexts: Christian allegory, oral frame narrative, and aristocratic psychological prose

Identify the features of the Japanese Noh theater tradition including the use of masks, the distinction between shite and wite roles, the influence of Zen Buddhism, and the aesthetic of yūgen (mysterious beauty and grace)

Apply analysis of Ibn Battuta's Rihla (Travels) as medieval Islamic world literature examining the genre of the rihlah travel narrative, Ibn Battuta's observations of Muslim communities from Mali to China, and what his journey reveals about the interconnected world of the 14th-century Dar al-Islam

Describe the Arthurian legend cycle as a medieval European literary tradition spanning Geoffrey of Monmouth, Chrétien de Troyes, Malory's Le Morte d'Arthur, and later reinventions, examining how each era reshapes Arthur's court to reflect its own chivalric ideals and anxieties

4Early Modern World Literature
5 topics

Apply analysis of Cervantes's Don Quixote examining the novel's self-conscious metafiction, the satirical treatment of chivalric romance, the interplay between Quixote's idealism and Sancho's pragmatism, and the novel's claim to being the first modern novel

Describe Goethe's Faust including the pact with Mephistopheles, the Faust legend's transformation into a meditation on human striving, the salvation theology, and the work's status as the central text of German literary culture

Analyze how Cervantes and Goethe each grapple with the limitations of received literary tradition — the chivalric romance and the classical epic — and transform those limitations into the defining subject matter of their major works

Apply analysis of Montaigne's Essays as the invention of the essay form — the personal, exploratory, self-questioning mode of writing — examining how the essai (attempt) models a new kind of intellectual honesty about the limits of knowledge and the instability of the self

Describe the Japanese haiku tradition including the contributions of Matsuo Bashō and explain how the 5-7-5 syllable structure, the kigo (seasonal word), the kireji (cutting word), and the juxtaposition of two images create meaning through compression and implication rather than statement

519th-Century European Fiction
8 topics

Identify the features of Russian realism in Tolstoy and Dostoevsky including the psychological depth of characterization, the moral philosophical argument embedded in narrative, the representation of Russian social classes, and the spiritual crisis of modernity

Apply analysis of Leo Tolstoy's Anna Karenina or War and Peace examining the epic sweep of Russian society, the counterpointed narrative structure, the moral argument against Anna's transgression, and Tolstoy's technique of psychological interiority

Apply analysis of Fyodor Dostoevsky's Crime and Punishment or The Brothers Karamazov examining the psychological portrait of a murderer, the problem of free will and moral responsibility, the Grand Inquisitor parable, and the Christian redemptive arc

Describe Gustave Flaubert's Madame Bovary examining free indirect discourse, the provincial realism of Norman France, Emma Bovary's romantic delusion, and Flaubert's aesthetic of impersonality and the mot juste

Analyze how 19th-century European realists — Tolstoy, Dostoevsky, Flaubert — used the novel's social breadth and psychological depth to diagnose the moral contradictions and spiritual crises produced by modernization, capitalism, and secularization

Apply analysis of Victor Hugo's Les Misérables examining the epic of social injustice, Valjean's redemptive arc, the historical panorama of post-Revolutionary France, and Hugo's use of historical digression as moral and political commentary

Apply analysis of Henrik Ibsen's A Doll's House examining Nora's awakening to the constraints of bourgeois marriage, the door-slamming ending as a political act, the problem play form's use of realist dialogue to expose social hypocrisy, and Ibsen's foundational influence on modern drama

Describe Anton Chekhov's short fiction and drama including The Cherry Orchard and The Lady with the Dog and explain the Chekhovian mode: understatement, subtext (the character says one thing and means another), the gun that must go off, and the slice-of-life that refuses melodrama

6Latin American Magical Realism
5 topics

Identify the defining features of magical realism including the matter-of-fact integration of magical events into realistic narrative, the critique of rationalist epistemology, the influence of oral tradition, and its emergence in the political context of mid-20th-century Latin America

Apply analysis of Gabriel García Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude examining the Buendía family saga, the circular time structure, Macondo as a mythic space, the magical events as historical allegory, and the final apocalyptic manuscript

Apply analysis of Jorge Luis Borges's short fiction — The Garden of Forking Paths, The Library of Babel, Tlön, Uqbar, Orbis Tertius — examining labyrinths, infinite regress, the unreliability of maps and texts, and Borges's influence on postmodern metafiction

Describe the contributions of Isabel Allende, Julio Cortázar, and Pablo Neruda to Latin American literature and explain the political and cultural contexts — dictatorship, colonialism, indigenous traditions — that shaped the Boom generation's aesthetic

Analyze how García Márquez and Borges use magical realism and metafiction respectively to challenge the authority of official historical narratives and offer alternative, pluralist, and indigenous-inflected accounts of Latin American identity

7Modern African Literature
6 topics

Apply analysis of Chinua Achebe's Things Fall Apart examining the Igbo worldview and social structure, Okonkwo's tragic flaw of rigidity, the disruption of traditional culture by Christian missionaries and colonial administration, and Achebe's use of Igbo proverbs and oral tradition

Describe Achebe's critique of Conrad's Heart of Darkness as an archetypal colonial text that uses Africa as backdrop for European self-examination while denying Africans interiority, language, and historical agency

Apply analysis of Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie's Americanah or Purple Hibiscus examining the politics of race and identity across the Nigeria-America divide, the blog narrative form, and Adichie's engagement with feminism and cultural authenticity

Identify the Negritude movement including its founders Senghor, Césaire, and Damas, its celebration of African cultural heritage as resistance to colonial assimilation, and its influence on postcolonial African and Caribbean literature

Analyze how African writers including Achebe, Adichie, and Ngugi wa Thiong'o have engaged with the colonial legacy in literary form — through reclaiming indigenous languages, rewriting colonial narratives, and centering African perspectives that colonialism suppressed

Apply analysis of Wole Soyinka's Death and the King's Horseman examining the Yoruba metaphysical worldview of transition between the living and the dead, the colonial interruption of a sacred ritual, and Soyinka's critique of cultural clash reductions that reduce the play to a simple colonialism narrative

8Modern Asian Literature
7 topics

Apply analysis of Lu Xun's A Madman's Diary and The True Story of Ah Q examining his satirical use of the first-person mad narrator, the critique of Confucian social conformity, cannibalism as metaphor for tradition devouring individuals, and Lu Xun's role as father of modern Chinese literature

Describe Junichiro Tanizaki's In Praise of Shadows as an aesthetic essay examining the tension between Japanese traditional aesthetics of subdued light and patina and Western modernity's appetite for brightness and efficiency

Apply analysis of Haruki Murakami's Norwegian Wood or Kafka on the Shore examining the influence of Western pop culture alongside Japanese sensibility, the blurring of realism and fantasy, alienated protagonists, and the use of music as structural motif

Identify key themes in modern Asian literature including the tension between tradition and modernization, the colonial encounter and its legacies, questions of national and individual identity, and the negotiation between indigenous literary forms and Western narrative conventions

Analyze how modern Asian writers — Lu Xun, Murakami, Mahfouz — negotiate the simultaneous pressure of Western modernism and indigenous literary tradition to forge distinctively national literary voices that speak to global concerns

Apply analysis of Naguib Mahfouz's Cairo Trilogy examining the multi-generational saga form, the mapping of Egyptian political history through a single family across the 20th century, and Mahfouz's synthesis of Arabic narrative tradition with the Western realist novel

Describe the Haitian literature of the 20th century and the concept of marvelous realism in the Caribbean (Alejo Carpentier, Edouard Glissant) as a regional variant of magical realism that emerges from the specific trauma of slavery, revolution, and cultural creolization in the Americas

9Cross-Cultural Themes and Global Literary Forms
9 topics

Identify the hero's journey structure as described by Joseph Campbell including the call to adventure, threshold crossing, trials and helpers, the ordeal, and the return with a boon, and apply it to ancient and modern narrative across multiple cultures

Apply analysis of how the frame narrative device — used in the One Thousand and One Nights, the Mahabharata, Chaucer, and Calvino — creates narrative frames that comment self-referentially on the act and power of storytelling itself

Apply analysis of an unseen world literature passage in translation by identifying cultural context, narrative technique, thematic concerns, and the translator's evident interpretive choices

Analyze how the theme of the outsider or exile appears across world literature — Odysseus, Dante, Don Quixote, Anna Karenina, Okonkwo, and contemporary diasporic writers — and what each culture's treatment of the exile reveals about its deepest values

Describe the concept of the literary canon and its critique — what gets included, what gets excluded, the politics of translation and access, and how world literature curricula have expanded to include non-Western voices

Analyze how magical realism, surrealism, and other non-realist modes function as politically resistant literary strategies in postcolonial and authoritarian contexts where direct political critique is suppressed or dangerous

Apply comparison of how two different literary traditions represent a shared human experience — grief, love, political injustice, or the sacred — using close textual evidence to show what is universal and what is culturally specific in each treatment

Analyze how the theme of justice and its absence — in Sophocles, the Bible, Dostoevsky, Achebe, and García Márquez — produces different narrative structures in different cultures: tragedy, parable, trial narrative, and cyclical repetition

Apply the concept of intertextuality to trace how world literary works explicitly or implicitly respond to predecessors — how Virgil rewrites Homer, how Achebe rewrites Conrad, how García Márquez rewrites Faulkner — and what these rewritings reveal about the politics of literary tradition

Scope

Included Topics

  • Ancient epics and oral traditions (Epic of Gilgamesh — heroism, mortality, friendship; Homer's Iliad and Odyssey — epic conventions, gods and fate, nostos; Mahabharata — dharma, duty, cosmic war), classical drama (Greek tragedy — Sophocles, Euripides, Aeschylus; Aristotle's Poetics; Japanese Noh theater), religious and philosophical texts (Bhagavad Gita — duty and non-attachment; Tao Te Ching — wu wei, paradox), medieval world literature (Dante's Divine Comedy — allegory, Commedia structure; One Thousand and One Nights — frame narrative, Scheherazade; Tale of Genji — mono no aware), early modern (Cervantes's Don Quixote — metafiction, the novel's origins; Goethe's Faust — ambition, salvation, modernity), 19th-century European fiction (Tolstoy, Dostoevsky — moral psychology, Russian realism; Hugo, Flaubert — romanticism vs. realism in France), 20th-century Latin American magical realism (García Márquez — One Hundred Years of Solitude, the Buendía family, Macondo; Borges — labyrinths, metafiction), modern African literature (Achebe — Things Fall Apart, Okonkwo, colonialism; Adichie — Half of a Yellow Sun, Americanah), modern Asian literature (Tanizaki, Lu Xun, Murakami — modernization, identity, Western influence), global contemporary voices

Not Covered

  • American and British literature (covered in separate domain specs)
  • Translation theory as a scholarly discipline
  • Postcolonial theory as a standalone field
  • Comparative linguistics
  • Film adaptations as primary texts

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