Literature

Unlock the profound stories, diverse voices, and timeless ideas shaping human history. Our literature courses offer a deep dive into global texts, critical theories, and masterful writing across genres and eras, enhancing your analytical skills and cultural knowledge.

L1 Course

Mapping the Narrative: Exploring the Eras and Movements that Shaped World Literature

Tracing the evolution of storytelling across millennia, this course explores key literary movements, influential authors, and diverse cultural contexts. Discover how epics, poetry, and novels have shaped and reflected human civilization.

Homer: Epic Poetry and the Foundations of Western Narrative

Shakespeare: Decoding Tragedy, Comedy, and the Human Condition

Cervantes: Satire, Idealism, and the Birth of the Modern Novel

Goethe's Faust: The Quest for Knowledge and the Soul's Bargain

Jane Austen: Social Satire and the Art of the Marriage Plot

How to Read Russian Classics: Dostoevsky and the Philosophy of Suffering

Poe and the Dark Side: The Origin of the Detective and Horror Genres

The Modernist Break: Joyce's Ulysses and the Stream of Consciousness

Heading for gAn Introduction to Virginia Woolf's Feminist Narratives rid item

Kafka: Bureaucracy, Alienation, and the Absurd

T.S. Eliot's Wasteland: Modernity, Myth, and the Fragmented Self

Gabriel García Márquez: Magic Realism and the Latin American Novel

How to Analyze Science Fiction: From Verne to Philip K. Dick

The Nobel Prize Master: Albert Camus and the Philosophy of the Absurd

The Birth of American Literature: From Melville to Hemingway

An Introduction to Post-Colonial Literature: Chinua Achebe and Cultural Identity

Dante's Inferno: Theology, Poetry, and the Structure of Hell

The Romantic Rebellion: Byron, Shelley, and the Cult of Emotion

How to Decipher Symbolism in Poetry: Baudelaire and Rimbaud

Toni Morrison: Race, Memory, and the American Narrative