Global Comparative Humanities Working Group

Global Comparative Humanities Working Group

What is world literature? Johann Wolfgang von Goethe coined the term in the early 19th century, referring to the collection of written works that circulate widely beyond their country of origin (think Homer’s The Odyssey, Ibsen’s A Doll’s House, Cervantes’ Don Quixote). The concept has seen a resurgence in the fields of comparative literature and the comparative humanities since the turn of the millennium, concurrent with a turn to the global in literary studies. This explicit focus responds to broader, and increasingly pressing, processes of economic, social and cultural globalization. But this original vision of world literature — featuring a distinctly narrow, culturally and geographically, body of work — is unsuited for a full appreciation of the history and potential of global literary study.

The Global Comparative Humanities Working Group, funded by an Arts & Sciences SPEED Grant, seeks to expand the history of comparatism, excavating multiple genealogies around the world. Their goal is to provide a truly global history of comparatism, including but not limited to world literature, which in turn can anchor a vision for the comparative humanities after the global turn. In retracing a new history of comparatism, the group’s new, original research will move the discussion beyond the Euro-Atlantic world, foregrounding moments in the history of early comparatism in Egypt, India, the early Soviet Union, Latin America and Eastern Europe. In the coming years, the group will organize a series of talks, publications and graduate mentoring workshops that center and analyze this alternative history. 

Articles

Q&A with scholar Ato Quayson

Stanford professor Ato Quayson talked with comparative literature PhD student ‘Gbenga Adeoba about his works-in-progress, modes of public scholarship and the beginnings of comparatism in Africa.

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Arabic encounters in comparative literature

Comp lit PhD student Safa Khatib spoke with literature scholar (and future MLA president) Waïl Hassan about Orientalism, the politics of translation and the relationship between Arabic literary studies and the field of comparative literature.

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Q&A with scholar Eric Hayot

On his recent visit to WashU, scholar Eric Hayot met with English PhD student Maria Siciliano about his most recent monographs, “On Literary Worlds” and “Humanist Reason,” as well as his essential guide to academic writing in the humanities, “The Elements of Academic Style.” They discussed a process-oriented vision of writing, considered new questions for teaching across the humanities and outlined methods that are key to humanist research. 

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Q&A with Anna Kornbluh

Graduate student Bonnie Pang (English) talks to literature and culture scholar Anna Kornbluh about “fast” and “good enough” art.

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Events

The Global Comparative Humanities Working Group organizes a lecture series that convenes the WashU humanities community to discuss and strategize new research in comparative humanities with leading scholars in the field. Each speaker gives a lecture and runs a workshop on an aspect of the comparative method.

Upcoming lectures + workshops

Panel Discussion: The Political Economy of Translation

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Ena Selimović, AJ Javaheri, and Mona Kareem

Event page


Bhavya Tiwari 
Associate Professor, Modern and Classical Languages, University of Houston

Monday, April 6, 2026

Lecture: The Task of a Comparatist

Tuesday, April 4, 2026

Workshop: Tagore’s Concept of World Literature: A Comparatist Genealogy

 


Sarah Brouillette
Professor, Department of English Language and Literature, Carleton University

Fall 2026 lecture and workshop

 

 

 

 


Earlier lectures + workshops

Eric Hayot 
Distinguished Professor of Comparative Literature and Asian Studies, Penn State University

Thursday, February 13, 2025

Lecture:Comparative Method at the End of Aesthetic History; or, The Possibilities and Limits of Historical Relativism 

Friday, February 14, 2025

Workshop: Structure and Style in Humanities Writing

Article: Q&A with scholar Eric Hayot by Maria Siciliano 


Namwali Serpell 
Professor of English, Harvard University

Tuesday, March 18, 2025

Lecture: Misreading Recitatif

 

 

 


Ato Quayson 
Jean G. and Morris M. Doyle Professor of Interdisciplinary Studies, Stanford University

Tuesday, March 25, 2025

Lecture: Interdisciplinarity and Interpretation: A Comparative Method 

Wednesday, March 26, 2025

Workshop: Decolonizing the Literary Curriculum: Means and Meanings 

ArticleQ&A with scholar Ato Quayson by ‘Gbenga Adeoba


Waïl S. Hassan
Professor and Head, Department of Comparative & World Literature, University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign

Thursday, April 10, 2025

Lecture: Arab Brazil: Ternary Orientalism and the Question of South-South Comparison

Friday, April 11, 2025

Workshop: Comparing the Literatures of the Global South

ArticleArabic encounters in comparative literature by Safa Khatib


Anna Kornbluh
Professor and Associate Head of English, University of Illinois, Chicago

October 2, 2025

Lecture: Good Enough Art: A Few Theses on Middling Mediations

Article: Q&A with Anna Kornbluh by Bonnie Pang

Graduate students

The Global Comparative Humanities Working Group provides collaborative opportunities and grant-writing training for graduate students. Graduate student stipends allow them to join the team, with an eye to generating research on areas of the world not covered by faculty expertise. They participate in the team’s research projects and develop individual projects in the comparative humanities.

'Gbenga Adeoba

'Gbenga Adeoba, a PhD student in comparative literature, focuses his research on The Life and Struggles of Walatta Petros, a book-length biography of a 17th-century Ethiopian woman saint. Adeoba examines what the text and its circulations — in manuscript forms and translations — contribute to the history of comparatism in early modern and modern African literature.

 

Headshot of Sarah María Medina

Sarah María Medina

Sarah María Medina, a PhD candidate in comparative literature (International Writers Track), is researching early comparatism in Mexico and its global networks. Her project focuses on Enrique de Olavarría y Ferrari (1844–1919), a central figure in Mexican literary circles who wrote extensively on Mexican history and edited literary journals in Mexico City.

 

Headshot of Bonnie Pang

Bonnie Pang

Bonnie Pang, a PhD candidate in English, centers her research around Paul Mayet (1846–1920), one of many o-yatoi gaikokujin (“hired foreigners”) in the employ of the modernizing Japanese state in the late 19th-century. She examines his twin contributions to Japan’s industrial and literary nation-building, tracing the connections and influence of the texts he submitted to Hugo Meltzl and his journal of comparative literature.

 

Headshot of Safa Khatib
Safa Khatib

Safa Khatib, a PhD student in comparative literature (International Writers Track), is researching traditions of literary and philosophical comparatism between Arabic and Ancient Greek. Her project focuses on the work of Suleiman Al-Bustani (1856–1925), a Lebanese poet, translator, historian and minister who translated the Iliad into Arabic while traveling throughout South Asia and the Mediterranean.