News & Events

News

May 25, 2025

San Francisco Chronicle

Frank Cahill, a doctoral student in comparative literature at UC Berkeley, is the national word list coordinator for the Scripps National Spelling Bee.

Marcus Gabbert/For the S.F. Chronicle

May 19, 2025

Comparative literature student Frank Cahill competed in the Scripps National Spelling Bee as an eighth grader. This year, on May 28 and 29, he’ll be on the other side of the stage.

February 24, 2025

Angel's passion for Comparative Literature continues to drive her exploration of literature, history, and philosophy across cultures. For the second year in a row, Angel has been awarded the prestigious Foreign Language and Area Studies (FLAS) Fellowship. This summer, she will travel to Almaty, Kazakhstan, where she will continue her studies of Russian.

Congratulations to Angel on receiving her second FLAS Fellowship!

February 18, 2025

February 7, 2025

Noise Pop @ SFJAZZ

Dani Offline
FEB 27-MAR 2 | Noise Pop @ SFJAZZ

Feb 27, 2025 | Joe Henderson Lab

Get tickets here(link is external)

January 29, 2025

Roxana (Qinhong) Wang, a recent graduate of the UC Berkeley class of 2024, has been awarded a 2025-26 Schwarzman Scholarship. Wang, who studied Comparative Literature and Ancient Greek and Roman Studies in the College of Letters & Science, was selected as one of 150 scholars from a pool of nearly 5,000 candidates. She is Berkeley’s sixteenth recipient of the award since its inception in 2013.

November 24, 2024

Professor Beth Piatote is cited ... as an inspiration for Sariel Sandoval, a math and engineering Native American student from Montana.  You can read the full story from Berkeley News here(link is external)

Selby Wynn Schwartz (Ph.D., 2005)...  was recently awarded the 2021 Reflex Press Novella Award(link is external) for her first novella, A Life in Chameleons (forthcoming 2022), and her debut novel After Sappho(link is external)

This year, Comparative Literature ...

We are pleased to share our new ... web page, celebrating our part of one hundred and fifty years of women at the University of California. We hope you enjoy these remembrances from our faculty, staff, and alumni! This page can also be accessed in the top left of our site, by the link labeled '150W.'

We are delighted to announce ... this year's Outstanding GSIs in Comparative Literature: Matthew GonzalesMax Kaisler, and Laila Riazi!  Congratulations to Matt, Max, and Laila on your excellent teaching, and thank you for all you contribute to our community.

The last Big Give took place ... on March 12, 2020 - just moments before our world changed. Since then your UC Berkeley community has kept the blue and gold spirit strong: repurposing labs for COVID research and PPE fabrication; making sure students have what they need to thrive in challenging times; innovating ways to keep connections strong for classes, clubs, and cohorts; and shining light on expert perspectives that illuminate pathways through some of the most complicated times in modern history.

EL GRUPO PRESENTS /EL ... GRUPO PRESENTA

(in conjunction with UC Berkeley's Department of Comparative Literature, and the UCB Department of Spanish & Portuguese)

--A CONVERSATION/CHARLA:

"WORKS IN PROGRESS / ESTUDIOS EN CURSO"

Monday, February 22, 5 pm (Pacific Coast Time)

A Zoomcast event, featuring three grupistas speaking briefly and informally about their current research, and then taking questions from--and engaging in discussion with--event attendees.

Our Three Presenters:

Bella Chavez is a recent graduate ... from the University of California, Berkeley where she double majored in Comparative Literature and Latin American Languages & Cultures. She is a recipient of the competitive Benjamin A. Gilman International Scholarship. During her undergraduate career, she studied abroad in Brazil, Italy, Portugal, and Spain. She also volunteered in Medellin, Colombia where she completed her education minor practicum. She is currently interning with the Office of the Director of National Intelligence through a Virtual Student Federal Service program.

"The Borderlands of Culture in Election-Urgency: Charla/Conversation with Ramón Saldívar (Stanford University)"--Responses from Ivonne del Valle (UC Berkeley) and Alejandra Decker (UC Berkeley), followed by discussion with the audience

Monday, October 26, 5-7 pm Webinar (webcast hosted by the University of California, Berkeley)

Co-Sponsors: Department of Spanish & Portuguese; Department of Comparative Literature

Third year Comparative Literature ... student at Cal Kayla Cohen is studying English, Hebrew, Arabic literatures. Drawing from her travels and the interviews that she conducted with Jewish Diaspora leaders in 2017 and 2018, her new book (titled "The Full Severity of Our Connection") carefully examines the Jewish people’s links to the non-Jewish world and how these links have impacted different conceptions of Jewishness.

Juneteenth marks the end of slavery... and we are asked to look back upon that horrific institution that debased, exploited, and dispensed with black life. Some will say that slavery came to an end and take this chance to congratulate the United States for its emergence from slavery. But what of slavery still remains? We can point to contemporary slave labor in the US and elsewhere which, though illegal, still continues to afflict the lives of many migrants.

The department is now accepting ... graduate applications for 2021-2022.  We welcome applicants with a diverse range of backgrounds and interests.  Here is more information.(link is external)

Professor Beth Piatote is a featured playwright in the 12th Annual Short Play Festival by Native Voices at the Autry. The festival includes two readings of Piatote's play, Tricksters, Unite! (March 20 at The Autry Museum and March 27 at La Jolla Playhouse).

Plays selected for this year's festival examine "Tricksters in their traditional form, but also in the modern roles they play today."

News archive and events happening in the Department of Comparative Literature.