world literature
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English
[edit]Noun
[edit]world literature (uncountable)
- (education) Comparative literature.
- (uncommon) The world's national literature collectively, especially the circulation and appreciation of works beyond their country of origin.
- 2008, P. Bayapa Reddy, editor, Aspects of Contemporary World Literature, Atlantic Publishers, →ISBN, page 5:
- Goethe's notion of world literature, therefore, is linked in an important way to the internationalization of culture that resulted from the emergence of capitalism as the dominant mode of production in modern Europe.
- 2009 April 17, Pankaj Mishra, “Author, author: The world of ‘world’ literature”, in The Guardian[1]:
- In 1827, fresh from his reading of a Chinese novel, Goethe pronounced to Eckermann that "national literature is now a rather unmeaning term; the epoch of world literature is at hand, and everyone must strive to hasten its approach.
- 2011, Theo D'haen, David Damrosch, Djelal Kadir, editors, The Routledge Companion to World Literature, Routledge, →ISBN, page 244:
- If cosmopolitanism and world literature are so closely related, to the point where one may wonder whether “cosmopolitan literature” is synonymous with “world literature” […] a question that needs to be answered is why the concept of cosmopolitanism plays such a minor role in world literature discussions.
Translations
[edit]comparative literature — see comparative literature