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Welcome to the DLCL

The Division brings together individuals dedicated to the study of literatures, cultures, and languages from humanistic and interdisciplinary perspectives.

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The Division of Literatures, Cultures, and Languages hosts five departments, as well as the Stanford Language Center.

Events

September
12
Date
Thursday, September 12, 2024 - Friday, September 13, 2024. All day
Location
The University of Cambridge, UK

Call for Papers

This two-day conference, hosted jointly by the PATH+ Research Unit at Stanford University and…

September
27
Date
Friday, September 27, 2024. 1:30pm
Location
Bolivar House
582 Alvarado Row, Stanford, CA 94305

Join us for a discussion about Professor Fatoumata Seck’s recently published article about Haiti’s first woman anthropologist, Suzanne Comhaire-…

October
9
Date
Wednesday, October 9, 2024. 12:00pm - 1:15pm
Location
Building 260, Pigott Hall
450 Jane Stanford Way, Building 260, Stanford, CA 94305
252

Organized and hosted by the Center for Medieval and Early Modern Studies (CMEMS).

Fiona Griffiths (Stanford) will…

News

The DLCL joins the international digital humanities community in remembering the life and legacy of C. Michael Sperberg-McQueen (1954-2024). Michael received his B.A. in German Studies and Comparative Literature with distinction, and with Honors in German Studies at Stanford in 1977, along with an M.A.
The Department of German Studies at Stanford University is pleased to announce the Gerda Henkel Visiting Professorship for 2025-26 and to request applications, due by November 29, 2024.

Dr. Ramzi Salti talking into studio microphone during his 'Arabology' radio show.

On July 12, 2024, KQED and The California Report published an extensive article (and audio podcast) spotlighting Dr. Ramzi Salti's Arabology radio show/podcast.

Research Unit

Speakers in a Symposium

Focal Groups

DLCL Focal Groups bring together faculty members and graduate students who share academic interests ranging across and beyond singular languages and national literatures. Our Focal Groups are conceived as portals that open from the Division outward to the wider community of literary and humanities scholars. All Focal Groups include participants from humanities departments outside the DLCL. Each focal group maintains a research workshop at which both faculty and graduate students present and discuss their work. Some Focal Groups offer formal courses, and all groups are responsible for overseeing research-oriented endeavors, including sponsoring conferences, publications, podcasts, and other activities that disseminate the outcomes of their research.

Female Speakers in a Symposium

Research Groups

DLCL Research Groups are collaborative groups that receive funding from the DLCL for one to three years. Graduate students from within the DLCL and other Stanford departments can start a research group by submitting a proposal during the Call for Proposals period each year in the spring for the following academic year.

Students Listening to a Speaker

Reading Groups

DLCL Reading Groups are smaller, student-run groups, centered around a specific area of literature. Unlike DLCL Focal Groups and Research Groups, Reading Groups do not require a Faculty PI, and typically hold internal meetings and discussions. DLCL Reading Groups are coordinated by DLCL graduate students and include students from within the DLCL and other Stanford departments.