Browse Study Programs
181 courses available


Germany's British Literature programs offer international students a fascinating paradox—studying the anglophone literary canon in the nation that gave English its Germanic roots, where Shakespeare is performed more than anywhere outside Britain and "Hamlet" remains Germany's most-staged play, creating unique scholarly perspectives at institutions like Humboldt University Berlin, University of Heidelberg, and LMU Munich whose English departments rival Oxbridge in research output. These rigorous English-taught degrees transform you into a literary scholar capable of tracing how Beowulf's Old English emerged from Germanic dialects, analyzing why German Romanticism profoundly influenced Wordsworth and Coleridge, understanding how Brecht's alienation effect revolutionized British theater from Pinter to Churchill, decoding the colonial discourse in Conrad through postcolonial theory developed by German scholars, and examining how contemporary British authors from Zadie Smith to Kazuo Ishiguro negotiate multicultural identity—all while benefiting from Germany's distinctive "outsider-insider" perspective that reveals aspects of British literature invisible from within anglophone academia. You'll master British literary tradition through comprehensive training spanning medieval manuscripts to digital humanities, studying Chaucer's Canterbury Tales in libraries holding 15th-century editions, Shakespeare's plays through both performance theory and German translation traditions that sometimes improve the original, Victorian novels exploring industrialization parallels between Manchester and the Ruhr, Modernist experiments from Joyce's stream-of-consciousness to Woolf's psychological realism, and contemporary British fiction grappling with Brexit, migration, and post-imperial identity—while accessing Germany's world-class research infrastructure including the Shakespeare Library in Munich with 20,000 volumes, digital humanities labs using AI to analyze corpus linguistics, and partnerships with British Council Germany facilitating scholarly exchange. The curriculum uniquely combines British literary scholarship with German theoretical rigor through seminars applying Frankfurt School critical theory to Dickens's capitalism critique, workshops comparing British and German Romanticism's nature philosophy, research projects examining how German publishers like Suhrkamp shape British literature's European reception, and translation studies exploring why Harry Potter needed cultural adaptation for German readers—preparing graduates who understand literature as both aesthetic achievement and cultural force.
Show more...
Other EU Students
Other EU Students | Admission-restricted courses | Admission-free courses | |
|---|---|---|
| Master | 15 July | No courses |