The Magazine

  • OU Homepage
  • The University of Oklahoma

world literature today book reviews

  • Student Programs
  • Student Success Stories
  • OU Discount Subscriptions
  • The Neustadt Lit Fest
  • The Puterbaugh Lit Fest
  • Support WLT
  • Read the Latest Issue

World Literature Today Magazine

WLT Magazines

World Literature Today  was founded as  Books Abroad  in 1927 by Roy Temple House, a scholar of vision from the University of Oklahoma. From a modest seedling of 32 pages in January 1927,  Books Abroad  grew to 256 pages by the end of its fiftieth year (Autumn 1976), and that year's cover design reflected the completion of a significant circle. In January 1977 the journal became known as  World Literature Today , reflecting the truly international range that its coverage and reputation had acquired.

Today, WLT is published quarterly and is available internationally in libraries and bookstores, and is available for individual subscriptions in print and digital format. The magazine can also be read online at www.worldliteraturetoday.org , which also hosts WLT' s blog on international literature and culture. OU students who participate in an intership at WLT have the opportunity to be a part of this magazine, working in copyediting, writing book reviews, or digital media, for example.

Now with over 90 years of uninterrupted publication,  WLT  is one of the oldest continuously published literary periodicals in the United States—along with such other publications launched in the early twentieth century as  South Atlantic Quarterly  (1902),  Poetry  (1912), and the  New Yorker  (1925)—and we remain devoted to our mission of serving students, scholars, and general readers worldwide. For years, a quotation from Goethe appeared on our masthead: "These journals, as they reach a wider public, will contribute most effectively to the universal world literature for which we are hoping. There can be no question, however, of nations thinking alike. The aim is simply that they shall grow aware of one another, understand one another, and, even where they may not be able to love, may at least tolerate one another." Goethe's words, first published in 1828, remain at the heart of our mission, even—or perhaps especially—in a world that has become increasingly globalized in the 21st century but remains fraught with national, linguistic, and political divisions.

Created by the Oklahoma Territorial Legislature in 1890, the University of Oklahoma is a doctoral-degree-granting research university serving the educational, cultural, economic, and health-care needs of the state, region, and nation. The Norman campus serves as home to all of the university’s academic programs except health-related fields. Administratively,  WLT  is supervised by OU's senior vice president and provost, Dr. Kyle Harper. For more information about the university, visit the  OU  home page.

Stack of World Literature Today magazines, WLT

A part of the University of Oklahoma family for over 90 years, World Literature Today offers special subscription discounts for fellow members of the OU community. If you're an OU student, faculty, or staff member, these offers for a print or digital subscription are for you!

See Subscription Offers

OU

  • Accessibility
  • Sustainability
  • OU Job Search
  • Accreditation
  • Legal Notices
  • Resources & Offices
  • OU Report It!

World Literature Today Social Media

IMAGES

  1. Book Reviews

    world literature today book reviews

  2. World Literature Today’s 75 Notable Translations of 2016

    world literature today book reviews

  3. World Literature Today

    world literature today book reviews

  4. Book Reviews

    world literature today book reviews

  5. Book Reviews

    world literature today book reviews

  6. Winter 2019

    world literature today book reviews

VIDEO

  1. WORLD LITERATURE (0408)

  2. Introducing Latin American Literature Today

  3. Literature as supermarket: Mapping world literature today|Literary Theory|Kannur University

  4. POETRY READING: Jamaica Baldwin, Farah Peterson, Jamella Hagen

  5. Poetry Reading: Adam Zagajewski

  6. Winning Price of || Guinness Book of World Record || #shorts