Career
She served as pro-vice-chancellor at the University of Warwick for ten years and taught in its Centre for Translation and Comparative Cultural Studies, which closed in 2009. Educated around Europe, she began her career in Italy and has lectured at universities in the United States prior to the University of Warwick where she is currently professor of comparative literature. In 2007, she was elected a Fellow at the Royal Society of Literature.
Foregrounding translation
In her 1998 work Constructing Cultures: Essays on Literary Translation (written with André Lefevere), Bassnett states that "the shift of emphasis from original to translation is reflected in discussions on the visibility of the translator.
Lawrence Venuti calls for a translator-centered translation, insisting that the translator should inscribe him/herself visibly into the text". Comparative literature as a literary strategy
In a 2006 essay titled Reflections on Comparative Literature in the Twenty-First Century, she engaged with Gayatri Chakravorty Spivak who argues in Death of a Discipline (2003) that the field of comparative literature must move beyond its eurocentrism if it is to stay relevant.
While she agrees with Spivak that eurocentrism has marginalised literatures from the non-West, she also argues that Spivak"s argument puts comparatists from Europe, who are familiar with its literatures, in a precarious position. To Bassnett, the way out for European comparatists is to critically investigate their past
Bassnett also recanted her previous stance that comparative literature is a dying subject that will slowly be replaced by translation studies.
Rather, she argues that comparative literature and translation theory continue to be relevant today if taken as modes of reading that literary critics can use to approach texts.