Anglophone Cultures Ii

A.Y. 2022/2023
6
Max ECTS
40
Overall hours
SSD
L-LIN/10
Language
English
Learning objectives
Focusing on the literary and non-literary works, films, discourses, art forms and cultural products and practices of the Anglophone countries which are taken as case studies in the syllabus, this course aims to contextualize them against the complex political and cultural histories of these countries, rooted in the fraught, divisive experiences of colonization, empire, decolonization and globalized contemporaneity. The course aims to provide the students with an inter- and cross-cultural awareness, as well as to enhance their critical knowledge and understanding of these themes, which are increasingly relevant to our current experience of the global, with its claims and alterities, and enduring inequalities. These aims are pursued through the methodological and critical tools of cultural studies, which, combined here with postcolonial theory, and in tune with the avowed educational and vocational objectives of our Master Degree Course, privilege multicultural and interdisciplinary exchanges and perspectives. By fostering active participation from the students, and providing opportunities for advancing spoken English skills, the course sets out to enhance the students' critical- analytical skills, their ability to make independent judgements and organize their own work and study projects, and encourages an advanced ability to recognize differences and make thoughtful connections among divergent forms, genres, practices, identities and cultures, in line with the overall mission of Lingue e Culture per la Comunicazione e la Cooperazione Internazionale.

Objectives include:
- Knowledge and understanding - Students will gain knowledge and critical understanding of a range of cultural practices, productions (visual art, films, writing, performances), and literary genres and texts in English, relevant to the main themes of the course, which they will approach through the lens of selected Cultural Studies practices and theories. Selected theoretical paradigms and current debates in Postcolonial Theory, as well as the contested legacies of colonisation and decolonisation, and their impact on non-Western paths to globalisation will be also important elements of the course.
- Applying knowledge and understanding - Students will have the opportunity to apply their acquired knowledge and understanding to in-depth close reading and critical analysis of cultural productions and literary texts; to improving their ability to retrieve, select, synthesise, compare, evaluate and organize relevant information and materials; to debating and discussing relevant texts and issues in the class and in groups and producing oral and written work in English, and PowerPoint presentations, consistent with the topics of the course.
- Making judgements - Students will acquire the following skills relevant to making informed and autonomous judgements: by acquiring and developing comprehensive analytical and critical attitudes towards a diversity of cultural productions and literary texts, they will be better equipped to embrace and transfer intercultural and plural perspectives of analysis. The ability to draw comparisons and establish connections between the various contexts under scrutiny, and the habit to experiment with a diversity of approaches to selected issues consistent with the course will also be major assets in developing judgements skills.
· Communication skills - The course will enable students to enhance their ability to discuss selected topics, present their own work to an audience of peers and engage the audience in fruitful debates, use IT technology to support both academic study, research and networking.
Expected learning outcomes
Acquired knowledge and skills will match the multicultural mission of the Master Degree Course by allowing students to select, contextualise, critically analyse, evaluate and discuss the thematic threads, the cultural practices, discourses and productions of selected English-speaking countries showing an awareness of their historical, political, social and cultural backgrounds. This will be done from a variety of perspectives and using the methodological approaches of Cultural Studies and Postcolonial Theory.
The acquisition of these skills will enable the students to draw comparisons and unravel the connections between a given Anglophone context, analysed in both its local and global dimensions, and their own culture and experiences, according to a cross-cultural perspective which, in line with the overall objectives of Lingue e Culture per la Comunicazione e la Cooperazione Internazionale, will enhance their ability to compare and assess different histories, ideologies, claims, cultural practices, and the way they offer thoughtful responses to the main issues of the present. Through active participation and independent work, students will develop skills which will help them undertake further study with a higher degree of intellectual curiosity, autonomy, and ability to discriminate, transfer the acquired skills to related fields of analysis and apply multiple methodologies and a consistent intercultural approach to their dissertation and post-graduate research.
Single course

This course cannot be attended as a single course. Please check our list of single courses to find the ones available for enrolment.

Course syllabus and organization

Single session

Responsible
Lesson period
Second semester
In the emergency teaching phase, should it become necessary to use online teaching, the program designed for face-to-face teaching is modified as follows:
Teaching methods:
The lessons will be held in synchronous, trying to enhance interaction (chat and forum), using mainly Teams; only in specific cases and duly communicated, the lessons will be held in asynchronous (videolessons). In case there will be activities in presence (following the indications of the university), students who will not participate will be offered an alternative online activity that will allow them to develop the same critical and text analysis skills.
The timetable of the lessons remains unchanged and all the most important information will be provided through the ARIEL website of the course.
The methods and criteria for attending the lessons in attendance, which require a reservation with the appropriate app, will be published in good time on the ARIEL website of the course.
Reference materials:
The syllabus is kept untouched. For those who decide not to attend the course, we recommend the supporting bibliography.
Testing and grading:
The exam is oral and will be conducted, in the case of online teaching, in Microsoft Teams, according to the indications provided by the University. The requirements and methods of evaluation remain the same with respect to the "in presence" program.
Course syllabus
TITLE: Cities of Africa. Colonial, postcolonial, post imperial and post-apocalyptic urban geographies in the heart od darkness


Starting from the late-19th-century image of colonial Africa - the "heart of darkness" evoked by Joseph Conrad - the course focuses on the current topographical and social forms that African cities of various types and sizes take. The aim is to construct, through documents, images, films and narratives of various kinds, the plurality of cultures inhabiting various parts of the continent. It also seeks to provide students with the tools to understand the differences on a continent where English is often used as the official language, though not being the mother tongue. The artistic and cultural hybridity is visible in both the cultural products and documents that will be analyzed together. The participation of students in the shared work will be an essential part of the course and an element of assessment.


The work will be organized into two units:
Unit 1 - The city, the township, the camp
Unit 2 - Nigerian sites
The first one will be slightly longer than the second one
Prerequisites for admission
Students are expected to be fluent in English. They must be able to read and understand complex texts in English and they must prove able to express their own critical position on the suggested issues, also showing to be aware of the characteristics of the methods of Cultural Studies: in case they are not, the students are invited to ask the professor for additional readings. Before sitting for the exam of English Culture II, students must have taken the exam of Anglophone Culture I.
Teaching methods
Classes will develop on a lecture-based method and collaborative, occasionally involving guest speakers and the participation to external events. Students will be led to develop team-working abilities, congruent with the professional profile they are meant to acquire. The outputs resulting from Students' work (slide presentations, podcasts, playlist, video) will be shared with classmates.
Teaching Resources
Unit 1 - The city, the township, the camp

Documents & websites
Africa: British colonies: https://www.encyclopedia.com/social-sciences/encyclopedias-almanacs-transcripts-and-maps/africa-british-colonies#B

Films & visuals
Andrea Gadaleta Caldarola, Nomos (ITA,2012)
Feruccio Goia, Gianni Sirch, My Private Zoo (ITA, 2012)
Laura Cappon, Gianluca Costantini, Patrick Zaki. Una storia egiziana, 2022 (maps uploades on the Ariel website and videoclip: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=AeNA9bSVMDw)

Fiction e non fiction:
Tlotlo Tsamaase, The Silence of the Wilting Skin, 2020 (available also in translation: Silenziosa sfiorisce la pelle, Zona 42, 2022, trad. di Giulia Lenti)


Unit 2 - Nigerian sites

Documents:
Ken Saro-Wiwa, Silence would be treason. Last writings of Ken Saro-Wiwa (2018 - excerpts uploaded on the Ariel website)
CLIP - presentation https://www.goldmanprize.org/recipient/ken-saro-wiwa/

Fiction & plays: choose one of the following works
Nnedi Okorafor, Lagoon (novel 2014 - available also in Italian: Laguna, Zona 42, 2017. Trad. Di Chiara Reali)
Wole Soyinka, The Beatification of Area Boy (play 1995 - also Italian edition)
Chris Abani, GraceLand (2004)



Optional readings:
L. Bruti Liberati, Impero, Bompiani, 2021
A. De Maio, La letteratura nigeriana in lingua inglese (2021)

For those unfamiliar with tools and methods of Cultural Studies:
Chris Barker, Cultural Studies. Theory and Practice, London, Sage, 2016
Stuart Hall, Representation. Cultural Representations and Signifying Practices, London/Thousand Oaks (cal.), Open University Press, 1997
Nicoletta Vallorani (a cura di), Introduzione ai Cultural Studies. UK, USA e paesi anglofoni, Roma, Carocci, 2016.
Assessment methods and Criteria
Students will have the opportunity to carry out some in itinere tests and in-depth activities that will be subject to evaluation and on which more specific indications will be given in class. The activities are meant as a form of training for team working, an ability that will be part of the final grading. The overall evaluation will be elaborated and communicated during the final exam.
L-LIN/10 - ENGLISH LITERATURE - University credits: 6
Lessons: 40 hours
Educational website(s)