English Culture Ii
A.Y. 2022/2023
Learning objectives
Focusing on the literary and non-literary works, films, art forms, discourses and cultural practices which inform and characterize the current British debate on national and cultural identity against the backdrop of the country's imperial past and with a view to redefine its role in Europe and globally, this course aims to enhance the students' knowledge and understanding of these themes, which are central concerns in the British and European experience of contemporaneity.
This aim is pursued through the methodological and critical tools of cultural studies, which, in line with the main objectives of the Degree Course, favour an understanding of ideological, intercultural and socio-spatial relations, as well as a multicultural and interdisciplinary approach. The course is meant to foster active participation from the students, and, besides advancing their spoken English skills, aims to enhance their ability to make judgements and recognize the differences and connections among divergent forms, genres, and cultures, according to the wider multicultural and intercultural mission of Mediazione Linguistica.
- Knowledge and understanding - Students will gain knowledge and understanding of a variety of cultural practices and productions (visual art, films, writing, performances) and literary texts, primarily in English, presented through the lens of Cultural Studies and against the backgrounds of contemporary British culture, history and society. Attention will be devoted to representations and redefinitions of British identity/ies, multi-culturalism, new ethnicities, the reemergence of nationalism, and current social inequalities and tensions. Cultural production and consumption will also be considered, along with the discourses and practices of consent construction and resistance, and youth cultures.
· Applying knowledge and understanding - Students will the opportunity to apply their acquired knowledge and understanding to close read and analyze cultural productions and literary texts; synthesize and compare relevant information; debate and discuss texts and issues in the class and in groups; produce brief oral or written work, and powerpoint presentations, consistent with the topics of the course.
- Making judgements - Students will acquire the skills relevant to making more informed and autonomous judgements. Thanks to their familiarity with different perspectives of intercultural analysis, they will develop analytical and critical attitudes towards cultural productions and literary texts and draw comparisons and establish connections between the various contexts under scrutiny and their own situated experience.
· Communication skills - The course will enable students to improve their oral skills in English, and, in particular, to discuss given topics, present their own work to an audience of peers; structure group work among peers; use IT technology to support both academic study and networking.
This aim is pursued through the methodological and critical tools of cultural studies, which, in line with the main objectives of the Degree Course, favour an understanding of ideological, intercultural and socio-spatial relations, as well as a multicultural and interdisciplinary approach. The course is meant to foster active participation from the students, and, besides advancing their spoken English skills, aims to enhance their ability to make judgements and recognize the differences and connections among divergent forms, genres, and cultures, according to the wider multicultural and intercultural mission of Mediazione Linguistica.
- Knowledge and understanding - Students will gain knowledge and understanding of a variety of cultural practices and productions (visual art, films, writing, performances) and literary texts, primarily in English, presented through the lens of Cultural Studies and against the backgrounds of contemporary British culture, history and society. Attention will be devoted to representations and redefinitions of British identity/ies, multi-culturalism, new ethnicities, the reemergence of nationalism, and current social inequalities and tensions. Cultural production and consumption will also be considered, along with the discourses and practices of consent construction and resistance, and youth cultures.
· Applying knowledge and understanding - Students will the opportunity to apply their acquired knowledge and understanding to close read and analyze cultural productions and literary texts; synthesize and compare relevant information; debate and discuss texts and issues in the class and in groups; produce brief oral or written work, and powerpoint presentations, consistent with the topics of the course.
- Making judgements - Students will acquire the skills relevant to making more informed and autonomous judgements. Thanks to their familiarity with different perspectives of intercultural analysis, they will develop analytical and critical attitudes towards cultural productions and literary texts and draw comparisons and establish connections between the various contexts under scrutiny and their own situated experience.
· Communication skills - The course will enable students to improve their oral skills in English, and, in particular, to discuss given topics, present their own work to an audience of peers; structure group work among peers; use IT technology to support both academic study and networking.
Expected learning outcomes
Beside consolidating their skills in comprehension, and oral and written English, students will acquire interdisciplinary methodological and cultural tools for discussing and analyzing cultural, political and media discourses and practices, fictional and non-fictional texts, visual culture, documentaries and films. This will be done from a variety of perspectives and using the methodological approaches of Cultural Studies. The acquisition of these skills will be fostered by encouraging active participation and dialogue, and by enabling the students to draw comparisons between the British context and their own situated experience of being Italians and citizens of the world, so as to facilitate forms of analysis and engagement with the issues and challenges of the British present which are consistent with the avowed specialist and intercultural mission of their Degree Course. Through active participation and independent work, students will be invited to develop a higher degree of intellectual curiosity, autonomy, and ability to discriminate; transfer the acquired skills to related fields of analysis; and to apply a methodological approach to future research and activities.
Lesson period: Second semester
Assessment methods: Esame
Assessment result: voto verbalizzato in trentesimi
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
Course syllabus
The course is centred on the literary and individual representation of the tragic, applying for this purpose the tools provided by the Cultural Studies and the Medical Humanities in all their mutidisciplinary approach. A special attention is devoted to: the embodiment of the tragic in the dramatic form of the tragedy, an evaluation of the the cultural and therapeutical approaches to the tragic dimension that have stratified throughout the years. The course tackles a wide range of texts: dramatic texts, news reports, philosophical essays and all those texts in general apt at representing the past and contemporary experience of the tragic.
Unit 1
Cultural Studies and Medical Humanities; the concept of the tragic
Unit 2
The tragedy; William Shakespeare and Macbeth
Unit3 3
Tragedy in contemporary drama (Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter, Arthur Miller)
Unit 1
Cultural Studies and Medical Humanities; the concept of the tragic
Unit 2
The tragedy; William Shakespeare and Macbeth
Unit3 3
Tragedy in contemporary drama (Samuel Beckett, Harold Pinter, Arthur Miller)
Prerequisites for admission
The student must show the ability to understand and analyse texts of various kind, in English, correctly framing them within their cultural and historical context. He/she must be able to analyse their adaptations in different time, space and genres, possibly providing a critical reading of these adaptations. He/she must be able to presento rally his/her when sitting for the exam, organizing contents in the most effective way and following the professor's suggestions during classes or tutorial activities, if proposed.
Teaching methods
Lecture-based classes, including some team working and occasional guest speakers, whenever possible.
Teaching Resources
Any edition, as long as it is in English and unabridged, of:
William Shakespeare, Macbeth
Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot; Catastrophe
Arthur Miller, Death of a Salesman
Harold Pinter, The Caretaker
AAVV, Introduzione ai Cultural Studies. UK, USA e paesi anglofoni. Roma, Carocci, 2016
Further critical essays will be made available by the teacher at the beginning of the course.
Non attending students shall also read, besides what listed above,: Jennifer Wallace, The Cambridge Introduction to Tragedy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press 2007 [ISBN: 9780521671491]. Non attending students are also reminded to be prepared on the biographic and critic profiles of the authors included in the programme.
William Shakespeare, Macbeth
Samuel Beckett, Waiting for Godot; Catastrophe
Arthur Miller, Death of a Salesman
Harold Pinter, The Caretaker
AAVV, Introduzione ai Cultural Studies. UK, USA e paesi anglofoni. Roma, Carocci, 2016
Further critical essays will be made available by the teacher at the beginning of the course.
Non attending students shall also read, besides what listed above,: Jennifer Wallace, The Cambridge Introduction to Tragedy, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press 2007 [ISBN: 9780521671491]. Non attending students are also reminded to be prepared on the biographic and critic profiles of the authors included in the programme.
Assessment methods and Criteria
Attending students will be required to organize and comment a PowerPoint presentation related to the acivities of the course, according to the instructions given during the course itself. The PPT presentation will be evaluated as an integration of the habitual oral exam.
Professor(s)