Italian Literature
A.Y. 2022/2023
Learning objectives
The first part intends to offer some exemplary critical readings taken from the main texts of the Italian literary tradition. The second will deepen in a monographic form a work, an author or a literary current.
Expected learning outcomes
Knowledge of the main currents of Italian medieval, early modern and modern literature, set in their historic and cultural context, with special emphasis on their literary and linguistic peculiarities. Elements of rhetoric and metric. Interpretive tools of critical analysis. Understanding of the specificities of literary texts. Familiarity with the basics of critical scholarship. Acquisition of a personal and grounded judgement. Clarity and rigor of the analysis through a proper use of the critical vocabulary.
Lesson period: First 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
A (A-D)
Responsible
Lesson period
First semester
Course syllabus
The course consists of two sections that will be developed sequentially:
Section A: "The Italian literature from the 13th to the 18th centuries: main authors and works" (40 hours, 6 ECTS).
Section B: "Dante's pluristilism and plurilingualism" (20 hours, 3 ECTS).
Section A will provide a general overview of some of the most important authors, works and historical moments of the Italian literature, from the Origins to the 18th century.
Section B will focus on two characteristics of Dante's poetry (and of his "Commedia" in particular): pluristilism and plurilingualism. This topic will be explored through the reading, commentary and discussion of some significant passages, and it will also provide a particular point of view on the great linguistic richness of Italy and Europe between the end of the 13th and the beginning of the 14th centuries.
This course provides only 9 ECTS; it can't provide only 6 ECTS. Lessons are held in Italian.
Section A: "The Italian literature from the 13th to the 18th centuries: main authors and works" (40 hours, 6 ECTS).
Section B: "Dante's pluristilism and plurilingualism" (20 hours, 3 ECTS).
Section A will provide a general overview of some of the most important authors, works and historical moments of the Italian literature, from the Origins to the 18th century.
Section B will focus on two characteristics of Dante's poetry (and of his "Commedia" in particular): pluristilism and plurilingualism. This topic will be explored through the reading, commentary and discussion of some significant passages, and it will also provide a particular point of view on the great linguistic richness of Italy and Europe between the end of the 13th and the beginning of the 14th centuries.
This course provides only 9 ECTS; it can't provide only 6 ECTS. Lessons are held in Italian.
Prerequisites for admission
None.
Teaching methods
Lectures with reading and commentary of texts; students are invited to take part in the discussion on the topics treated in class. Attendance to lectures is highly recommended. Additional digital teaching materials (such as images, musical registrations, and bibliographic supports) will be published in the Ariel site of the course.
Teaching Resources
Section A:
Before classes start, the teacher will publish on the Ariel site of the course a booklet containing the texts that will be read and commented during the lessons.
Class notes are part of the exam program.
Students will complete their preparation with the study of the main authors of Italian literature analyzed in class on a good handbook of Italian literature, that will provide a general knowledge of their historical-cultural background (the authors to be studied will be listed in a document published on the Ariel site at the end of this section of the course). The teacher can provide foreign students with additional information about this and all the other aspects.
During personal study, students may use handbooks that can help them in the metrical and rhetorical analysis of texts (such as Pietro G. Beltrami, "Gli strumenti della poesia", Bologna, Il Mulino, 2002 and Bice Mortara Garavelli, "Il parlar figurato. Manualetto di figure retoriche", Bari-Roma, Laterza, 2010).
Further teaching materials will be provided in the Ariel site during the course.
Section B:
Before classes of this section start, the teacher will publish on the Ariel site of the course a booklet containing: 1) the texts that will be read and commented during the lessons; 2) the precise indication of the critical bibliography to be studied for the exam.
Class notes are part of the exam program.
Further teaching materials will be provided in the Ariel site during the course.
Non-attending students are invited to contact the teacher for additional information and supplementary bibliographic references that will substitute the attendance at classes (and consequently the study of personal class notes). Erasmus incoming students with linguistic difficulties with the Italian language may contact the teacher to establish a specific study plan. The programme of this course is valid until February 2024.
Before classes start, the teacher will publish on the Ariel site of the course a booklet containing the texts that will be read and commented during the lessons.
Class notes are part of the exam program.
Students will complete their preparation with the study of the main authors of Italian literature analyzed in class on a good handbook of Italian literature, that will provide a general knowledge of their historical-cultural background (the authors to be studied will be listed in a document published on the Ariel site at the end of this section of the course). The teacher can provide foreign students with additional information about this and all the other aspects.
During personal study, students may use handbooks that can help them in the metrical and rhetorical analysis of texts (such as Pietro G. Beltrami, "Gli strumenti della poesia", Bologna, Il Mulino, 2002 and Bice Mortara Garavelli, "Il parlar figurato. Manualetto di figure retoriche", Bari-Roma, Laterza, 2010).
Further teaching materials will be provided in the Ariel site during the course.
Section B:
Before classes of this section start, the teacher will publish on the Ariel site of the course a booklet containing: 1) the texts that will be read and commented during the lessons; 2) the precise indication of the critical bibliography to be studied for the exam.
Class notes are part of the exam program.
Further teaching materials will be provided in the Ariel site during the course.
Non-attending students are invited to contact the teacher for additional information and supplementary bibliographic references that will substitute the attendance at classes (and consequently the study of personal class notes). Erasmus incoming students with linguistic difficulties with the Italian language may contact the teacher to establish a specific study plan. The programme of this course is valid until February 2024.
Assessment methods and Criteria
The exam consists of a preliminary written examination about section A, and in an oral examination about section B. The written examination will take place in December 2022 and May, September and December 2023; both examinations are mandatory and contribute to the final overall evaluation.
The written exam has to be completed within 90 minutes and consists of three open-ended questions: two questions focus on authors, works or literary movements analysed in the course; a third question consists in the paraphrase and stylistic analysis of one of the texts studied in the course. Written exams will be assessed as: Acceptable - Quite Good - Good - Excellent. The abilities to provide correct information within a coherent exposition and to paraphrase and comment properly the text will be evaluated.
The oral examination focuses on section B, and will assess students' preparation, their ability to construct a coherent and precise speech using the acquired skills in the analysis of literary texts.
The final overall evaluation (written exam + oral exam) is expressed in thirties. The examination procedures for students with disabilities shall be established in advance with the teacher and with the dedicated office. If the health situation will make it appropriate or necessary, some sessions of the written test may be converted into an other form.
The written exam has to be completed within 90 minutes and consists of three open-ended questions: two questions focus on authors, works or literary movements analysed in the course; a third question consists in the paraphrase and stylistic analysis of one of the texts studied in the course. Written exams will be assessed as: Acceptable - Quite Good - Good - Excellent. The abilities to provide correct information within a coherent exposition and to paraphrase and comment properly the text will be evaluated.
The oral examination focuses on section B, and will assess students' preparation, their ability to construct a coherent and precise speech using the acquired skills in the analysis of literary texts.
The final overall evaluation (written exam + oral exam) is expressed in thirties. The examination procedures for students with disabilities shall be established in advance with the teacher and with the dedicated office. If the health situation will make it appropriate or necessary, some sessions of the written test may be converted into an other form.
L-FIL-LET/10 - ITALIAN LITERATURE - University credits: 9
Lessons: 60 hours
Professor:
Resconi Stefano
B (E-O)
Responsible
Lesson period
First semester
Course syllabus
The class is subdivided into two units.
Unit A offers some exemplary critical readings selected from the main texts of the Italian literary tradition, typically from the Middle Ages and Dante to Romanticism. Its content will be assessed in a written exam at the end of the class.
In Unit B (which may vary every year) the focus is on a specific work, author, or literary movement, treated monographically. Unit B will be the main topic of the discussion during the oral exam.
This year's class examines "Italian" literature's troubled encounter with the "other", both as a character and as a geo-cultural setting - from the late 19th-century, through the culture of the Italian diaspora, to the present.
Unit A offers some exemplary critical readings selected from the main texts of the Italian literary tradition, typically from the Middle Ages and Dante to Romanticism. Its content will be assessed in a written exam at the end of the class.
In Unit B (which may vary every year) the focus is on a specific work, author, or literary movement, treated monographically. Unit B will be the main topic of the discussion during the oral exam.
This year's class examines "Italian" literature's troubled encounter with the "other", both as a character and as a geo-cultural setting - from the late 19th-century, through the culture of the Italian diaspora, to the present.
Prerequisites for admission
The class is conducted entirely in Italian. Course materials and readings require an average knowledge of the main currents of Italian medieval, early modern ad modern literature, set in their historic and cultural context, with special emphasis on their literary and linguistic peculiarities.
Teaching methods
The class consists in 30 lectures. Students are strongly invited to turn in written assignments, the content of which is discussed with the teacher. These papers, though, are not mandatory.
Teaching Resources
Unit A
Course materials are uploaded in the Ariel portal: https://ariel.unimi.it
Unit B
Texts
Arrigo Boito, L'alfier nero
Pietro di Donato, Christ in Concrete
Plinio Martini, Il fondo del sacco, Casagrande, Bellinzona
Elvira Mujčić, Dieci prugne ai fascisti, Elliot, Roma
Criticism
Martino Marazzi, Italexit. Saggi su Risorgimento e disunione nazionale, Franco Cesati, Firenze 2019
Stefano Lazzarin, L'altro, l'esotico e il perturbante nell' "Alfier nero" (1867) di Arrigo Boito, in "Italianistica", nn. 1-2, 2007 [downloadable through unimi.it]
Sebastiano Martelli, Cibo e lutto nella letteratura dell'emigrazione, in "Oltreoceano", 4, 2010 [downloadable online]
Peter Kvidera, Ethnic Identity and Cultural Catholicism in Pietro di Donato's "Christ in Concrete", in MELUS, 35, 3, 2010 [downloadable through unimi.it]
Additional readings for non-attending students
Marisa Fenoglio, Il ritorno impossibile, Nutrimenti, Roma
Elvira Mujčić, La lingua di Ana, Infinito edizioni, Castelgandolfo (Roma)
Giovanna Miceli Jeffries, Mondo nuovo, Rubbettino, Soveria Mannelli (Catanzaro)
Course materials are uploaded in the Ariel portal: https://ariel.unimi.it
Unit B
Texts
Arrigo Boito, L'alfier nero
Pietro di Donato, Christ in Concrete
Plinio Martini, Il fondo del sacco, Casagrande, Bellinzona
Elvira Mujčić, Dieci prugne ai fascisti, Elliot, Roma
Criticism
Martino Marazzi, Italexit. Saggi su Risorgimento e disunione nazionale, Franco Cesati, Firenze 2019
Stefano Lazzarin, L'altro, l'esotico e il perturbante nell' "Alfier nero" (1867) di Arrigo Boito, in "Italianistica", nn. 1-2, 2007 [downloadable through unimi.it]
Sebastiano Martelli, Cibo e lutto nella letteratura dell'emigrazione, in "Oltreoceano", 4, 2010 [downloadable online]
Peter Kvidera, Ethnic Identity and Cultural Catholicism in Pietro di Donato's "Christ in Concrete", in MELUS, 35, 3, 2010 [downloadable through unimi.it]
Additional readings for non-attending students
Marisa Fenoglio, Il ritorno impossibile, Nutrimenti, Roma
Elvira Mujčić, La lingua di Ana, Infinito edizioni, Castelgandolfo (Roma)
Giovanna Miceli Jeffries, Mondo nuovo, Rubbettino, Soveria Mannelli (Catanzaro)
Assessment methods and Criteria
Written + oral exam:
at the end of the class, either in November or December, a two-hour written exam on Unit A (no dictionary allowed) tests the understanding of the specificities of literary texts, as well as students' familiarity with the basics of critical scholarship, and their acquisition of a personal and grounded judgement. Clarity and rigor of the analysis is required through a proper use of the critical vocabulary. Two additional tests are typically scheduled in May and in September.
Grades breakdown: Fail, Basic, Average, Good, Excellent.
Once the written part is completed, students can access to the oral exam (Unit B). All students can take part in it, even those who were graded as Fail (in which case, they will have to repeat their preparation of Unit A, in accordance with the teacher).
The oral part asks for the same learning requirements as the written part, and, in compliance with the Italian academic tradition, will be graded on a 30-point scale, from 18/30 to 30/30 cum laude .
at the end of the class, either in November or December, a two-hour written exam on Unit A (no dictionary allowed) tests the understanding of the specificities of literary texts, as well as students' familiarity with the basics of critical scholarship, and their acquisition of a personal and grounded judgement. Clarity and rigor of the analysis is required through a proper use of the critical vocabulary. Two additional tests are typically scheduled in May and in September.
Grades breakdown: Fail, Basic, Average, Good, Excellent.
Once the written part is completed, students can access to the oral exam (Unit B). All students can take part in it, even those who were graded as Fail (in which case, they will have to repeat their preparation of Unit A, in accordance with the teacher).
The oral part asks for the same learning requirements as the written part, and, in compliance with the Italian academic tradition, will be graded on a 30-point scale, from 18/30 to 30/30 cum laude .
L-FIL-LET/10 - ITALIAN LITERATURE - University credits: 9
Lessons: 60 hours
Professor:
Marazzi Martino
C (P-Z)
Responsible
Lesson period
First semester
Course syllabus
The class is divided into two parts (A and B), addressed in sequence:
Part A: Italian literature from the origins to the eighteenth century: authors and fundamental texts (40 hours).
Part B: Love and guilt. Dante and Francesca (20 hours).
Part A - institutional and preparatory to the written test - deals with fundamental authors and texts (even in a broader European horizon) of Italian literature from the origins to the eighteenth century from a historical perspective.
Part B - monographic - deals with the theme of love and guilt, retracing Dante's production in the vernacular from the New Life to the Rhymes up to the Comedy and in particular the fifth canto of Hell.
Part A: Italian literature from the origins to the eighteenth century: authors and fundamental texts (40 hours).
Part B: Love and guilt. Dante and Francesca (20 hours).
Part A - institutional and preparatory to the written test - deals with fundamental authors and texts (even in a broader European horizon) of Italian literature from the origins to the eighteenth century from a historical perspective.
Part B - monographic - deals with the theme of love and guilt, retracing Dante's production in the vernacular from the New Life to the Rhymes up to the Comedy and in particular the fifth canto of Hell.
Prerequisites for admission
No prerequisites are requested. The class is conducted entirely in Italian.
Teaching methods
Lectures, which include critical discussions and analysis of literary texts.
Teaching Resources
Part A:
At the beginning of the course, the teacher will publish a handout on the Ariel website containing all the texts that will be read, paraphrased and commented on in class.
The lecture notes are the fundamental part of the exam program.
To complete the preparation, it is advisable to have a certain historical and cultural framework of the authors and of the texts analyzed in class using a good manual for high schools. In any case, updated manuals of Italian literature will be indicated in the dispensation, as well as useful tools for the study of texts from a metric, rhetorical and stylistic point of view.
Part B:
Notes of the lessons
D. PIROVANO, Amore e colpa. Dante e Francesca, Roma, Donzelli, 2021.
The materials and the bibliography for examination require literary history skills, use of specific terminology and analysis tools of the literary text acquired during secondary school.
At the beginning of the course, the teacher will publish a handout on the Ariel website containing all the texts that will be read, paraphrased and commented on in class.
The lecture notes are the fundamental part of the exam program.
To complete the preparation, it is advisable to have a certain historical and cultural framework of the authors and of the texts analyzed in class using a good manual for high schools. In any case, updated manuals of Italian literature will be indicated in the dispensation, as well as useful tools for the study of texts from a metric, rhetorical and stylistic point of view.
Part B:
Notes of the lessons
D. PIROVANO, Amore e colpa. Dante e Francesca, Roma, Donzelli, 2021.
The materials and the bibliography for examination require literary history skills, use of specific terminology and analysis tools of the literary text acquired during secondary school.
Assessment methods and Criteria
The exam (entirely in Italian) consists of a preliminary written test (held in December 2022 and May 2023) and an oral exam to be taken (in one of the sessions of the didactic calendar); passing the written test is a prerequisite for the oral exam. The tests are both compulsory and determine an overall final evaluation.
The paper concerns the subject of Part A, and consists of three questions: two open questions on aspects and authors of Italian literature dealt with during the first 40 hours of class, and an exercise in paraphrasing and commenting on a text (or part of a text ) analyzed in class and placed in the pantry. The time available to take the written test is 90 minutes. The evaluation is expressed through a judgment: insufficient - basic - average - good - excellent. In particular, the ability to provide correct information by constructing a clear and coherent speech, and to provide a timely paraphrase and comment of the proposed text will be positively evaluated. During the written test it is not possible to consult any material: neither books, nor notes, nor dictionary.
The oral exam focuses only on the subject of part B (last 20 hours) and consists of an interview aimed at ascertaining the preparation of the students, the ability to exploit specific knowledge (in particular in the paraphrase and in the commentary of the Dante's texts analyzed), the property of exposure.
The final evaluation of the exam (which takes into account both the written test and the oral test) is marked out of thirty.
Attendance at lessons is strongly recommended.
Students unable to attend lessons are invited to go to the reception desk by the teacher, who will provide precise indications on the supplementary bibliography with which to replace attendance. Foreign and incoming Erasmus students who have particular linguistic difficulties with Italian can write an email to the teacher to arrange a reception and agree on a specific program. The course program is valid until February 2024.
Students with any disabilities are kindly asked to contact the teacher in order to agree on alternative examination methods, in agreement with the competent office.
The paper concerns the subject of Part A, and consists of three questions: two open questions on aspects and authors of Italian literature dealt with during the first 40 hours of class, and an exercise in paraphrasing and commenting on a text (or part of a text ) analyzed in class and placed in the pantry. The time available to take the written test is 90 minutes. The evaluation is expressed through a judgment: insufficient - basic - average - good - excellent. In particular, the ability to provide correct information by constructing a clear and coherent speech, and to provide a timely paraphrase and comment of the proposed text will be positively evaluated. During the written test it is not possible to consult any material: neither books, nor notes, nor dictionary.
The oral exam focuses only on the subject of part B (last 20 hours) and consists of an interview aimed at ascertaining the preparation of the students, the ability to exploit specific knowledge (in particular in the paraphrase and in the commentary of the Dante's texts analyzed), the property of exposure.
The final evaluation of the exam (which takes into account both the written test and the oral test) is marked out of thirty.
Attendance at lessons is strongly recommended.
Students unable to attend lessons are invited to go to the reception desk by the teacher, who will provide precise indications on the supplementary bibliography with which to replace attendance. Foreign and incoming Erasmus students who have particular linguistic difficulties with Italian can write an email to the teacher to arrange a reception and agree on a specific program. The course program is valid until February 2024.
Students with any disabilities are kindly asked to contact the teacher in order to agree on alternative examination methods, in agreement with the competent office.
L-FIL-LET/10 - ITALIAN LITERATURE - University credits: 9
Lessons: 60 hours
Professor:
Pirovano Donato
Professor(s)
Reception:
Monday 11.00 A.M
Piazza sant'Alessandro, first floor, near Spanish studies
Reception:
Monday, h. 10.00-13.00; please, anticipate your presence by e-mail
Professor's office: Via Festa del Perdono 7, Sezione di Modernistica (right side of the courtyard after accessing from the main entrance, entrance B), 1st floor, room 1062