Medieval, Humanistic and Renaissance Italian Literature
A.Y. 2025/2026
Learning objectives
This course aims at two main objectives: 1) to provide students with a critically founded preparation on Medieval, Humanistic and Renaissance Italian literature, through the reading of texts and essays 2) to develope students' analytical and critical skills in order to understand and evaluate both ancient texts and their own and others' research work.
Expected learning outcomes
Knowledge: By the end of the course, the student is expected to: know the main lines of Italian literature from 13th to 16th cent. with relation to historical and cultural context; be acquainted with different instruments and methodologies to analyse and interpret texts; know the main lines of studies' history and more recent achievements regarding some fundamental themes and problems; know and use instruments of bibliographic research.
Abilities: By the end of the course, the student is expected to: fully comprehend and analyse ancient texts in historical and cultural context; find, select and critically evaluate previous scholarship, understanding possibilities and limitations of different methodological perspectives and identifying main themes and challenges of the discipline; prepare a full scientific bibliography on a topic; produce an articulate and personal judgment and express it with clarity using appropriate scholarly lexicon.
Abilities: By the end of the course, the student is expected to: fully comprehend and analyse ancient texts in historical and cultural context; find, select and critically evaluate previous scholarship, understanding possibilities and limitations of different methodological perspectives and identifying main themes and challenges of the discipline; prepare a full scientific bibliography on a topic; produce an articulate and personal judgment and express it with clarity using appropriate scholarly lexicon.
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, for the present year, is divided into two sections. The first section (Parts A-B), Petrarch's Triumphs, a new approach to reading for our times, aims at presenting an extraordinary poem, whose literary influence lasted for centuries. We will use a newly printed commentary, authored by an international équipe, intended to contemporary readers and students.
Part A (20 hrs; 3 ECTS): Petrarch, a cosmopolite intellectual. Life, works, diffusion and influence in Italian and European culture. Petrarch and Dante. The idea of Triumphs: challenging the Commedia and the classics. The first two triumphs, close readings focusing on literary models and innovation. Recall and improvement of undergraduate knowledge about history of Italian poetry and petrarchan poetry in particular with close readings.
Part B (20 hrs; 3 ECTS): The Triumphs, close readings. Lines of textual history and iconography.
Part C (20 hrs; 3 ECTS): The letter: genre tradition and philological practise.
- Outline of epistolary genre history from Antiquity to Middle Age to Humanism; the Renaissance, age of letters and of secretaries; material and textual characteristics of the letter; fundamentals of epistolary philology; autograph transcriptions, with classroom guided practice in small groups; digital exploration of some Della Casa's and Bembo's manuscripts and presentation of the didactic project for MA dissertations "Lettere di Pietro Bembo".
International or Erasmus incoming students are kindly requested to contact the teacher of the course. Also students with disabilities should contact the teacher of the course, in order to discuss alternative examination methods, in agreement with the competent Office
Part A (20 hrs; 3 ECTS): Petrarch, a cosmopolite intellectual. Life, works, diffusion and influence in Italian and European culture. Petrarch and Dante. The idea of Triumphs: challenging the Commedia and the classics. The first two triumphs, close readings focusing on literary models and innovation. Recall and improvement of undergraduate knowledge about history of Italian poetry and petrarchan poetry in particular with close readings.
Part B (20 hrs; 3 ECTS): The Triumphs, close readings. Lines of textual history and iconography.
Part C (20 hrs; 3 ECTS): The letter: genre tradition and philological practise.
- Outline of epistolary genre history from Antiquity to Middle Age to Humanism; the Renaissance, age of letters and of secretaries; material and textual characteristics of the letter; fundamentals of epistolary philology; autograph transcriptions, with classroom guided practice in small groups; digital exploration of some Della Casa's and Bembo's manuscripts and presentation of the didactic project for MA dissertations "Lettere di Pietro Bembo".
International or Erasmus incoming students are kindly requested to contact the teacher of the course. Also students with disabilities should contact the teacher of the course, in order to discuss alternative examination methods, in agreement with the competent Office
Prerequisites for admission
There are no required prerequisites. Yet, a good undergraduate study of Italian literature is recommended to attend the course. Students who, for different reasons, do not possess this background should contact the teacher to draw a study plan.
Teaching methods
The course (Part A-B), more complex and wider than an undegraduate one, is based on traditional lectures, yet leaves large room to students' active participation. Many close readings will be held, by the teacher and by the students, and bibliography will be discussed in classroom. At the end of the course students can, if they wish (many do), submit a short written analysis of a poetry, so as to test their knowledge and method. The paper is evaluated and taken into account in the final assessment. Teaching widely uses materials posted on the Ariel platform: essays, texts, list of topics to think about.
Part C consists of a limited theoretical part, being mainly a workshop where student work in small groups under the teacher's guidance to autograph transcripts.
Part C consists of a limited theoretical part, being mainly a workshop where student work in small groups under the teacher's guidance to autograph transcripts.
Teaching Resources
Part A:
These references will be detailed and completed during the course; they are not the examination program, which in time will be published on ARIEL.
- Petrarca, Rerum Vulgarium Fragmenta, a cura di M. Santagata, Mondadori (or a cura di P. Vecchi Galli, Rizzoli, a cura di S. Stroppa, Einaudi).
- Petrarca, a cura di G. Baldassari e C. Berra, Carocci, 2025 (some parts which will be listed on ARIEL).
- F. Petrarca, Trionfi, a cura di Franco Tomasi e Andrea Torre, Bites, 2025 (sarà disponibile dalla fine del 2025).
- E. Fenzi, Petrarca, Il Mulino, 2009.
- Z. Baransky, To hail in triumph Caesar or poet: Petrarch's Triumphs, in The Cambridge Companion to Petrarch, 2015, pp. 74-86.
- B. Huss, Il Trionfo della morte di Petrarca come risposta al Paradiso terrestre di Dante, in "Scaffale aperto", X (2019).
- I trionfi di Petrarca, indagini e ricognizioni, a cura di M. A. Terzoli e M. M. Stella Barbero, 2020.
- C. Berra, Fra Fragmenta e Trionfi. Per la sinopia degli anni Sessanta, in Fragmenta recollecta, a cura di A. Borrelli, Padova, Antenore, 2025.
Altre indicazioni verranno fornite a lezione.
Part C:
For this teaching module, including a practical part, attendance (at least 7 lectures out of 10) is mandatory and verified through signatures (see next paragraph).
- M. Marti, L'epistolario come «genere» e un problema editoriale, in Studi e problemi di critica testuale. Convegno di Studi di Filologia italiana nel Centenario della Commissione per i Testi di Lingua, Bologna, 1961, pp. 203-208;
- P. Moreno, Filologia dei carteggi volgari quattro-cinquecenteschi, in Studi e problemi di critica testuale 1960-2010. Per i 150 anni della Commissione per i testi di lingua, a cura di E. Pasquini, Bologna, Commissione per i testi di lingua, 2012, pp. 127-147;
- E. Russo, La traduzione dell'epistolografia italiana: protagonisti e punti di svolta, in Scrivere lettere. Briefe Schreiben. Ecrire des lettres. Writing letters. Typologies, Utilisation, Corpora, a cura di E. Garavelli e H. Lenk, Memo CII (2018), pp. 15-35.
All essays will be posted on ARIEL site.
These references will be detailed and completed during the course; they are not the examination program, which in time will be published on ARIEL.
- Petrarca, Rerum Vulgarium Fragmenta, a cura di M. Santagata, Mondadori (or a cura di P. Vecchi Galli, Rizzoli, a cura di S. Stroppa, Einaudi).
- Petrarca, a cura di G. Baldassari e C. Berra, Carocci, 2025 (some parts which will be listed on ARIEL).
- F. Petrarca, Trionfi, a cura di Franco Tomasi e Andrea Torre, Bites, 2025 (sarà disponibile dalla fine del 2025).
- E. Fenzi, Petrarca, Il Mulino, 2009.
- Z. Baransky, To hail in triumph Caesar or poet: Petrarch's Triumphs, in The Cambridge Companion to Petrarch, 2015, pp. 74-86.
- B. Huss, Il Trionfo della morte di Petrarca come risposta al Paradiso terrestre di Dante, in "Scaffale aperto", X (2019).
- I trionfi di Petrarca, indagini e ricognizioni, a cura di M. A. Terzoli e M. M. Stella Barbero, 2020.
- C. Berra, Fra Fragmenta e Trionfi. Per la sinopia degli anni Sessanta, in Fragmenta recollecta, a cura di A. Borrelli, Padova, Antenore, 2025.
Altre indicazioni verranno fornite a lezione.
Part C:
For this teaching module, including a practical part, attendance (at least 7 lectures out of 10) is mandatory and verified through signatures (see next paragraph).
- M. Marti, L'epistolario come «genere» e un problema editoriale, in Studi e problemi di critica testuale. Convegno di Studi di Filologia italiana nel Centenario della Commissione per i Testi di Lingua, Bologna, 1961, pp. 203-208;
- P. Moreno, Filologia dei carteggi volgari quattro-cinquecenteschi, in Studi e problemi di critica testuale 1960-2010. Per i 150 anni della Commissione per i testi di lingua, a cura di E. Pasquini, Bologna, Commissione per i testi di lingua, 2012, pp. 127-147;
- E. Russo, La traduzione dell'epistolografia italiana: protagonisti e punti di svolta, in Scrivere lettere. Briefe Schreiben. Ecrire des lettres. Writing letters. Typologies, Utilisation, Corpora, a cura di E. Garavelli e H. Lenk, Memo CII (2018), pp. 15-35.
All essays will be posted on ARIEL site.
Assessment methods and Criteria
Intended learning outcomes are assessed through an oral examination. Students can submit a short written analysis of a text, which will be graded as "sufficiente", "discreto", "buono", "ottimo" and will be part of the final assesment. The examination usually starts with the reading of a text (paraphrasis and commentary regarding style and contents) and moves to the discussion of some critical issues and/or essays.
Assessment criteria are: knowledge of topics, ability to analyse a literary ancient text in its different levels and aspects, ability to organize a synthetic, clear and rigorous discourse, full command of disciplinary lexicon, ability to locate problematic themes, ability to synthetise and employ in an original way ideas from across the subject. The grades are on a scale of 30 (minimum grade 18), plus the possibile distinction of the "lode".
Assessment criteria are: knowledge of topics, ability to analyse a literary ancient text in its different levels and aspects, ability to organize a synthetic, clear and rigorous discourse, full command of disciplinary lexicon, ability to locate problematic themes, ability to synthetise and employ in an original way ideas from across the subject. The grades are on a scale of 30 (minimum grade 18), plus the possibile distinction of the "lode".
Unita' didattica A
L-FIL-LET/10 - ITALIAN LITERATURE - University credits: 3
Lessons: 20 hours
Unita' didattica B
L-FIL-LET/10 - ITALIAN LITERATURE - University credits: 3
Lessons: 20 hours
Unita' didattica C
L-FIL-LET/10 - ITALIAN LITERATURE - University credits: 3
Lessons: 20 hours
Professor(s)
Reception:
Prof. Berra will receive on Wednesday, 10.30-13.30, in person or via Teams, by appointment.
Dipartimento di Studi letterari filologici e linguistici, section Filologia Moderna, 1st floor