According to the
Dublin descriptors, students, at the end of the course, will demonstrate:
1. Knowledge and understanding
The Course aims to transfer the most advanced Concepts of recent Literary Debate, and to verify the
critical and communicative skills of the students. Students will achieve
autonomy of aesthetic judgment and interpretation.
2. Applying
knowledge and understanding
These goals will be verified through a written essay
and a final oral exam, in the final perspective of Scientific Research, and
Teaching of Languages and Literatures. Interdisciplinary knowledge and skills
will be transferred and texted
3. Making judgements
Student is supposed to achieve autonomous hermeneutic
and interpretive judgments, adequate to literary Theory current Debate.
4.
Communication skills
During the Class Comunication Skills will be stressed
in order to achieve a clear and effective ability, in Teaching such as in the
field of Scientific Research and researching
5. Learning skills
Learning
skills will be stressed in order to achieve a clear and effective ability, in
Teaching such as in the field of Scientific Research and researching.
The whole Course is a reading and writing Lab; it is divided in two modules (18 hours each). Students will work either individually and in group.
The First Part introduces to Theories of Literature as a Form of Human
and Cultural Communication, and Interpretation. The Second Part focuses on the
relation between Generations (the Old and the Young) in Ancient and Modern
Literature.
Part A: Literature, Evolution, Interpretation
Texts: E. Raimondi, Ermeneutica e commento, Sansoni, Firenze, pp. 1-68. G. Steiner, Che cosa è la letteratura comparata?» in Nessuna passione spenta. Saggi 1978- 1996, Garzanti, Milano 1996, pp. 86-103; A. Scuderi, «Occidenti letterari», in Le forme e la storia, XV, 2002, n. 1-2, pp.15-40. Un testo a scelta tra M. Austin, Useful Fictions. Evolution, Anxiety, and the Origins of Literature,Nebraska University Press, Lincoln and London, 2010, pp. 1-170; A. Casadei, Biologia della letteratura. Corpo, stile, storia, il Saggiatore, Milano, 2018, pp. 1-220.
Part B: The
Old and the Young
Texts Sofocle, Antigone,
Feltrinelli (translator G. Greco); Shakespeare, Amleto,
Feltrinelli, Milano, 2018; L. Pirandello, I vecchi e i giovani,
(Edition chosen from Garzanti, Rizzoli, and Mondadori).
Subjects | Text References | |
1 | La critica letteraria oggi - Introduzione alla letteratura | Literature, Evolution, Interpretation Texts: E. Raimondi, Ermeneutica e commento, Sansoni, Firenze, pp. 1-68. G. Steiner, Che cosa è la letteratura comparata?» in Nessuna passione spenta. Saggi 1978- 1996, Garzanti, Milano 1996, pp. 86-103; A. Scuderi, «Occidenti letterari», in Le forme e la storia, XV, 2002, n. 1-2, pp.15-40. Un testo a scelta tra M. Austin, Useful Fictions. Evolution, Anxiety, and the Origins of Literature,Nebraska University Press, Lincoln and London, 2010, pp. 1-170; A. Casadei, Biologia della letteratura. Corpo, stile, storia, il Saggiatore, Milano, 2018, pp. 1-220. |
2 | Letteratura: vecchi e giovani | Sofocle, Antigone, Feltrinelli (si raccomanda questa edizione nella traduzione di G. Greco); Shakespeare, Amleto, Feltrinelli, Milano, 2018; L. Pirandello, I vecchi e i giovani, edizione a scelta tra quelle Garzanti, Rizzoli o Mondadori. |