- Docente: Cristina Bragaglia
- Credits: 6
- SSD: L-ART/06
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
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Corso:
Second cycle degree programme (LM) in
Modern, Post-Colonial and Comparative Literatures (cod. 0981)
Also valid for Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Modern, Post-Colonial and Comparative Literatures (cod. 0981)
Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Italian Culture and Language for Foreigners (cod. 0983)
Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Italian Culture and Language for Foreigners (cod. 0983)
Learning outcomes
The student has an in-depth knowledge about the relationships between literary and cinematographic texts. He's able to use instruments and critical methodologies to analyze the connections between the two languages.
Course contents
The landscape invention between literature and cinema
Since Fifteenth century the painting knows very well the importance of landscape and of its interpretation. Only a century after the literature begins to think over the landscape (Piero Camporesi, Le belle contrade, Garzanti 1992). From this moment the landscape become an essential element of poetry, travel report or whatever form of writing, until the flourishing of nineteenth century novel. The cinema inherits from the literature the awareness and the thought, sometimes by adaptation of novels where landscape and nature are real characters as the humans, sometimes by the translation in images of the same literary sensations and functions, particularly for the Romantic empathic vision of nature. The Lumière brothers present in their movies daily or exotic landscapes, but the fiction cinema will celebrate the landscape and make it became a protagonist: the large extensions of the western film (J. Ford); the Italian countryside, location of the war in the neorealist movies, the Sicilian islands or the London lawns of M. Antonioni, the German views emblematic background of the loneliness and the crisis of identity narrated by W: Wenders, the wild nature of Sean Penn's Into the Wild, the futuristic and ecologic foreshortenings of the science fiction (J. Cameron). The course includes the collaboration of professors of the Faculty of Agriculture.
Readings/Bibliography
Texts for the students of "Cinema e letteratura" (LM):
Giorgio Tinazzi, La scrittura e lo sguardo. Cinema e letteratura, Venezia, Marsilio, 2010.
Vincenzo Buccheri, Lo stile cinematografico, Roma, Carocci, 2010.
Sergio Arecco, Il paesaggio del cinema, Dieci studi da Ford ad Almodóvar, Genova, Le Mani, 2002
Paesaggi (ed. by Luca Pasquale), n. 4 of the review "Film/Letterature" (Edizioni Gedit, 2008), only the part concerning the landscape. The students can buy the review on the web or find it in the Journal Catalogue of the Bologna libraries.
Added text for those students who don't attend the course:
Paolo Brandi, Parole in movimento. L'influenza del cinema sulla letteratura, Fiesole, Cadmo, 2006.
The students who don't attend the course have to watch 5 movies (at least 2 related to landscape) among those deeply analyzed in the texts.
At the exam the students have to bring the list of the chosen movies
The attendance (also for the past courses) is valid only for a year from the first examination session after the end of the course.
Texts for the students of History of Cinema (LM):
Fernaldo Di Giammatteo, Storia del cinema, Venezia, Marsilio, 2005.
Sergio Arecco, Il paesaggio del cinema, Dieci studi da Ford ad Almodóvar, Genova, Le Mani, 2002
Paesaggi (a cura di Luca Pasquale), numero 4 della rivista "Film/Letterature" (edizioni Gedit, 2008). The students can buy the review on the web or find it in Journal Catalogue of the Bologna libraries.
Added text for those students (LM) who don't attend the course:
Paolo Brandi, Parole in movimento. L'influenza del cinema sulla letteratura, Fiesole, Cadmo, 2006.
The students who don't attend the course have to watch 5 movies (at least 2 related to landscape) from the following list:
Nosferatu, Eine Symphonie des Grauens (1922) by Friedrich Wilhelm Murnau
Bronenosec Potëmkin (1925) by Sergej M. Ejzenštejn
Metropolis (1927) by Fritz Lang
Modern Times (1936) by Charlie Chaplin
Bringing Up Baby (1938) by Howard Hawks
Le quai des brumes (1938) by Marcel Carné
Gone With the Wind (1939) by Victor Fleming
Citizen Kane (1941) by Orson Welles
Paisà (1946) by Roberto Rossellini
Ladri di biciclette (1948) by Vittorio De Sica
Rear Window (1954) by Alfred Hitchcock
A bout de souffle (1960) by Jean-Luc Godard
La dolce vita (1960) by Federico Fellini
El angel exterminador (1962) by Luis Buñuel
Andrej Rublev (1966) by Andrej Tarkovskij
Blow up (1968) by Michelangelo Antonioni
2001: A Space Odyssey (1968) by Stanley Kubrick
Nashville (1975) by Robert Altman
Taxi Driver (1976) by Martin Scorsese
Apocalipse Now (1979) by Francis Ford Coppola
Pulp Fiction (1994) by Quentin Tarantino
Exotica (1994) by Atom Egoyan
Ta'm e guilass (1997) by Abbas Kiarostami
Todo sobre mi madre (1999) by Pedro Almodovar
Code inconnu - Récit incomplet de divers voyages (2000) by Michael Haneke
Dogville (2003) by Lars von Trier
Um filme falado (2004) by Manoel de Oliveira
At the exam the students have to bring the list of the chosen movies.
The attendance (also for the past courses) is valid only for a year from the first examination session after the end of the course.
Assessment methods
Oral examination
Teaching tools
Video projector, PC
DVD and VHS are available at: Videoteca del Dipartimento di Musica e Spettacolo(via Barberia, 4); Sala Borsa; Biblioteca di Discipline Umanistiche (via Zamboni, 36).
Office hours
See the website of Cristina Bragaglia