- Docente: Giuliana Benvenuti
- Credits: 6
- SSD: L-FIL-LET/11
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Italian Studies, European Literary Cultures, Linguistics (cod. 9220)
Learning outcomes
This course intends to provide a critical and cultural awareness in contemporary Italian literature and civilization. For this purpose, literary texts are always analyzed as open shapes, focusing on the relationships among their tradition and cultural legacies. We will also read together and discuss a corpus of prose works through many examples of comparative analysis and practice on different methods.
Course contents
Genealogies of engagement
The course will analyze works representative of the writers' commitment to society. It will focus on texts that present a critique of contemporary society, rewriting and reinterpreting chronicle and recent history.
In particular, it will focus on the reception of authors and works that have gained success through international circulation.
Special attention will be given to a case study investigating the relationship among literature, cinema, television and new media as transnational narratives
Italian literary and audio-visual products circulate in various markets, spreading – at national and international levels – images and models (stereotypes and/or counter-stereotypes) of “Italianness”.
Readings/Bibliography
Leonardo Sciascia, Il contesto. Una Parodia, Adelphi 2006
Pierpaolo Pasolini, Scritti corsari, Garzanti, 2015
Giancarlo De Cataldo, Romanzo criminale, Einaudi, 2009
Romanzo criminale, Michele Placido, 2005,
Romanzo criminale - La serie
Students will study the following critical tests:
Marco Belpoliti, Settanta, Einaudi 2010
The assigned readings are the same for non-attending students. Additional resources for exam preparation will be available on the Virtuale platform, also useful for those who cannot attend the course
Teaching methods
The lessons are, most of all, lectures held by the teacher. During the lessons, students will be encouraged to participate. Finally, students will be invited for some specific issues and for the presentation of some texts and authors.
Assessment methods
The oral test consists in an oral interview which has the aim of evaluating the critical and methodological ability of the students. The students will be invited to discuss the tests on the course programme. The student must demonstrate an appropriate knowledge of the bibliography in the course programme.
Those students who are able to demonstrate a wide and systematic understanding of the issues covered during the lessons, are able to use these critically and who master the field-specific language of the discipline will be given a mark of excellence.
Those students who demonstrate a mnemonic knowledge of the subject with a more superficial analytical ability and ability to synthesize, a correct command of the language but not always appropriate, will be given a ‘fair' mark.
A superficial knowledge and understanding of the material, a scarce analytical and expressive ability that is not always appropriate will be rewarded with a pass mark or just above a pass mark.
Students who demonstrate gaps in their knowledge of the subject matter, inappropriate language use, lack of familiarity with the literature in the programme bibliography will not be given a pass mark.
Teaching tools
In addition to lectures, held by the teacher, audiovisual tools will bthe coursee used to support the teaching. Scholars will also be invited to bring a significant contribution to increase the issues upon which the course focuses.
Office hours
See the website of Giuliana Benvenuti
SDGs



This teaching activity contributes to the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals of the UN 2030 Agenda.