Modern Languages 186- Spring 2012

Italian Civilization 2 – From the Renaissance to the Present

Tu/Th 1:10 – 2:40

Professor Costanza Gislon Dopfel, Ph.D.

Office hours: Tu/Th 12:20-1:10; Tu 4:30-5:00 and by appointment

Office: Dante 318

Textbooks:

Christopher Duggan, A Concise History of Italy, Cambridge UP

Alessandro Manzoni, The Betrothed

Amara Lakhous, Clash of Civilizations over an elevator in Piazza Vittorio

Course description:

ML 186 – Italian Civilization – is an interdisciplinary course that focuses on the art, literature, music and culture of Italy. It is taught sequentially in two parts/courses that can be taken independently. This syllabus refers to the second part/course. The first course covers the time period from proto-history to the Renaissance, while the second course starts with the late Renaissance and ends with present-day Italy.

The material covered in the second part includes art, literature, architecture, history and music. The class and the readings are in English, and the course has no pre-requisites. It is highly recommended to students who plan to spend a semester in Italy and to students pursuing a Minor or Major in Art History and in Italian Studies.

The material is vast and diverse, and students are expected to become familiar with hundreds of works of art, several literary works as well as music. Accordingly, the course looks at Italian civilization through its artistic and literary expressions. Each period will be examined through the lens of multiple works of art: sculpture, architecture, painting, literature and music. Each week features a work of art that will be carefully examined and discussed in class.

Course Goals:

To interpret and critique works of Italian literature, music and art within their specific historical context; to analyze and discuss images, object, words and sounds using appropriate vocabulary; to understand the varied aspects of Italian civilization; to understand the development of art and literature as living and ever-changing expressions of a society; to connect different periods while identifying their differences; to recognize artwork and gain knowledge of its genesis.

Course outcomes:

Students will learn how to examine works of art in an accurate and observant way, allowing for a deeper, more accurate reading (CC 1a and 1b); they will be able to think of the Italian artistic heritage in an organized, informed and organic way (CC 1b); to understand and identify different periods and styles, while connecting them to key historical and social events(CC 1d); to develop or refine their understanding and analysis of artwork and literature and bring them together as connected cultural expressions(CC 1c); to discuss and write about artistic expression using appropriate vocabulary and methodology(CC 1c).

Textbooks:

Christopher Duggan, A Concise History of Italy, Cambridge UP

Alessandro Manzoni, The Betrothed

Amara Lakhous, Clash of Civilizations over an elevator in Piazza Vittorio

Classroom Policy and Procedure

Attendance and participation are necessary in this course. Come prepared to listen, respond and be involved in class activities. After three absences, each absence will result in one point being deducted from the total percentage points at the end of the semester. There is no distinction between excused and unexcused absences. Repeated tardiness is not acceptable. No eating in class unless it is social eating.

Honor Code: This course follows all rules and practices of Saint Mary’s College Honor Code. Students will be required to submit their papers through Turnitin.

Students with disabilities:

Reasonable and appropriate accommodations, that take into account the context of the course and its essential elements, for individuals with qualifying disabilities, are extended through the office of Student Disability Services. Students with disabilities are encouraged to contact the Student Disability Services Coordinator at (925) 631-4164 to set up a confidential appointment to discuss accommodation guidelines and available services. Additional information regarding the services available may be found at the following address on the Saint May’s website: http://www.stmarys-ca.edu/academics/academic-advising-and-achievement/student-disability-services.html

Week 1 – Introduction

Reading: Duggan, Chapter 1 and 2

2/7 – The Trecento

2/9 – The Quattrocento

Featured art: Ghiberti’s doors of the Baptistry

Week 2 – The end of the Renaissance

Reading: On Moodle Castiglione and Ariosto

2/14 – The literature of the Cinquecento: Castiglione, Machiavelli and Ariosto

2/16 – The Art of the Cinquecento: Michelangelo, Raffaello and Mannerism

Featured art: Raffaello’s School of Athens

Week 3 – The end of the Cinquecento

Reading: On Moodle, Torquato Tasso’s summary and Book 1

2/21 – The Popes of the Cinquecento; Saint Peter’s Basilica; Torquato Tasso

2/23 – Martin Luther and the Counter Reformation

Featured art: Saint Peter’s Basilica

Week 4 – The Seicento – class summary: the Renaissance

Reading: Duggan, Ch 3;

2/28– Artists Caravaggio and Bernini

3/1- Galileo Galilei

Featured art: Caravaggio’s Bacchus

Featured art: Bernini’s Apollo and Daphne

Week 5 –The Settecento

Reading: Duggan, Chapter 4

On Eres: Ugo Foscolo, Jacopo Ortis and selected poems

3/6 – The Age of Enlightment

3/8- Classicism and pre-Romanticism

Featured art: Canova’s Graces

Week 6 – The Ottocento: Romanticism

Reading: I Promessi Sposi/The Betrothed

3/13 – Opera

3/15 – Midterm

Featured art: Francesco Hayez The Kiss

Week 7 – Romanticism – class summary: Art and Literature

Reading: I Promessi Sposi/The Betrothed

Film: Senso

3/20 – Manzoni and the Italian Language

3/22 – Towards a Unified Italy.

Featured art: Bellini’s Norma

Week 8 – Unified Italy

Reading: Duggan Ch 5 and 6

On ERes: Tomasi di Lampedusa The Leopard

On Moodle: Poems by Carducci and Leopardi

Film: The Leopard

3/27 – Mazzini, Cavour and Garibaldi

3/29 – Poets of Unified Italy: Carducci and Leopardi

Featured art: Verdi’s La Traviata

Week 9 – Easter

Week 10 – The First World War

Readings: On ERes: Gabriele D’Annunzio’s Il Piacere

Duggan ch. 7

Film: For Whom the Bell Tolls

4/10 – Pre-war decadentism: Gabriele D’Annunzio

4/12 – The Hermeneutic Poets: Ungaretti, Montale and Quasimodo

Featured art: Puccini’s Madama Butterfly

Week 11 – The Rise of Fascism – Students’ Presentations

Readings: ERes, Giorgio Bassani, Il giardino dei Finzi-Contini

Duggan ch. 8

ERes: Luigi Pirandello

Film: The Garden of the Finzi Contini

Film: Amarcord

4/17 – Fascist art, poetry and architecture: Futurism

4/19 – Fascist society

Featured art: Umberto Boccioni’s Unique Forms

Week 12 – The Second World War - Students’ Presentations

Film: Rome Open City

Film: Christ Stopped at Eboli

4/24 – Giorgio Bassani

4/26 – Carlo Levi, Primo Levi

Week 13 – Post-war Italy- Students’ Presentations

Duggan Ch.9

Film: Bicycle Thieves

Film: The Night of the Shooting Stars

Week 14 - Italy: The last 40 years.

Reading: Amara Lakhous: Clash of Civilizations over an elevator in Piazza Vittorio

5/8 – Review

5/10 – Review

Week 15 – FINAL PAPER DUE

5/15 – Final –2:00 p.m. in GV 150

Grading: Midterm 15%; Final 20%; Paper 40%

Attendance, Presentations and Participation 25%

Attendance is mandatory: more than three absences will result in point deduction from your final grade.

Honor Code: This course follows all rules and practices of Saint Mary’s College Honor Code. Students will be required to submit their papers through Turnitin.

Guidelines for analytical paper

When you write an analytical paper, try to focus on something relatively small or specific, and to go deep instead of wide. The analytical paper is just that, your own close reading or analysis of a literary work, artwork or film. Do not fill the pages with summary, only refer to the storyline when needed.

Guidelines for writing your research paper

1)  Choose a book, film, painting or artifact from the period we cover during this course. Look for something you find interesting, something that can hold your attention and makes you want to find out more.

2)  Begin your research. Find out about the context of the work, why was it produced, by whom and for whom. Although some of the background information can be used as a backdrop for your research, this is not the basis for your paper, it is just the information upon which you can start building your own interpretation.

3)  Now that you can situate the work in a social and historical context, start looking at it carefully and try to develop the purpose of your paper. Ask yourself questions without relying on readily available answers: What does the work convey as its apparent message? Are there other layers of reading and interpretation? How does it fit with what was expected of similar artifacts?

4)  DO NOT COPY OR RELY ON AVAILABLE INTERPRETATIONS, DEVELOP YOUR OWN. Plagiarism will be harshly dealt with, so be extremely careful about citing all sources.

5)  DO NOT USE ONLINE SOURCES, except for obtaining images. Learn how to research on books

6)  Set up the purpose of your paper. What are you going to discuss? What are you trying to prove? What is the message that the artifact delivers, according to your own reading of the work?

7)  Now you can use your research to find out if your interpretation fits within the general and current approach, or if it counters it. You can support your thesis not just on your personal reading of the artifact itself and its historical and social context, but also using current interpretations. Find out if there are conflicting views, and state your position.

8)  Finished papers must be at least 8 pages long and must contain:

1)  Title, name, date

2)  Text, double-spaced

3)  Footnotes

4)  Bibliography

5)  List of illustrations, with printed copies of the work(s), labeled including location, artist and date