Studying at the University of Verona

Here you can find information on the organisational aspects of the Programme, lecture timetables, learning activities and useful contact details for your time at the University, from enrolment to graduation.

This information is intended exclusively for students already enrolled in this course.
If you are a new student interested in enrolling, you can find information about the course of study on the course page:

Laurea in Lingue e culture per il turismo e il commercio internazionale - Enrollment from 2025/2026

The Study Plan includes all modules, teaching and learning activities that each student will need to undertake during their time at the University.
Please select your Study Plan based on your enrollment year.

CURRICULUM TIPO:

1° Year 

ModulesCreditsTAFSSD

2° Year   activated in the A.Y. 2022/2023

ModulesCreditsTAFSSD
ModulesCreditsTAFSSD
activated in the A.Y. 2022/2023
ModulesCreditsTAFSSD
Modules Credits TAF SSD
Between the years: 1°- 2°- 3°
3rd foreign language B1 level
3
F
-
Between the years: 1°- 2°- 3°

Legend | Type of training activity (TTA)

TAF (Type of Educational Activity) All courses and activities are classified into different types of educational activities, indicated by a letter.




S Placements in companies, public or private institutions and professional associations

Teaching code

4S002903

Coordinator

Lisanna Calvi

Credits

6

Language

English en

Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)

L-LIN/10 - ENGLISH LITERATURE

Period

I semestre (Lingue e letterature straniere) dal Sep 27, 2021 al Jan 8, 2022.

Learning outcomes

The course, held in English, aims at introducing students to relevant aspects of English literature, from the Pre-Romantic to the contemporary period, through the reading of a selection of canonical texts. Primary notions about possible methodological approaches for the analysis of literary texts and genres will be imparted. Furthermore, the course will provide a sound knowledge of the English literature of the period (historical context, texts, genres, literary movements and authors) and stimulate abilities and skills for the critical analysis of texts, their discussion and analysis, in consideration of their historical, cultural, and context specificities. At the end of the course, students will be able to: - Analyse the literary texts of the syllabus discussing them in relation to their historical and cultural context; - Discuss the texts using an appropriate critical approach demonstrating the knowledge of the literary conventions of their time; - Express the acquired literary and critical knowledge demonstrating an adequate competence also in the English language.

Program

Her Bread to Earn. Women, Money, and Society in the Nineteenth- and Twentieth-Century Literary Imagination

Moving from three texts, published between 1847 and 1966 and all written by female authors, the module will investigate, also in the light of the notion of appropriation, the intellectual, socio-economic, cultural, and of course literary problems related to the position of women and to its conceptualization between the nineteenth and the twentieth century.

Please be advised
The programme consists in three parts: a. Primary texts, b. and b.1 Readings, and c. Handbook (see the BIBLIOGRAPHY section below).
Further details on required readings, general information on bibliographical material, and exam method will be given during classes.
Language: lectures will be in English.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

a. Primary texts
- Charlotte Bronte, Jane Eyre, ed. by Stevie Davies, Penguin, 2006.
- Virginia Woolf, A Room of One’s Own, in V. Woolf, A Room of One’s Own and Three Guineas, ed. by Michèle Barrett, Penguin 2019, pp. 3-103.
- Jean Rhys, Wide Sargasso Sea, ed. by Andrea Ashworth, Penguin, 2000.

b. Readings
- Julie Sanders, Adaptation and Appropriation, Routledge, 2006, pp. 1-41, 95-137.
- Esther Godfrey, “Jane Eyre, from Governess to Girl Bride”, Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900, Vol. 45, No. 4, 2005, pp. 853-871.
- Susan Stanford Friedman, “A Room of One’s Own in the World: The Pre-life and After-life of Shakespeare’s Sister”, in A Companion to Virginia Woolf, ed. by Susan Berman, Blackwell, 2019, pp. 189-201.
- Caroline Rody, “Burning Down the House: The Revisionary Paradigm of Jean Rhys’s Wide Sargasso Sea”, in Wide Sargasso Sea, ed. by Judith L. Raiskin, Norton, 1999, pp. 217-225.

b1. Further readings for non-attending students
- Laura Marcus, “Woolf’s feminism and feminism’s Woolf”, in The Cambridge Companion to Virginia Woolf, ed. by Susan Sellers, Cambridge UP, 2010, pp. 142-179.
- Michael Thorpe, “The Other Side: Wide Sargasso Sea and Jane Eyre”, in Critical Perspectives on Jean Rhys, ed. by Pierette M. Frickey, Three Continents, 1990, pp. 178-185.

3. Handbook
As regards the literary and cultural context spanning from the Romantic Age to Postmodernism, students will refer to:
- Andrew Sanders, The Short Oxford History of English Literature (Oxford University Press, 2003 - third edition), chapters 6 (“The Literature of the Romantic Period 1780-1830”), 7 (“High Victorian Literature 1830-1880”), 8 (“Late Victorian and Edwardian Literature 1880-1920), 9 (“Modernism and its Alternatives: Literature 1920-1945”) e 10 (“Post- War and Post-Modern Literature”).

FURTHER MATERIALS
Other teaching materials (slides, images, videos, other texts, etc.) that will be used during classes will be available for download from the MOODLE e-repository. These contents do not substitute but complement the mandatory readings listed in the BIBLIOGRAPHY section.

Bibliography

Visualizza la bibliografia con Leganto, strumento che il Sistema Bibliotecario mette a disposizione per recuperare i testi in programma d'esame in modo semplice e innovativo.

Examination Methods

Typology: oral exam. There will be no mid-term tests.
The exam will consist in an oral discussion (in English) that will test the knowledge of the module’s topics (texts, authors, and genres) and the literary and cultural context (c. Handbook; main authors and movements from the Romantic Age to Postmodernism). Assessment will consider: 1. the knowledge and comprehension of primary texts, 2. the development of good analytical and synthetic skill levels with regard to the main historical, cultural, textual, and critical topics of the module, 3. the use of an appropriate vocabulary. Students may be required to read and comment on passages taken from primary texts (see a. above).

Students with disabilities or specific learning disorders (SLD), who intend to request the adaptation of the exam, must follow the instructions given HERE