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.
Study Plan
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.
1° Year
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
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1ST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
2ND FOREIGN LANGUAGE
1ST FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE
German literature and culture 1
1ST FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE
German literature and culture 1
2° Year activated in the A.Y. 2022/2023
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
---|
1ST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
2ND FOREIGN LANGUAGE
1ST FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE OR A RELATED COURSE
English literature and culture 2
French literature and culture 2
German literature and culture 2
Spanish literature and culture 2
2ND FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE OR A RELATED COURSE
English literature and culture 2
French literature and culture 2
German literature and culture 2
Spanish literature and culture 2
Geography of communication and international trade
Italian literature and culture
Modern and Contemporary Economic History
Theory and Techniques of communication
3° Year activated in the A.Y. 2023/2024
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
---|
1ST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
2ND FOREIGN LANGUAGE
Comparative and European Public law
Principles of international marketing
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
---|
1ST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
2ND FOREIGN LANGUAGE
1ST FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE
German literature and culture 1
1ST FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE
German literature and culture 1
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
---|
1ST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
2ND FOREIGN LANGUAGE
1ST FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE OR A RELATED COURSE
English literature and culture 2
French literature and culture 2
German literature and culture 2
Spanish literature and culture 2
2ND FOREIGN LITERATURE AND CULTURE OR A RELATED COURSE
English literature and culture 2
French literature and culture 2
German literature and culture 2
Spanish literature and culture 2
Geography of communication and international trade
Italian literature and culture
Modern and Contemporary Economic History
Theory and Techniques of communication
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
---|
1ST FOREIGN LANGUAGE
2ND FOREIGN LANGUAGE
Comparative and European Public law
Principles of international marketing
Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
---|
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.
Anglophone literatures and cultures [Cognomi F-O] (2022/2023)
Teaching code
4S002911
Teacher
Coordinator
Credits
9
Language
English
Scientific Disciplinary Sector (SSD)
L-LIN/10 - ENGLISH LITERATURE
Period
I semestre (Lingue e letterature straniere) dal Sep 26, 2022 al Dec 23, 2022.
Learning objectives
The aim of the course is to provide students with: - a basic knowledge of the history of the British Empire - a basic knowledge of postcolonial theories At the end of the course students will be able to: - discuss the selected literary texts through the critical theories introduced in the course - discuss in English, in a clear and consistent way, the topics dealt with in the course
Prerequisites and basic notions
As required by the Regolamento Didattico of the degree course, students can sit for the exam of Anglophone Literatures and Cultures only after passing English Literature 1 and English Literature 1.
Program
RE-WRITING THE CANON: ANGLOPHONE LITERATURES/CULTURES AND THE EMPIRE'S DISCOURSE
The counter-discoursive re-writing,of, or “writing back” to, the works of the canon that have prominently figured in the ideology and imaginary of the British empire and that are still detectable in its post-imperial legacies, thus exposing their underlying ideological-cultural assumptions, has been vital and necessary for the re-birth and affirmation of the anglophone cultures and literatures of the former colonies. In the light of the main theoretical tools of Postcolonial Studies, the module will deal with the main narrative strategies – rhetorical as much as political – enacted by Caribbean creole Jean Rhys and by South-African J.M. Coetzee in their re-writing of two classic novels set in the period of colonization and imperialism, D. Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe and C. Brontë’s Jane Eyre. In studying the subversive intertextuality superbly enacted by Rhys and Coetzee, attention will be focused over themes such as Otherness, identity/identitary alienation, the subaltern’s representation/voiceleeeness, resistance to the imperial/patriarchal dominion and to Euro-centric universality.
PRIMARY TEXTS (no abridgements):
-D. DEFOE : The Life and Strange and Surprising Adventures of Robinson Crusoe (1719)
-J.M. COETZEE, Foe (1986)
-C. BRONTE: Jane Eyre (1847)
-J. RHYS: Wide Sargasso Sea (1966)
A) CRITICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY.
-C. Plasa,Textual Politics from Slavery to Postcolonialism: Race and Identification, Palgrave Macmillan, 2000, ch.3: “’Silent revolt’. Slavery and the Politics of Metaphor in Jane Eyre”+Ch.4: “‘Qui est là? Race and the Politics of Fantasy in Wide Sargasso Sea”.
-D. Head, “The maze of Doubting: Foe”, in ID, "J.M. Coetzee", Cambridge UP, 1998 (112-128).
ADDITIONAL OBLIGATORY CRITICAL BIBLIOGRAPHY FOR NON-ATTENDING STUDENT:
-J Thieme, Postcolonial Con-Texts. Writing Back to the Canon, Continuum, 2002, the following chapters:
“Introduction: Parents, Bastards and Orphans”;
ch.3: “’ On England’s desert Island Cast Away’: Protean Crusoes; Exiled Fridays”;ch.4: “Reclaiming Ghosts, Claiming Ghosts: Caribbean and Canadian Responses to Brontes”.
-A. Howells, “The Madwoman comes out of the attic: Wide Sargasso Sea “ in ID, Jean Rhys, St.Martin’s Press, 1991.
-A. Moradi and F. Purgiv, “A Contrapuntal Reading of Daniel Defoe’s Robinson Crusoe”, in Journal of Humanistic & Social Studies, Vol.8 (2017), 31-42.
Non-attending students are strongly recommended to read the Introductions to the novels.
C) Reference handbook: J. McLeod: Beginning Postcolonialism, Manchester UP, 2010, capitoli: 1-2-3-6-7-8
N:B: All the critical texts listed above are available at the A. Frinzi Library
Bibliography
Didactic methods
Frontal teaching lessons in English.
Students will have to register for the webclass on the e-learning platform, and check it regularly for updates and supplementary teaching material discussed in class and uploaded on moodle so as to be available and downloadable. The latter contents do not replace the critical material set in the syllabus, they simply complement it.
Learning assessment procedures
Oral exam in English.
The exam will principally consist in questions on the primary texts and the contents of taught classes. It will ascertain the students' reading of the scheduled critical bibliography and handbbok.
Non-attending students will be principally examined on the whole critical bibliography scheduled for them + handbook.
All students may be required to read and comment on passages taken from the primary texts, which they are strictly required to take with them at the exam.
There will be no mid-term tests.
Evaluation criteria
Students will have to demonstrate:
-knowledge of the texts set in the syllabus and their contexts
-ability to critically comment on them (by drawing on the notes taken during classes and on the critical material set in the syllabus, resorting to personal elaboration, too)
-knowledge of the main points of postcolonial theory
-use of a language appropriate for discussing literature
Criteria for the composition of the final grade
The final grade, awarded on a 30-point scale, will be based on the above-listed criteria.
Exam language
English