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 |
|---|
1st foreign language2nd foreign literature1st foreign literature2nd foreign literature2° Year activated in the A.Y. 2019/2020
| Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
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1st foreign language2nd foreign language1st foreign literature2nd foreign literature1 module to be chosen among the following3° Year activated in the A.Y. 2020/2021
| Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
|---|
1st foreign language2nd foreign languagePhilology of the 1st or 2nd language| Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
|---|
1st foreign language2nd foreign literature1st foreign literature2nd foreign literature| Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
|---|
1st foreign language2nd foreign language1st foreign literature2nd foreign literature1 module to be chosen among the following| Modules | Credits | TAF | SSD |
|---|
1st foreign language2nd foreign languagePhilology of the 1st or 2nd language| 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.
French Literature I (2018/2019)
Teaching code
4S00860
Credits
9
Coordinator
Language
Italian
Also offered in courses:
- French Literature (i) of the course Bachelor’s degree in Humanities
- French Literature I - PARTE I of the course Bachelor's degree in Foreign Languages and Literatures
- French Literature I - PARTE II of the course Bachelor's degree in Foreign Languages and Literatures
The teaching is organized as follows:
Learning outcomes
In accordance with the periodization adopted in our French lit-erature courses (first year: from 1850 to today; second year: Eighteenth century and first half of the Nineteenth century; third year: Sixteenth and Seventeenth centuries), this course introduces to French literature from 1850 to today, with in-depth analysis of some aspects, authors and works, in order to develop critical competences concerning various literary gen-res.
As for the course that pertains to the Departement of Cultures and Civilizations (Laurea in Lettere), the historical insights and critical perspectives offered by this course in the field of French literary culture are useful tools for the comparative study of Italian literature in the European context.
At the end of the course, students shall therefore acquire over-all knowledge of the history of French literature from 1850 to today (main literary movements, authors and works), along with critical competences and the capacity of applying them to the comparative analysis of texts belonging to different literary genres (poetry, narrative prose, essay, and theatre).
This course is divided in two parts because students attending the course that pertains to the Department of Cultures and Civ-ilizations (Lettere) achieve 6 credits (part 1 of the course), whereas students attending courses that pertain to the Depart-ment of Foreign Languages and Literatures (Lingue e lettera-ture straniere, Lingue e culture per l’editoria) achieve 9 credits (part 1 and 2 of the course, the second part, which deals with contemporary literature, being conceived as the completion of the first).
Program
Part 1
An outline of the history of French literature and publishing from 1850 to the end of the Second World War with in-depth analysis of some emblematic aspects, authors and works, and a critical introduction to the study of texts belonging to different literary genres:
a. poetry, from Baudelaire to early XXth-Century avant-garde movements;
b1. narrative prose, from Flaubert to Zola and Huysmans;
b2. the novel, from early XXth century to the end of the Second World War;
c. the theatre, from late XIXth century to the end of the Second World War;
The reading of two entire literary works in French, among those presented during the course, is compulsory. Only students attending the course which pertains to the Department of Cultures and Civilizations (Lettere) may read the two chosen books in the Italian translation.
A detailed program with bibliographical information, as well as a selection of literary and critical texts, will be given at the beginning of the course.
Students attending the course will be given access to a mid-term paper (1/3 of the final evaluation): students will be required to comment on one of the literary excerpts discussed during the course (literary context and genre, thematic and stylistic analysis).
Students unable to attend the course are requested to contact the teacher (e-mail and office hours). Some critical readings given at the beginning of the course are especially selected for them in order to prepare the final oral exam.
The course, as well as the mid-term paper and the final oral exam, are in Italian. All texts (literary excerpts and extended readings) must be in French, except the two books that, as already mentioned, only students attending the course which pertains to the Department of Cultures and Civilizations (Lettere) may choose to read in Italian.
Further instructions, concerning both the mid-term paper and the oral exam, will be given during the course.
Select bibliography
Paul Aron, Denis Saint-Jacques et Alain Viala, Le dictionnaire du littéraire, Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 2002.
Éric Bordas, Claire Barel-Moisan, Gilles Bonnet, Aude Déruelle et Christine Marcandier, L’analyse littéraire, 2e édition, Paris, Armand Colin, 2015.
Jean-Yves Mollier, Une autre histoire de l’édition française, Paris, La Fabrique Editions, 2015.
Lionello Sozzi (a cura di), Storia europea della letteratura francese. II. Dal Settecento all’età contemporanea, Torino, Einaudi, 2013.
Sandra Teroni (a cura di), Il romanzo francese del Novecento, Roma/Bari, Laterza, 2008.
Anne Ubersfeld, Les termes clés de l’analyse du théâtre, Paris, Seuil, 1996.
Alain Vaillant, La poésie. Initiation aux méthodes d’analyse des textes poétiques, Paris, Nathan, 1992.
Part 2
An outline of contemporary French literature from the end of the Second World War to today, with particular regard to nowaday’s theatrical trends and to the developments and interactions of narrative prose and essayism:
a. from the ‘nouveau théâtre’ to contemporary theatre;
b. from the ‘nouevau roman’ to contemporray narrative prose.
The reading of one entire literary work in French, among those presented during the course, is compulsory.
A detailed program with bibliographical information, as well as a selection of literary and critical texts, will be given at the beginning of the course.
Students unable to attend the course are requested to contact the teacher (e-mail and office hours). Some critical readings given at the beginning of the course are especially selected for them in order to prepare the final oral exam.
The course and the final oral exam are in Italian. All texts (literary excerpts and extended readings) must be in French.
Further instructions concerning the oral exam will be given during the course.
Select bibliography
Paul Aron, Denis Saint-Jacques et Alain Viala, Le dictionnaire du littéraire, Paris, Presses Universitaires de France, 2002.
Éric Bordas, Claire Barel-Moisan, Gilles Bonnet, Aude Déruelle et Christine Marcandier, L’analyse littéraire, 2e édition, Paris, Armand Colin, 2015.
Joseph Danan, Entre théâtre et performance: la question du texte, Arles Actes Sud, 2013.
Jean-Yves Mollier, Une autre histoire de l’édition française, Paris, La Fabrique Editions, 2015.
Gianfranco Rubino (a cura di), Il romanzo francese contemporaneo, Roma/Bari, Laterza, 2012.
Lionello Sozzi (a cura di), Storia europea della letteratura francese. II. Dal Settecento all’età contemporanea, Torino, Einaudi, 2013.
Dominique Viart et Bruno Vercier, La littérature française au présent. Héritage, modernité, mutations, Paris, Bordas, 2005.
Bibliography
| Author | Title | Publishing house | Year | ISBN | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lionello Sozzi (a cura di) | Storia europea della letteratura francese | Einaudi | 2013 |
Examination Methods
It must be remembered that this course is divided in two parts because students attending the course that pertains to the Department of Cultures and Civilizations (Lettere) achieve 6 credits (part 1 of the course), whereas students attending courses that pertain to the Department of Foreign Languages and Literatures (Lingue e letterature straniere; Lingue e culture per l’editoria) achieve 9 credits (part 1 and 2 of the course, the second part being conceived as the completion of the first).
For students attending the course who choose to present their mid-term paper, the final evaluation will be the result of:
a) mid-term paper (1/3 of the evaluation);
b) oral exam (2/3 of the evaluation).
For students unable to attend the course, the complete program will be discussed during the oral exam exam.
