Corsi
courses
Select a course title to view that course's description:
Current Courses (2006-2007)
Beginning Italian
Intermediate Italian: Modern Italian Prose
Advanced Italian: Fascism, World War Two, and the Resistance in Twentieth-Century Italian Narrative and Cinema
Previous Courses
Advanced Italian: "Read the Book! See the Movie!"
Eros, Beauty & the Pursuit of Happiness
Per mare e per terra: il viaggio nella letteratura italiana contemporanea
Sognando l'America: l'America nella letteratura italiana moderna
The Grand Tour
Boccaccio's Decameron
Fascism and Antifascism
Svevo e Pirandello
Images of Heaven and Hell: Dante's Divine Comedy
Beginning Italian
J. Serafini-Sauli, S. Benzoni
Fall 2007 - Spring 2008; Two Sections
Course Syllabus (Serafini-Sauli)
This course is for students with no previous knowledge of Italian. It aims at giving the student a complete foundation in the Italian language, with particular attention to the oral and written communication of everyday use and to all aspects of Italian culture. The course will be conducted in Italian after the first month and will involve the study of all the basic structures of the language—phonological, grammatical, syntactical—with practice in conversation, reading, composition, and translation. In addition to the basic Italian textbook, and an array of supplementary computer and Internet material, the course will also include texts from prose fiction, poetry, journalistic prose, songs, films, recipe books, and the language of publicity. Conference work is largely based on reading and writing, and the use of the language is encouraged through games and creative composition. In addition to class and group conference, the course also has a conversation component in regular workshops with the language assistants. Supplementary activities such as opera and relevant exhibits in New York are made available as possible. The course is for a full year, by the end of which students attain a basic competence in all aspects of the language.
Intermediate Italian: Modern Italian Prose
T. Rorandelli
Fall 2007 - Spring 2008
This intermediate-level course aims at improving and perfecting the students’ speaking, listening, reading, and writing skills, as well as their knowledge of Italy’s contemporary culture and literature. In order to acquire the necessary knowledge of Italian grammar, idiomatic expressions, and vocabulary, students will be exposed to present-day Italy through the selection of specific newspaper articles, music, and cinema, as well as modern Italian literature (i.e., short stories, poems, and passages from literary works) in the original language. Some of the literary works will include selections from Gianni Rodari, Carlo Castellaneta, Clara Sereni, Dino Buzzati, Stefano Benni, Antonio Tabucchi, and Italo Calvino. In order to address the students’ own writing skills, written compositions will also be required as an integral part of the course. The materials selected for the class, be they a literary text, a song, video, or grammar exercise, will be accessible at all times to the students through the course’s “Web Board”; research on the Web will be central to the course and will offer the basis for the weekly “Web piece,” a short paper on a particular topic. Conference topics might include the study of a particular author, literary text, film, or any other aspect of Italian society and culture that might be of interest to the student. Conversation classes will be held twice a week with the language assistants.
Advanced Italian: Fascism, World War Two, and the Resistance in Twentieth-Century Italian Narrative and Cinema
T. Rorandelli
Fall 2007; Open to students with advanced proficiency in Italian.
This course is intended for advanced students of Italian who want to better their comprehension as well as their oral and written skills in the language. This will be achieved by reading literary works and watching films in the original language, producing written compositions, and also through in-class discussion of the material. The course examines the manner in which crucial historical events that occurred during the twentieth century (such as the rise and fall of fascism, World War II, and the Resistance) were represented within Italian literature and cinema of the time as well as throughout the decades following the end of the war (up to the 1970’s). Literary texts will include those authored by Italo Calvino, Alba de Céspedes, Ignazio Silone, Vasco Pratolini, Renata Viganò, Cesare Pavese, Carlo Cassola, Beppe Fenoglio, Elio Vittorini, Elsa Morante, Alberto Moravia, and Carlo Levi. Films will include fascist propaganda and documentaries (from the Istituto Luce’s archives), as well as films by Roberto Rossellini (his fascist-era war trilogy as well as his neorealist films), Paolo and Vittorio Taviani, Bernardo Bertolucci, Mario Camerini, and Alessandro Blasetti. Conference topics might include the study of a particular author, literary text, or film that might be of interest to the student. Conversation classes will be held with the language assistants. Literary texts will be available for purchase; critical material will be available through e-reserve.
