Skip to main content
CODE 65319
ACADEMIC YEAR 2017/2018
CREDITS
SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINARY SECTOR L-LIN/15
LANGUAGE Italian
TEACHING LOCATION
SEMESTER Annual 1° Semester

OVERVIEW

This course is made up of 54 hours of lectures, corresponding to 9 credits, and it is divided into three parts: two monographic parts and a seminar on linguistic analysis of literary texts. All three parts (eighteen hours each) will take place from the end of February to the end of May.

The course will be entirely held in Italian. During the seminar, texts in Swedish will be analysed.

AIMS AND CONTENT

LEARNING OUTCOMES

This course aims to introduce the students to a variety of aspects of the cultural and literary history of Nordic countries, while highlighting elements of uniformity and diversity among them and in relation to the rest of the European cultural world.

AIMS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES

Students will become able to scientifically approach the genre of the Icelandic medieval sagas and of Scandinavian children's literature between the 19th and the 20th century. The main questions relevant to these genres will be addressed and key literary passages will be examined. Students will also acquire the basic tools to analyse literary texts, in this case in Swedish.

TEACHING METHODS

36 hours of lectures and 18 hours of seminar. Students are also warmly invited to analyse one or more course topics in depth and to present their work (individually or in groups, as they prefer) during the course, so as to refine their methods and stimulate discussion. This work will be taken into account for the final evaluation; morevoer, presenters will have a shorter list of books to read. Please contact me for further details.

SYLLABUS/CONTENT

PART ONE - Sagas between mythology, literature and chronicle, from the ancient times to the birth of Iceland: Hervarar saga, Völsunga saga and Njáls saga

A typical Scandinavian literary genre, sagas also preserve a common German cultural heritage and are undoubtedly one of the best examples of the literary flourishing in medieval Scandinavia. Drawing on both myth and history, they document in a precious and sometimes unique manner the richness of ancient German culture as well as the early stages of Nordic history. After an introduction pointing out the characteristics of this kind of narrative (and texts) and clarifying the historical context in which it has developed, the three mentioned sagas will be analysed by reading and commenting on significant passages in Italian translation.

 

PART TWO - Tradition and transgression in Scandinavian children's literature: the surprising features of a 'minor' genre

During the 20th century, Scandinavian literature offered interesting cases of alternative, provocative and innovative children's books, which often highlighted the contradictions and limitations of traditional literature, the most famous example of which is certainly the series on Pippi Longstocking by the Swedish author Astrid Lindgren. No less disruptive - even though less celebrated - were the adventures of Bibi by the Danish writer Karin Michaëlis and the world of the Moomin created by the Finland-Swedish author Tove Jansson. We will address several issues concerning children's literature, reconstructing its development in the different European socio-cultural contexts, pointing out its characteristic features and focusing on aspects of similarity and diversity among the considered authors and their works. Analysis will also take into account pedagogical aspects and the role of literature in representing, suggesting and promoting social values, specifically related to children's conditions and needs.

RECOMMENDED READING/BIBLIOGRAPHY

Students will have to prove their acquaintance with course contents, including all the texts which will be examined during the course, and will have to read eight works of contemporary Scandinavian literature (two for each country: Sweden, Denmark, Norway and Iceland).

Further critical bibliography will be indicated during the course. For details about the syllabus, the reading list and the materials for students who cannot attend the course, please contact me at davide.finco@unige.it.

TEACHERS AND EXAM BOARD

Exam Board

DAVIDE AGOSTINO FINCO (President)

CHIARA BENATI

PAOLO MARELLI

LESSONS

LESSONS START

Lessons will start in the second term, at the end of February. The schedule will be announced a couple of weeks before.

EXAMS

EXAM DESCRIPTION

Oral exam at the end of the course or in the following exam sessions. The exam lasts approximately forty minutes and is meant to test both the knowledge of the syllabus (course topics, texts analysed in class and readings) and reasoning skills. Accuracy in the use of the specific language of the discipline will be taken into account.

The examination will take place partly in Italian and partly in Swedish on a topic of the programme chosen and carefully analysed by the student.

Students are allowed to divide the syllabus into (no more than) two parts to be prepared for two different exam sessions. The final evaluation will take into consideration the results of both parts (which must be both pass marks, i.e. both marked at least with 18/30); moreover, students are free to take the exam(s) as many times as they wish to improve their marks.

ASSESSMENT METHODS

Oral tests consist of an interview conducted by the teacher who taught the course plus another teacher or expert in the same discipline. For each course, the exam board members establish common and shared evaluation criteria, as illustrated by the lecturer(s) during the course and indicated in the course syllabus template.

Exam schedule

Data appello Orario Luogo Degree type Note
05/02/2018 10:00 GENOVA Orale
05/02/2018 14:30 GENOVA Compitino
20/02/2018 10:00 GENOVA Orale
20/06/2018 10:00 GENOVA Orale
04/07/2018 10:00 GENOVA Orale
12/09/2018 10:00 GENOVA Orale
25/09/2018 10:00 GENOVA Orale
13/12/2018 10:00 GENOVA Orale

FURTHER INFORMATION

Course attendance is not compulsory, but warmly recommended.

Students will not have to formally enrol in this course; however, this course - as any other - is to be included in the learning plan to be officially acknowledged.

Those who want to take the exam must enrol through the university website within three days before the examination. Participants in the course will have to log in to the Aulaweb platform, where course material will be made available.

This course is obligatory for all third year students who have chosen Swedish as Language A or Language B in the address "Lingue, letterature e culture moderne". Other students may include it in their learning plan, but they are kindly asked to contact me in order to obtain a specific syllabus designed according to their own academic needs.