Students who attend this course regularly and study the assigned texts
Lectures in English interspersed with activities aimed at encouraging active participation in class. Attendance is highly recommended. Students who are unable to attend will have to refer to an ad-hoc reading list.
This course aims to introduce students to the study of the literature about London from the end of the 19th century to the first decades of the 20th century, focusing on the late-Victorian short story (Prof. Villa), impressionist and modernist non-fiction writing (Prof. Colombino) and, finally, the poetic experimentation of the avant-gardes (Prof. Michelucci). Strolling without aim or destination, losing oneself in the city streets and immersing oneself in the crowd, while maintaining a detached posture: this is the experience of the flâneur described by Baudelaire, which inspired the urban journeys of much of the London literature of the period. The physical space and places of the modern city become the landscape of modernity par excellence — sensationally recounted by tabloids, traversed by new means of transport, captured in fragments by photography and in motion by early cinema. Their significance is both ideological and aesthetic: they materialise specific political conditions and social relations, and at the same time solicit perceptions that redefine the subject, fracturing and multiplying its identity.The course focuses on a selection of texts by authors who have represented this experience in their writings.
All students will have to study a selection of critical articles, contextual materials, and the following literary texts, which will be made available on aulaweb:
Ricevimento: By appointment only. My office is in Santa Sabina, 2, Floor 5.
Ricevimento: Office hours: DLCM, Piazza Santa Sabina 2, 5th floor. Students can arrange an appointment by email.
Ricevimento: Please check my departmental webpage: https://lingue.unige.it/luisa.villa@unige.it
Classes will be held in the second semester, starting in February, on Wedn. 19th.
Timetable: Wedn., 14-15 Aula M (Polo Didattico); Friday, 9-11 Aula G (Polo Didattico).
ENGLISH LITERATURE AND CULTURE MOD.2
This course is assessed by a 3-hour written examination in English. The exam paper covers all parts of the syllabus (literary history, poems and other texts commented in class; and the assigned critical material). The final mark will result from the average of the marks related to the three parts of the syllabus.
Students who attend regularly and actively will be able to opt for alternative forms of assessment on selected parts of the syllabus.
The exam paper involves open-ended questions (on the historical period, the cultural contexts, the main authors) and guided commentaries of literary texts. Open-ended questions test knowledge and comprehension; guided commentaries test the students’ ability to recognise and describe the main formal and thematic features of specific texts, and connect them to contextual historical and cultural information; it also tests the students’ comprehension of, and ability to respond to, the critical essays included in the reading list.