CODE 65297 ACADEMIC YEAR 2025/2026 CREDITS 6 cfu anno 2 LINGUE E LETTERATURE MODERNE PER I SERVIZI CULTURALI 9265 (LM-37) - GENOVA 6 cfu anno 2 LINGUE E LETTERATURE MODERNE PER I SERVIZI CULTURALI 9265 (LM-38) - GENOVA SCIENTIFIC DISCIPLINARY SECTOR L-LIN/15 LANGUAGE Italian TEACHING LOCATION GENOVA SEMESTER 2° Semester MODULES Questo insegnamento è un modulo di: SCANDINAVIAN LITERATURE AND CULTURE AIMS AND CONTENT AIMS AND LEARNING OUTCOMES Students will critically examine the phenomenon of the representation of the North, in its stereotypes and their deconstruction, drawing on a corpus of literary and extra-literary examples which they will have the chance to integrate. Moreover, they will be able to critically deal with the genre of Nordic sagas, reflect on the main features of this kind of narrative works (and their evolution) and identify the peculiarities of the Scandinavian tradition and trends. At the end of the course they will be able to: - address stereotypes linked to the imagery of and about the Nordic countries, adopting and adapting the conceptual tools of mythemes and borealism; - apply the principles and tools they will acquire to independently chosen case studies; - outline the development of Nordic sagas, while discussing the historical and socio-cultural premises of this literary genre; - describe and discuss the features of Nordic sagas in the context of European literature; - critically analyse some relevant examples of legendary sagas and sagas of the Icelanders. TEACHING METHODS 36 hours of classroom activities, articulated in three weekly hours over 12 weeks (each part consists of 18 hours) in the second term (February to May). The whole course, particularly the first part, will have a markedly seminar character, therefore students are expected to contribute to analyses and discussion with their own remarks. The monographic module on the imagery about the North will initially deal with theoretical considerations on the approach to this topic, later focusing on the examination of significant case studies of the 20th century. This survey, primarily aimed at stimulating a discussion among the participants, will be finally enriched by their contribution, with the analysis of a work of their choice to be presented during the course. Further activities will be announced during the course. The course will be entirely held in Italian. The course attendance is not compulsory, but highly recommended. SYLLABUS/CONTENT PART ONE - Images of the North, imagery about the North: between mythemes, borealism and northernness This module offers an initial reflection on the stereotypes that are associated with the Northern countries, in particular from the Italian perspective, drawing examples from literature and cinema: which images have been successful or most frequent? What functions did they have? Have there been any attempts to deconstruct (some of) them? The participants, on the basis of the literary criticism indicated and inspired by the suggested examples, will be asked to enrich the research corpus and to discuss the dynamics, evolution and implications of such narratives on the North. PART TWO - 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 main features 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. RECOMMENDED READING/BIBLIOGRAPHY For PART ONE (Imagery about the North): Andrea Meregalli and Camilla Storskog (eds.), Bridges to Scandinavia, Milano, di/segni, Dipartimento di Lingue e letterature straniere, Università degli Studi di Milano 2016, pp. 141-155 Robert Zola Christensen (ed.), Rethinking Scandinavia. A collection of articles based on presentation held at the CSS Conference 2017 – (web proceedings), Lund, International web community for Scandinavian Studies 2018 Bruno Berni and Anna Wegener (eds.), Translating Scandinavia. Scandinavian Literature in Italian and German Translation, 1918-1945, Roma, Edizioni Quasar 2018, pp. 109-129 Frédérique Toudoire-Surlapierre et Alessandra Balloti (dir.), Nordiques n° 38 – Automne 2019. Le petit héros scandinave, Bibliothèque de Caen-Association Norden Alessandra Ballotti, Claire McKeown, Frédérique Toudoire Surlapierre (dir.), De la nordicité au boréalisme, Reims, Presses Universitaires 2020 Jens Bjerring-Hansen, Torben Jelsbak, Anna Estera Mrozewicz (eds.), Scandinavian Exceptionalisms. Culture, Society, Discourse, Berlin, Nordeuropa-Institut der Humboldt Universität 2021 For PART TWO - The Nordic sagas: La Saga dei Volsunghi, a cura di Marcello Meli, Alessandria, Edizioni dell'Orso 1993 La Saga dei Völsunghi, a cura di Ludovica Koch, trad. di Annalisa Febbraio, Torino, Nuova Pratica Editrice 1994 La Saga di Hervör, in M. Meli (a cura di), Antiche saghe nordiche, Milano, Mondadori 1997, volume primo, pp. 5-75 La Saga di Njáll, in M. Meli (a cura di), Antiche saghe nordiche, volume secondo, pp. 707-1086 Further critical bibliography will be announced during the course. Students are expected to know the contents of the lessons, including all the texts which will be examined during the course, and will have to read a number of tales or essays in Swedish to be able to translate them (some passages will be chosen by the teacher during the exam) into Italian and summarize them in Swedish. In details: - Astrid Lindgren, “Pippi flyttar in i Villa Villekulla” and “Pippi vill inte bli stor” (da Boken om Pippi Långstrump, 1952) - Birgitta Svanberg, “På barnets sida. Om Astrid Lindgren” (in Elisabeth Møller Jensen, Nordisk kvinnolitteraturhistoria 3, 1996), available at www.litteraturbanken.se - Tove Jansson, “Vårvisan” and “Granen” (from Det osynliga barnet, 1962) - Ebba Witt-Brattström, “Motståndets utopi. Om Tove Jansson” (in Nordisk kvinnolitteraturhistoria 3) - August Strindberg, “Blåvingen finner guldpudran” or “Lotsens vedermödor” (in Sagor, 1903), available at www.projektruneberg.org o www.litteraturbanken.se For details about the programme, the reading list and all the material for students who cannot attend the lessons, please contact the teacher at davide.finco@unige.it. TEACHERS AND EXAM BOARD DAVIDE AGOSTINO FINCO Ricevimento: Students are warmly asked to regularly check the teacher's personal page on the Department website to make sure about office hours. It's always possible to fix an appointment, even on Microsoft Teams. LESSONS LESSONS START Lessons will start in mid-February, the course schedule will be announced a few weeks earlier. Class schedule The timetable for this course is available here: Portale EasyAcademy EXAMS EXAM DESCRIPTION An oral exam at the end of the course and in the following exam sessions. During the exam, texts or case studies examined during the course will be submitted to candidates for their analysis. N.B. The final judgement will include the evaluation of a written work (in Italian or Swedish) on a topic connected with the second part of the programme (Images of the North): students are warmly invited to ask the teacher about indications and details regarding this paper. The examination will take place partly in Italian and partly in Swedish on course topics. Students are allowed to divide the programme into (no more than) two parts to be prepared for two different exam sessions at their choice. The final evaluation will consider the results of both parts (however, they must be both sufficient, i.e. both evaluated at least with 18/30) and students are free to take the exam(s) as many times as they wish to take a better evaluation. The mentioned term paper can be presented apart, provided that it will have to be discussed with the examiners as a necessary subject for the final evaluation. The final mark is announced at the end of the exam and it can be refused by the candidate. In case of a refused mark or a failed exam, the candidate may always sit the exam in the following session (no limit is prescribed in the number of attempts). For final year or Erasmus students there are special sessions in addition to the seven ordinary ones: even in this case, the examination days are indicated in the lecturer's personal pages or in the university website (students are requested to contact the teachers of “Sezione Scandinavistica” to have further information). ASSESSMENT METHODS In the overall evaluation, not only the knowledge of the syllabus (course topics, texts analysed in class – or included in the specific list – and readings) and reasoning skills, but also expository skills and accuracy in the use of the specific language of the discipline will be taken into account. The main skills that will be evaluated are: capability orientating oneself in the different periods of the literary history, setting the considered works (or texts) in the proper context, comparing different authors, ages, nations, movements, developing a personal critical judgement on the considered phenomena, mainly basing on competences acquired and critical contributions presented during the course. The part of the exam that has to be taken in Swedish is aimed to make students used to expressing even in this language on formal subjects, like literature, linguistics and culture. The evaluation of students’ language skills will be less strict than that required in a typical language assessment, but it will, nonetheless, contribute to the final mark according to grammatical correctness, fluency of expression and richness of vocabulary. FURTHER INFORMATION Students will not have to formally enrol in this course; however, this course – as any other – is to be inserted 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 the Aulaweb platform, where all material that will be examined will be uploaded. This course is obligatory for all second year students of “Laurea Magistrale” (Master) who have chosen Swedish as Language A or Language B. Students who have valid certification of physical or learning disabilities on file with the University and who wish to discuss possible accommodations or other circumstances regarding lectures, coursework and exams, should speak both with the instructor and with prof. Sara Dickinson (sara.dickinson@unige.it), the Department's disability liaison. Further information available at https://unige.it/disabilita-dsa. Agenda 2030 - Sustainable Development Goals Quality education Gender equality Decent work and economic growth Reduce inequality