I T A L I A N S T U D I E S
Notes
- The following courses are administered by St. Jerome's University.
- All ITALST courses are taught in English.
Course ID: 011972
Understanding Modern Italy
This course examines Italy's transformation from Unification in 1861 to present day. Students will explore its paradoxes and challenges through films and readings on topics such as the World Wars, the rise of fascism, internal terrorism, and migration in order to gain an understanding of contemporary Italian society and culture.
Course ID: 012274
Sex, Marriage, and Family Traditions in Italy
This course explores the contributions of Italian women artists, writers, and intellectuals from the Medieval times through the Renaissance to the Baroque period. The focus will be on the institutions of marriage and of the family.
(Cross-listed with SMF 111)
Course ID: 016144
Sexual Identities and Relationships in Italy
This course explores the contributions of Italian women artists, writers, and intellectuals from the Enlightenment until contemporary times. The focus will be on the expression of sexual identities, the nature of relationships, and the influence of family ties.
(Cross-listed with SMF 112)
Course ID: 016145
Italian Cinema
This is a survey of the most representative works of Italian cinema, from the early 20th century to present day. Students will gain an understanding and appreciation of one of the most influential world cinemas. Special attention will be given to cinematic movements, the role of directors, and cult movies.
Course ID: 016498
Contagion, Disease, and Illness in Italian Literature and Film
This course will focus on representations of contagion and illness in Italian literature and film. Covering such topics as the portrayal of the Bubonic Plague in 14th-century novelle, Renaissance descriptions of syphilis, Verist and Neo-realist stories about contagion and poverty, and the projection of social malaise in art films, students will assess the ways in which disease is depicted in primary texts. Students will gain familiarity with contemporary contagion theories, as well as historicization and cultural criticism of literary and cinematic accounts of disease. In this course students will consider the psycho-social impact of contagion and disease from multiple perspectives - near and far, past, and present.
(Cross-listed with HHUM 263)
Course ID: 015541
The Mafia
This course analyzes the visual media representation of the Mafia in North America and the manner in which it often glorifies the Italian Mafiosi's lifestyle. The goal is to deconstruct the romanticized portrayal of the Italian and Italian-American gangster created in visual media by analyzing atrocities committed by organized crime.
Course ID: 006530
Italian Cinema and the Novel
A survey of some of the principal novels of 20th century Italy as they have been adapted in film by Italian directors. Students will study literary and cinematic representations of themes such as the rise of the Italian bourgeoisie, the economic boom of the 1960s, domestic violence, and organized crime.
Course ID: 006526
Italian Culture and Civilization 1
A survey of developments in Italian culture - history, literature, and the arts - up to and including the Renaissance.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 006527
Italian Culture and Civilization 2
A survey of developments in Italian culture - history, literature, painting, and music - in the post-Renaissance period, with emphasis on modern Italy.
Prereq: Level at least 2A
Course ID: 016146
Special Topics in Contemporary Italian Society
This course gives students an opportunity to study aspects of contemporary Italian society not covered in other courses.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of two times.]
Prereq: Level at least 1B
Course ID: 015863
The Mystical Imagination
This course examines works of writers, artists, architects, and thinkers in the Western European tradition for whom all of reality participates in the larger mystery of God. The course focuses on figures who, from the early Italian Renaissance onward, gave expression to that mystical imagination.
[Note: This course is taught in Rome and incurs extra costs for the student above and beyond the registration fee in the form of travel, room and board, and incidental costs.]
Prereq: Level at least 2A
(Cross-listed with RS 349)
Also offered at St. Jerome's University
Course ID: 011898
Dante's Divine Comedy
This course examines the various strands of what is one of the greatest works in Western literature, Dante's Divine Comedy. The course will engage students in a critical reading of the text's various layers of meaning, which emphasize perennial issues of our human condition.
Prereq: Level at least 2B
Course ID: 016147
Special Topics/Directed Readings
This course gives the student an opportunity to study authors and works of special interest which are not covered in other courses.
[Note: This is a repeatable course, subject to different content; it may be completed a total of two times.]
Department Consent Required
Prereq: Level at least 3A