Comparative English Literature

Academic Year 2023/2024 - Teacher: MANUELA FORTUNATA D'AMORE

Expected Learning Outcomes

According to the Dublin descriptors, students, at the end of the course, will demonstrate:

1) Knowledge and Understanding

This course intends to present students with the main cultural/literary trends of late modern and contemporary Britain and Italy, thus focusing on the main features of travel and migrant writing in Anglo-Italian contexts. The activities that will be carried out on the texts included in the syllabus will also enhance their comprehension skills. 

2) Applying Knowledge and Understanding

A considerable part of the course will be dedicated to close reading activities, which will help students to develop their literary appreciation tools, also to apply their knowledge of Italian and British culture in late modern and contemporary times.

3) Making Judgement

Close reading activities will promote students’ ability to make judgement, also to establish stylistic and thematic relations among the texts included in the syllabus.    

4) Communication skills

Text analysis activities, as well as exchanges on the chosen texts will enhance students’ communication skills also in English.   

5) Learning skills

Students will develop a deeper awareness of their learning skills, which will result in a more mature and autonomous approach to texts.     

Course Structure

Both the course and the syllabus are divided into 2 modules:

1) Writing Italy: Fiction and Travel (3 ECTS);

2) Italian Migrant Communities in Scotland: Perceptions and Self-Perceptions (3 ECTS);

The course will be held both in Italian and in English. The materials that will be used in class, complete with the extracts that have been chosen, bibliographical references and audio-video materials, will be immediately made available in electronic form. 

Attendance of Lessons

Attendance is not compulsory.

Detailed Course Content

Module A, Writing Italy: Fiction and Travel (3 ECTS), is centred on four XIX-XXI century English writers: Charles Dickens, E.M. Forster, Muriel Spark, and Jan Morris. The extracts that will be presented in class will draw the students’ attention to the way the Italian “other” has been represented until today.

 

Module B, Italian Migrant Communities in Scotland: Perceptions and Self-Perceptions (3 ECTS), will focus on Joe Pieri (1918-2012), Ann Marie Di Mambro (1949―), Anne Pia (1951―) e Mary Contini (1961―), Scots-Italian writers, who have written about the Italian communities in Glasgow and Edinburgh. Their works will throw light on the history of Italian migration to Britain as well as on the concepts of identity, “perception” and “self-perception”.

Textbook Information

A. Writing Italy: Fiction and Travel (3 ECTS)

Students will choose one of the following handbooks:

·         Lilla Crisafulli e Keir Elam (a cura di), Manuale di letteratura e cultura inglese, Bologna, Bononia University Press, 2009, pp. 181-489.

·         Harry Blamires, A Short History of English Literature, London, Routledge, 2013, pp. 231-423.

 

Texts and Materials

  • Charles Dickens, Pictures from Italy (1846) [Penguin Classics, latest ed.]
  • E.M. Forster, A Room with a View (1908) [Penguin Classics, latest ed.]
  • Muriel Spark, Territorial Rights (1979) [Virago, latest ed.]
  • Jan Morris, Trieste and the Meaning of Nowhere (2001) [Faber & Faber, latest ed.]

 

The relevant information about the above-mentioned authors and works will be found in the PPT presentation, also in critical essays, which will be made available in electronic form and on STUDIUM.

 

Methodology

Students will read

·         Tim Youngs, The Cambridge Companion to Travel Writing, Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 2013, pp. 50-177.

 

B. Italian Migrant Communities in Scotland: Perceptions and Self-Perceptions (3 ECTS)

Primary Texts

Students will study the given extracts and will read one of these works in full:   

·         Joe Pieri, The Isle of the Displaced; An Italian-Scot’s Memoirs of Internment in the Second World War (1997) [also in Kindle ed. 2014]

  • Ann Marie Di Mambro, Tally’s Blood (2002) [also in Kindle ed. 2014]
  • Mary Contini, Dear Olivia: An Italian Journey of Love and Courage (2007) [either in paperback or Kindle ed.]
  • Anne Pia, Language of My Choosing. The Candid Life-Memoir of an Italian-Scot (2017) [either in paperback or Kindle ed.]

 

The relevant information about the above-mentioned authors and works will be found in the PPT presentation, also in critical essays, which will be made available in electronic form and on STUDIUM.

 

Critical Essays

Students will read

  • Burrell Kathy and Panikos Panayi, Histories and Memories: Migrants and their History in Britain, London, I.B. Tauris 2006, pp. 57-74.
  • Colpi Terri, Italians’ Count in Scotland: The 1933 Census. Recording History, London, The St. James Press, 2015, pp. 101-120.
  • D’Amore Manuela, Neutralising “difference by silence”, “choosing to remain peripheral”: Xenophobia, Marginalisation and Death in Italian Scottish Migrant Narratives of World War II, in I. Sirkeci and M. Zulfiu Alili (a cura di), The Migration Conference 2020 Proceedings: Migration and Integration, London, Transnational Press, 2020, pp. 131-134.   
  • D’Amore Manuela, Transcultural Identities, Plurilingualism and Gender in Scottish Italian Literary Writing: Ann Marie Di Mambro, Anne Pia and Mary Contini, «Polyphonie», vol. 7, n. 1, 2020, pp. 1-21.   

 

Please remember that in compliance with art 171 L22.04.1941, n. 633 and its amendments, it is illegal to copy entire books or journals, only 15% of their content can be copied.

For further information on sanctions and regulations concerning photocopying please refer to the regulations on copyright (Linee Guida sulla Gestione dei Diritti d’Autore) provided by AIDRO - Associazione Italiana per i Diritti di Riproduzione delle opere dell’ingegno (the Italian Association on Copyright).

All the books listed in the programs can be consulted in the Library. 

VERSIONE IN ITALIANO