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JOHN CABOT UNIVERSITY

COURSE CODE: "EN 282"
COURSE NAME: "Italian Visions: Perceptions of Italy in Literature"
SEMESTER & YEAR: Spring 2014
SYLLABUS

INSTRUCTOR: Shannon Russell
EMAIL: [email protected]
HOURS: TTH 11:30 AM 12:45 PM
TOTAL NO. OF CONTACT HOURS: 45
CREDITS: 3
PREREQUISITES: Prerequisite: EN 110 with a grade of C or above
OFFICE HOURS: By appointment

COURSE DESCRIPTION:

“A man who has not been in Italy is always conscious of an inferiority, from his not having seen what it is expected a man should see.” Samuel Johnson [who did not make it to Italy] 1776

 

This course attempts to chart the incredible influence of Italy on the imaginations of British, American and European writers of the 18th and 19th centuries.  In addition to reading, students will make on-site visits to places relevant to the literature studied, including:   Keats Shelley House, Goethe House, the Protestant Cemetery, the Palazzo Barbarini and the Capitoline Museum.  We begin with the European “discovery” of Italy through accounts of the Grand Tour. From there we consider the ways in which Italy existed as a destination for the emotional transformation of artists. From our discussion of Goethe through the gothic novel and on to the Romantics, we will consider the changing landscape of pre and post-revolutionary Italy. Victorian responses both to Rome’s imperial past, to its art, and to the Risorgimento will follow. We will look at how the “otherness” of Italy is involved in the definition of Euro-American values in this period. The historical changes in Europe and America which inform the way writers encounter the culture of Italy will provide the map for our understanding of the literature of the period. The relationship between constructions of gender and nationalism in this literature will also be a focus. By the end of the course, we will be able to appreciate how much these writers are influenced not just by Italy, but by each other’s responses to its rich resources, despite their very different cultural or historical perspectives. Students should develop an appreciation and awareness of importance of the transcultural and transnational relationships between these writers. 

SUMMARY OF COURSE CONTENT:
See above as well as the reading list and course schedule.
LEARNING OUTCOMES:
Students will become familiar with eighteenth and nineteenth century Biritish, American and European literary engagement with and about Italy.  It is hoped that they will be able to identify the important trans-cultural relationships between these writers which their encounters with Italy expose.  Students will also become familiar with the cultural challenges of travel writing.
TEXTBOOK:
Book TitleAuthorPublisherISBN numberLibrary Call NumberCommentsFormatLocal BookstoreOnline Purchase
Daisy MillerHenry JamesOxford World's Classics9780192835437     
Italian JourneyJ. W. GoethePenguin Classics0140442332/978-0140442335     
Where Angels Fear to TreadE.M. ForsterPenguin Classics141441453     
Corinne, or ItalyGermaine de StaelPenguin Classics0-19-282505-4     
The Marble FaunNathaniel HawthorneOxford World's Classics978-0-19-955407-2     
Pictures from ItalyCharles DickensPenguin Classics0-14-043431-3     
The Innocents AbroadMark TwainPenguin Classics978014243708     
The ItalianAnn RadcliffPenguin Classics00000     
REQUIRED RESERVED READING:
NONE

RECOMMENDED RESERVED READING:
Book TitleAuthorPublisherISBN numberLibrary Call NumberComments
Off the Beaten TrackJames Buzard0000000  
Disorienting FictionJames Buzard000000  
John Bull's Snakes and Ladders: English Attitudes to Italy in Mid-nineteenth CenturyAnnemarie McAllisterCambridge Scholars000  
GRADING POLICY
-ASSESSMENT METHODS:
AssignmentGuidelinesWeight
Two essays 6-8 pages typedEssays should conform to MLA standards in terms of documentation of sources and research.50%
Reading Journal (Minimum 15 typed pages)Reading journals are to demonstrate the student's engagement with the material in light of their own attempts to articulate either their own or an alien culture. Journals may be personal but must also be critically engaged with the reading assigned. Students should aim to comment in some way on every work of literature we study in the course through their responses in the journal.20%
Participation Participation is essential. Students are expected to demonstrate their reading and understanding of the material assigned through their class contributions.10%
Final ExamThe Final Exam will involve an extended essay which will be completed in the exam timetable. The topic will be given in advance and students are expected to arrive at the exam with an outline in place.20%

-ASSESSMENT CRITERIA:
AWork of this quality directly addresses the question or problem raised and provides a coherent argument displaying an extensive knowledge of relevant information or content. This type of work demonstrates the ability to critically evaluate concepts and theory and has an element of novelty and originality. There is clear evidence of a significant amount of reading beyond that required for the course.
BThis is highly competent level of performance and directly addresses the question or problem raised.There is a demonstration of some ability to critically evaluatetheory and concepts and relate them to practice. Discussions reflect the student’s own arguments and are not simply a repetition of standard lecture andreference material. The work does not suffer from any major errors or omissions and provides evidence of reading beyond the required assignments.
CThis is an acceptable level of performance and provides answers that are clear but limited, reflecting the information offered in the lectures and reference readings.
DThis level of performances demonstrates that the student lacks a coherent grasp of the material.Important information is omitted and irrelevant points included.In effect, the student has barely done enough to persuade the instructor that s/he should not fail.
FThis work fails to show any knowledge or understanding of the issues raised in the question. Most of the material in the answer is irrelevant.

-ATTENDANCE REQUIREMENTS:
Attendance is mandatory.  At three absences your overall grade for the course is reduced.
ACADEMIC HONESTY
As stated in the university catalog, any student who commits an act of academic dishonesty will receive a failing grade on the work in which the dishonesty occurred. In addition, acts of academic dishonesty, irrespective of the weight of the assignment, may result in the student receiving a failing grade in the course. Instances of academic dishonesty will be reported to the Dean of Academic Affairs. A student who is reported twice for academic dishonesty is subject to summary dismissal from the University. In such a case, the Academic Council will then make a recommendation to the President, who will make the final decision.
STUDENTS WITH LEARNING OR OTHER DISABILITIES
John Cabot University does not discriminate on the basis of disability or handicap. Students with approved accommodations must inform their professors at the beginning of the term. Please see the website for the complete policy.

SCHEDULE

There will be FIVE on-site classes.  ATTENDANCE IS MANDATORY and our visits have been pre-booked.  Absences will be counted as 1.5 missed classes and an extra assignment will be required to make up for any legitimate absences.  Trips planned in advance do NOT count as a legitimate excuse.

Payment for our field trips is required in advance of the visit. In lieu of these required field trips and the extra time required during the lunch hour break, 2 classes in the regular schedule have been cancelled.  See schedule below for details.

WEEK 1

Tues. Jan. 14

Introduction to the Course and Requirements

The Grand Tour - An Introduction

Please go through the virtual tour of Italy and the Grand Tour constructed by the 2001 exhibition at the Getty Museum and will look at the paintings from the Oglethorpe Museum exhibition in class.

http://www.getty.edu/art/exhibitions/grand_tour/

http://museum.oglethorpe.edu/GrandTour.htm    

http://www2.wwnorton.com/college/english/nael/18century/topic_4/tour.htm

Review: Three views of the Grand Tour in Norton Anthology

http://www2.wwnorton.com/college/english/nael/18century/topic_4/tour.htm

Thurs. Jan.  16

The Grand Tour continued:  The Anti-Italy Travellers   Tobias Smollett Selections from Travels through France and Italy (1766).  Do a google search to find an e-text version like http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/_Texts/Smollett/Travels/25.html

Read Letters 29 - 35 (letters on Rome and final letter in which he sums up the effect of his travels).

WEEK 2    Pre-Revolution Travellers and the European Artists Abroad

Tues. Jan.   21  

Goethe's Italian Journey  Read Part 1 for today (Tuesday)

Required reading is the two sections on Rome in the book, but please feel free to read the entire book.

Thurs. Jan. 23 
Goethe's Italian Journey  Read Part 3 Second Roman Visit

WEEK 3

Tues. Jan. 28 Italy and the Female Gothic

Ann Radcliffe The Italian  Read Volume 1.  Please read the prefatory story that introduces the novel, carefully.

Thurs. Jan. 30

FIRST FIELD TRIP:  Casa di Goethe Via del Corso 18 Meet there at 12 om. sharp for scheduled tour in English (lasts one hour; cost 3 euros per person including free guided tour in English)

WEEK 4  

Tues. Feb. 4

Read:  Ann Radcliffe The Italian (Volume 1 continued and Volume 2)

Thurs. Feb. 6  JOURNALS DUE TODAY

Read:  Radcliffe The Italian (Volume 2 and 3)

Aesthetic and psychological categories: The Sublime and the Picturesque Background Reading: The concept of the Sublime on the Victorian Websitehttp://www.victorianweb.org/philosophy/sublime/sublimeov.html

Edmund Burke excerpts from essay on the Sublime http://www2.wwnorton.com/college/english/nael/romantic/topic_1/burke.htm

Gilpin on ideas of the Picturesque for Romantics http://www2.wwnorton.com/college/english/nael/romantic/topic%5F1/riverwye.htm

WEEK 5  

Tues. Feb. 11  

Read:  The Italian (Volume 3)

Thurs. Feb. 13  SECOND FIELD TRIP:  Capitoline Museum  Meet at 12pm in front of ticket office to the right of the statue of Marcus Aurelius on his horse.

Read:  Madame de Stael's Corinne; or Italy  Books 1-8

Meet at the Capitoline Museum at 12 pm. The Capitoline is a huge museum and at 10 euros a ticket is worth savouring.  Plan to spend some time here on your own after we see the things relevant to our reading for the course, as it is well worth it.  We will meet at the Ticket Office and will proceed to the Pinoteca to view the Cumean Sibyl.  After that we will visit the sculpture gallery to view the Marble Faun and the Dying Gladiator.

WEEK 6

Tues. Feb. 18  FIRST ESSAY DUE

Read:  Madame de Stael's Corinne; or Italy  Books 9-16

Thurs. Feb. 20 NO CLASS  

WEEK 7

Tues. Feb. 25

Read:  Corinne (Books 17-20)

Thurs. Feb. 27  The Romantics in Italy

Read:  Percy Bysshe Shelley’s  The Cenci

http://web.bilkent.edu.tr/Online/www.english.upenn.edu/jlynch/Frank/PShelley/cencitp.html

WEEK 8

Tues. March 4

Read:  Keats’s “Happy is England”  and Byron’s Beppo

http://readytogoebooks.com/LB-Bp48.htm

(Not required reading, but you may want to look at “Childe Harolde Canto 4” especially stanzas cxxviii-cxxxi; cxxxviii-cxlv). http://www.gutenberg.org/dirs/etext04/chpl10h.htm

Timeline: http://www.rc.umd.edu/reference/chronologies/mschronology/chrono.html#1822

Thurs. March 6

Hawthorne's The Marble Faun (Chapters 1-16)

THIRD FIELD TRIP: The Palazzo Barberini at 12 pm (cost 7 euros for non-EU, less for EU citizens under 25).   For those who have time, we can follow our visit to the Palazzo Barberini with a visit to the Bone Church or the Church of L'Immacolata Concezione, Via Vittorio Veneto 27 (Metro Barberini or Bus to Piazza Barberini). 

WEEK 9
 

Tues. March 11

Read: Nathaniel Hawthorne’s The Marble Faun  (Chapters 17-35)

Thurs. March 13 

Read:  The Marble Faun (continued)

SUBMIT JOURNALS FOR GRADING

SPRING BREAK 17-21

Week 10

Tues. March 25

Read:  Excerpts from Dickens’s Pictures from Italy, including chapters entitled:  Italian Dream, Rome, and A Rapid Diorama:   e-text available on Project Gutenberg

Thurs. March 27  FOURTH FIELD TRIP:  Keats Shelley House  Meet at the Museum on the Spanish Steps at 12 pm for a scheduled tour (cost 4 euros).


Week 12

Tues. April 1

Read:  Mark Twain's The Innocents Abroad (Chapter 17-31 and Conclusion)

http://etext.lib.virginia.edu/toc/modeng/public/TwaInno.html

Hypertext of map of Twain’s journey http://etext.virginia.edu/railton/innocent/iamaphp.html


Thurs. April 3

Henry James Daisy Miller Chapters 1-3

WEEK 13 

Tues. April 8

Read:  Henry James’s Daisy Miller Chapters 4-end

Thurs. April 10

E. M. Forster Where Angels Fear to Tread Chapters 1-4

WEEK 14  

Tues. April 15  SECOND ESSAY DUE

Read: E. M. Forster Where Angels Fear to Tread  Chapters 5-6

Thurs. April 17

E. M. Forster Where Angels Fear to Tread Chapters 7-end

WEEK 15

Tues. April 22  
Edith Wharton's "Roman Fever"  available on the internet

Thursday April 24 FIFTH FIELD TRIP - Protestant Cemetery (Piramide). Donation required.  Meet at Keats's graveside at 12 pm.