On-site classes will be held in a variety of neighbourhoods in the city in order to analyze the area’s role as a social entity and its relationship with the wider urban context. They will include teacher-guided group discussions and observational activities to refine students’ skills of sociological analysis. Lectures and readings before each on-site class will provide students with historical, topographical and sociological information about the area and will introduce relevant urban theories through which to interpret its particular issues. In-class debates will encourage them to question the applicability of theories to the realities observed on-site. We will watch sections of films, read various literary texts and talk to residents of the city (in on-site interviews or with guest speakers) in order to analyze the different discourses through which the city is narrated. Students are expected to do their assigned readings punctually and to follow developments in Roman and Italian society by reading newspapers throughout the semester.
Student Responsibilities:
Students will attend every class and arrive on time for all class sessions and on-site visits. They will keep up with assigned readings and with any out of class assignments. They will turn in assignments promptly. Failure to do so will result in their final grade being lowered.
RESEARCH ASSIGNMENT:
Students will do a research project on a specific neighborhood of the city or a relevant social or spatial phenomenon of contemporary Rome of their choosing and will write a 2,000 word paper on the issue as well as do a 10-15 minute oral presentation to the class on their main findings. Their projects will be graded based on the appropriateness of the research question, methods and materials adopted to answer the question, the depth of the analysis employed and the linguistic sophistication of the written and oral presentation. Students are required to hand in an outline providing their tentative research question, bibliography and main points to be made at least three weeks ahead of the research project deadline in order to receive the profesor's feedback. Please consult the scoring rubric provided; this gives indications of the quality expected and the grading criteria used.