HISTORY OF CATALAN CULTURE

Academic year
2019/2020 Syllabus of previous years
Official course title
STORIA DELLA CULTURA CATALANA
Course code
LT1290 (AF:248516 AR:165981)
Modality
On campus classes
ECTS credits
6
Degree level
Bachelor's Degree Programme
Educational sector code
L-LIN/05
Period
1st Semester
Course year
3
Moodle
Go to Moodle page
“History of Catalan Culture/Catalan Literature 2 mod. 2” is a core course for students enrolled in any of the three curricula (Literatures and Cultures; Linguistics, Philology and Language Teaching Research; International Politics) of the Bachelor's Degree Programme in Languages, Civilisation and the Science of Language, who have chosen to study Catalan Language and Literature (as language A or language B). The course can also be included in the study plan as a “relative/additional” or “chosen by the student” educational activity. In accordance with the learning outcomes of the Bachelor’s Degree Programme in Languages, Civilisation and the Science of Language, the course will enable students to: deepen their knowledge of contemporary Catalan culture; develop skills in the analysis of films, and understand how they relate to their own context. This year topic will be: “Portraits of a city: Barcelona in cinema”. The course will focus on works by Catalan directors realised between 1963 and 2010, in order to analyse the cinematic representation of the city of Barcelona.
Regular and active participation in the teaching activities offered by the course (lectures, discussions and, possibly, thematic research seminars) and in independent research activities will enable students to:

- gain a wider knowledge of Barcelona and its history, as well as of the cinema surrounding it, from the 60s to the present;
- acquire a basic knowledge of the history of the contemporary city;
- become acquainted with the key elements of film language;
- use cinema as a tool for studying and interpreting the city;
- critically discuss, with appropriate language and argumentative rigour, the main issues related to the cinematic representation of Barcelona;
- develop the ability to independently analyse and interpret films.
No previous knowledge is required.
The course aims to explore the cinematic and literary representation of Barcelona in two key stages of its urban development: the era of Francoist desarrollismo, which coincides with Porcioles’s municipal government (1957-1973), and the period that runs from the restoration of democracy until today. Through the comparative analysis of a corpus of films made by an international group of filmmakers that have portrayed the Catalan capital in the chosen periods, we will study how the image of Barcelona has evolved in relation to the deep urban, cultural and socio-economic changes experienced by the city over time. We will also highlight how cinema has participated in the construction and dissemination of the new image of post-Olympic Barcelona, thus contributing to relaunch the city as a tourist destination.

Topics
1. Cinema and the city
2. The Barcelona of desarrollismo: a “vampirised” city
3. Transitions. Barcelona was a party "underground"
4. From Cinderella to top model: the transformation of Barcelona
5. The Tourist City
6. The Dark Side of Barcelona
For students attending classes, the study material is limited to the notes taken in class and to the slides that will be made available on the course web page on the University Moodle platform. For non-attending students, instead, the study material consists of the slides of the lessons and of the texts listed in point b).

a) Film
Los Tarantos (Francesc Rovira Beleta, 1963)
Umbracle (Pere Portabella, 1972)
Ocaña, retrat intermitent (Ventura Pons, 1978)
Todo sobre mi madre (Pedro Almodóvar, 1999)
En construcción (José Luis Guerín, 2001)
L’appartamento spagnolo (Cédric Klapisch, 2002)
Salvador (Manuel Huerga, 2006)
Vicky Cristina Barcelona (Woody Allen, 2008)
Barcelona era una festa underground (Morrosko Vila-San-Juan, 2010)
Biutiful (Alejandro González Iñarritu, 2010)

The films will be screened during lessons in original version with subtitles.

b) Texts (mandatory for non-attending students)

Gámir Orueta, Agustín. “La consideración del espacio geográfico y el paisaje en el cine”. Scripta Nova. Revista Electrónica de Geografía y Ciencias Sociales, vol. XVI, nº 403, 2012. [article]
Antoniazzi, Sara. “La ciudad filmada: cine, espacio e historia urbana”. Biblio3W. Revista Bibliográfica de Geografía y Ciencias Sociales, vol. XXIV, nº 1.260, 2019. [article]
Holte, James Craig. Dracula in the dark. The Dracula film adaptations, II capitolo. Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press, 1997. [book chapter]
Fanés, Fèlix. Pere Portabella: Avantguarda, cinema, política, I capitolo (versione spagnola). Barcelona: Pòrtic, 2008. [book chapter]
Hermet, Guy. Storia della Spagna nel Novecento, VIII capitolo. Bologna: Il Mulino, 2011. [book chapter]
Aertsen, Víctor U. “El cine como inductor del turismo. La experiencia turística en Vicky, Cristina, Barcelona”. Razón y palabra, n° 77, 2011. [article]
Deleyto, Celestino e Gemma López. “Catalan beauty and the transnational beast: Barcelona on the screen”. Transnational Cinemas, vol. 3, n° 2, 2012. [article]
Fraser, Benjamin. (2012), “A Biutiful city: Alejandro González Iñárritu’s filmic critique of the Barcelona model’’. Studies in Hispanic Cinemas, vol. 9, n° 1, 2012. [article]

All texts will be made available on the course web page on the University Moodle platform. The list of texts may be subject to change, therefore non-attending students are invited to periodically check the teaching materials uploaded on Moodle.
Evaluation will take place through an oral exam in Italian. The oral exam will evaluate:

- the candidate's ability to present the course contents clearly and consistently using a scientifically appropriate vocabulary;
- the candidate's ability to make connections

The evaluation will also take into account active participation in the lessons and cultural activities proposed by the teacher (only for attending students).

ATTENTION: due to the Covid-19 emergency, the oral exam at the end of the second semester (May/June 2020) will take place online.
Please note that this method of evaluation is temporary and will be applied only until the end of the emergency.
Conventional lectures during which students will be required to actively participate. The teacher make extensive use of multimedia materials.
Italian
Although not mandatory, class attendance is recommended.
oral

This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Poverty and inequalities" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development

Definitive programme.
Last update of the programme: 30/04/2020