JAPANESE LITERATURE 3
- Academic year
- 2022/2023 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- LETTERATURA GIAPPONESE 3
- Course code
- LT016N (AF:356945 AR:186228)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Subdivision
- Surnames M-Z
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Educational sector code
- L-OR/22
- Period
- 2nd Semester
- Course year
- 2
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
This course is one of the core educational activities for the Japan-focused curriculum of the Bachelor's Degree Programme in Language, Culture and Society of Asia and Mediterranean Africa. It contributes to the attainment of the teaching goals of the same Bachelor's Degree Programme in language skills, but it also invests the cultural and humanities areas. The study of novels and essays will enhance skills in textual analysis and the understanding of historical and cultural contexts.
Abilities concerning the macroscopic development of modern and contemporary Japanese literature constitute the foundations to pursue literary and cultural studies.
Expected learning outcomes
The course aims to introduce knowledge and understanding of the main literary, artistic and cultural phenomena of contemporary Japan.
Upon successful completion of this course, the student will be able to
Knowledge and comprehension skills
- outline the main elements (authors, movements, works, etc.) of the history of Japanese literature from 1945 to the present day;
- identify and distinguish among the concepts and tools of literary criticism and historiography;
- extend, through the analysis of literary texts, their knowledge and understanding of historical contexts, previously encountered in other subjects of the degree course from a different perspective (e.g. historical, artistic...).
Application and analysis skills:
- analyse and interpret literary texts using critical and historiographical concepts and tools;
- relate literary texts using critical and historiographical concepts and tools;
- critically apply concepts of literary historiography to the period under examination.
Evaluation skills:
- appraise textual and historical-literary phenomena that are part of the programme using critically and historiographically sound arguments;
- assess a variety of sources through critical examination;
- criticise essentialist and stereotypical discourses on 'Japanese culture';
Communication skills:
- concisely and effectively re-elaborate and convey a presentation on a topic of interest in Japanese literature
- debate or present a topic of interest in Japanese literature in accordance to the aforementioned objectives;
- engage and collaborate in group projects.
Learning skills:
- improve their ability to use the online teaching platform Moodle;
- improve their ability to use Ca’ Foscari University’s bibliographic research tools.
Pre-requirements
Contents
- Post-war Literature
- Il Buraiha
- Atomic bomb Literature
- Ibuse Masuji
- Endō Shūsaku
- Mishima Yukio
- Women's literature
- Enchi Fumiko
- Contemporary Literature
- Post-Fukushima Literature
Students will take an active part in the seminar classes, debating on the basis of short texts related to syllabus content and suggested by the lecturer.
Other individual presentations and group discussions on the main literary texts will be agreed directly with the students.
Referral texts
TESTI DI LETTURA IN TRADUZIONE
Ibuse Masuji, La pioggia nera, a cura di L. Bienati, Marsilio, 2005.
Mishima Yukio, Confessioni di una maschera, in Romanzi e racconti, Mondadori 2006.
Kawabata Yasunari, La bellezza del Giappone e io, in Romanzi e racconti, Mondadori.
Oe Kenzaburo, Io e il mio ambiguo Giappone, in Il figlio dell'imperatore, Marsilio 1997
Abe Kobo, La donna di sabbia, Atmosphere libri, 2016.
Murakami Haruki, un romanzo a scelta.
Yoshimoto Banana, Il dolce domani, Feltrinelli.
Enchi Fumiko, Maschere di donna, a cura di M.T. Orsi, Marsilio 1999.
Scrivere per Fukushima, Atmosphere Libri, 2013.
Yu Miri, Tokyo-Stazione Ueno, 21lettere
Short texts related to the above-mentioned contents and discussed during class time will be made available periodically on the Moodle platform of the course.
Students are also asked to actively participate in the search for critical material to support the topics discussed.
Assessment methods
The written examination will require the knowledge of the topics discussed, of the materials uploaded on Moodle and of all literary texts of the course.
Written test (75 mins):
- 5 open-ended questions.
- 5 identifications of excerpts taken from the compulsory creative texts.
The 5 open questions each receive a score in 30/30. The overall vote for this part is the average of these answers.
The quiz and the recognition parts contribute to the final score thus obtained by adding to it a bonus-malus ranging between -1 (all wrong answers) and +1 (all answers are correct)