INTRODUCTION TO CLASSICAL CULTURE I
- Academic year
- 2024/2025 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- INTRODUZIONE ALLA CULTURA CLASSICA I
- Course code
- FT0355 (AF:512659 AR:290205)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Educational sector code
- L-FIL-LET/05
- Period
- 1st Term
- Course year
- 1
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
– know the genres of Greek poetry of the Archaic and Classical periods and their most prominent authors
– know some texts, or rather extracts from them, pertaining to the poetic genres studied
– know some of the main tales of Greek myth and, in specific cases, at least some of their later developments in modern and contemporary art
– have some knowledge on the contexts of production, the dynamics of textual transmission, and the reception practises (both ancient and later) of Greek epic poetry, lyric, and drama
– be able to situate epic poetry, lyric, and drama (especially tragedy) and their main authors in space and time, as well as in relation to the relevant historical-cultural contexts
– be able to draw effective and informed comparisons between specific myths of ancient Greece and their modern and contemporary reception
– be able to reflect on the relationship between ancient (especially Greek) and modern literary cultures, also in terms of continuity/discontinuity, proximity/distance, analogy/difference between them
– be able to explain in writing, with appropriate vocabulary and independent critical thinking, their knowledge on the course topics.
Pre-requirements
Contents
(a) epic literature of the Archaic period (classes 1-5);
(b) lyric poetry (classes 6-10);
(c) tragic theatre and satyr drama (classes 11-15).
Within each thematic core, selected passages or fragments of ancient literary works will be used as examples to illustrate the main features of the poetic genres and authors studied. While these texts will be presented in Italian translation, attention will occasionally be paid to the original Greek, especially in the case of words that may be particularly representative of concepts and institutions highly relevant to ancient Greek literary culture.
Teaching aims to situate the literary phenomena under study in their respective historical, cultural, and political contexts and to provide insight into the dynamics of the production, circulation, and transmission of the literary works of the Archaic and Classical periods.
Referral texts
(2) L.E. Rossi, “I poemi omerici come testimonianza di poesia orale”, in R. Bianchi Bandinelli (a c. di), Storia e civiltà dei Greci. Vol. 1.1: “Origini e sviluppo della città. Il Medioevo greco”, Bompiani, Milano 1978, especially pp. 73-99 (sections A-F of the essay).
(3) C. Neri, Breve storia della lirica greca, Carocci, Roma 2010, chapters 1 (‘I nomi della lirica greca’), 2 (‘I luoghi della lirica greca’), 4 (‘Geografia e storia della lirica greca’), pp. 16-50, 62-77.
(4) G. Cerri, “La tragedia”, in G. Cambiano, L. Canfora, D. Lanza (a c. di), Lo spazio letterario della Grecia antica. Vol. I, Tomo I: “La polis”, Salerno editrice, Roma 1992, pp. 301-34.
(5) E. Rossi Linguanti, “Sulle tracce di Medea”, in M. Di Marco, Storia del teatro greco, Carocci, Roma 2018, pp. 439-60.
All the literary texts examined in class, as well as those provided by the lecturer, will also form part of the examination programme.
As further, optional reading on the course topics, the following books are recommended:
– A. Ercolani, Omero. Introduzione allo studio dell’epica greca arcaica, Carocci, Roma 2006, chapters 1 (‘La protostoria dei poemi omerici: la civiltà micenea’), 2 (‘I poemi omerici e i secoli bui’), 3 (‘Mito e cultura orale’), 4 (‘L’avvento della scrittura alfabetica e il perdurare della cultura orale’), pp. 39-102.
– G. Avezzù, Il mito sulla scena. La tragedia ad Atene, Marsilio, Venezia 2003 (especially the sections focusing on tragedies dealt with in class).
– A. Rodighiero, La tragedia greca, Il Mulino, Bologna 2013, chapters 1 (‘La tragedia nella città’), 2 (‘Lo spazio teatrale’), pp. 23-83.
Assessment methods
1. question 1 will require ample and well-structured answers (more or less amounting to half of the final evaluation)
2. question 2 will entail shorter, yet still extended, answers
3-4. questions 3-4 will require more synthetic answers
Overall, questions 2 and 3-4 will (more or less) account for the other half of the final evaluation (more specifically, question 2 will weigh more – roughly four times – than questions 3 and 4 respectively).
Grading:
Marks within the 18-22 range will be awarded in case of:
– sufficient knowledge of the course contents and bibliography
– answers that are sufficiently in-depth
– sufficient clarity of exposition
– limited critical rethinking as to the course contents and their knowledge
Marks within the 23-26 range will be awarded in case of:
– decent knowledge of the course contents and bibliography
– answers that are decently in-depth
– decent clarity of exposition
– decent critical rethinking as to the course contents and their knowledge
Marks within the 27-30 range will be awarded in case of:
– good or very good knowledge of the course contents and bibliography
– answers that are much or very much in-depth
– good or very good clarity of exposition
– good or very good critical rethinking as to the course contents and their knowledge
Teaching methods
Teaching language
Further information
A detailed outline of the topics covered in class will be made available on Moodle.
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Human capital, health, education" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development