COMPARATIVE LITERATURE
- Academic year
- 2025/2026 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- LETTERATURE COMPARATE
- Course code
- LT1240 (AF:572976 AR:321185)
- Teaching language
- Italian
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Subdivision
- Surnames P-S
- Degree level
- Bachelor's Degree Programme
- Academic Discipline
- L-FIL-LET/14
- Period
- 1st Semester
- Course year
- 1
- Where
- VENEZIA
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
(1) Knowledge and understanding of the methodologies for a comparative analysis of literature
(2) Knowledge and understanding of the main literary, artistic, and cultural phenomena of the countries in which the studied languages are spoken
(3) Knowledge and understanding of the historical and cultural evolutionary processes of the countries in which the studied languages are spoken
Applying Knowledge and Understanding
(1) Ability to situate a literary work in its context
(2) Ability to apply the methodologies for analysis to the society and culture that produced the literary work under scrutiny
(3) Ability to read a literary text and comment upon it with correct terminology and scientific methodology
(4) Ability to treat historical sources in a framework of correct critical contextualization, and in relation to different cultures in their specific historical developments
(5) Ability to start autonomously in-depth analyses of specific cases connected to the object of the thesis
Making Judgments
(1) Ability to develop intellectual independence with regard to the topics covered during classes
Communication Skills
(1) Ability to communicate orally and effectively the knowledge acquired while using the correct terminology
(2) Ability to interact with peers and the teacher in a critical and respectful way both in person and on the forum of the virtual classroom
Learning Skills
(1) Ability to navigate critically the required readings and the bibliography they provide
Pre-requirements
Contents
Medea, Macbeth, St. Matthew’s executioner as painted by Caravaggio, Don Giovanni in Mozart’s opera, Stavrogin in Dostoevsky’s Demons, Humbert Humbert in Nabokov’s Lolita, the bloody, crucified bodies in Hermann Nitsch’s Theater of Orgies and Mysteries, Diabolik, the master thief, the scenes of violent submission in Mapplethorpe’s X Portfolio, the shattered glass sheets at the foot of the Tower of the Falling Pictures in Anselm Kiefer’s Seven Heavenly Palaces, Maximilien Aue in Jonathan Littell’s The Kindly Ones, Walter White in Breaking Bad, the children in Michael Haneke’s The White Ribbon, the crazed, derelict figure of Arthur Fleck in Todd Phillips’s Joker: The history of the arts is full of characters, figures, performances, objects, compositions, and spaces that have a negative connotation or that evoke a primary violence; elements with which readers and spectators establish a specific type of empathetic relationship that is both ambivalent and destabilizing, inspiring attraction and repulsion all at once. We will call this relationship negative empathy and, by reading Euripides’s Medea, William Shakespeare’s Macbeth, and Emily Brontë’s Wuthering Heights, we will consider it as a specific aesthetic experience that tests the limits of art consumers’ capacity to take an ethical stance and art’s potential to provoke moral reflection on the fate of collective life.
Referral texts
William Shakespeare, Macbeth (1606-7), trad. it. Agostino Lombardo, in Id., Teatro completo di William Shakespeare, a cura di Giorgio Melchiori, vol. 4: Le tragedie, I Meridiani, Milano, Mondadori, 1976, pp. 837-1037.
Emily Brontë, Cime tempestose (1847), trad. it. Margherita Giacobino, Milano, Mondadori, 2016.
Stefano Ercolino e Massimo Fusillo. Empatia negativa. Il punto di vista del male, Milano, Bompiani, 2022.
For students who do not have the possibility to complete the preparation in the classroom by following the lessons, one of the following texts is required:
Massimo Fusillo, Estetica della letteratura. Bologna: Il Mulino, 2009.
Assessment methods
Type of exam
Grading scale
28-30L: Students master the topics presented in the course and the assigned readings; they are capable of hyerarchizing information and make use of appropriate terminology;
26-27: Students have a good knowledge of the topics presented in the course and the assigned readings; they generally succeed in hyerarchizing information and are familiar with scientific terminology;
24-25: Student do not always know thoroughly topics presented in the course and the assigned readings; their oral exposition is clear, although concepts are not always expressed through appropriate terminology;
22-23: Students have a mostly superficial knowledge of the topics presented in the course and the assigned readings; their oral exposition is not always clear and generally lacks scientific terminology;
18-21: Student have a very superficial knowledge of the topics presented in the course and the assigned readings; their oral exposition is confused and does not resort to scientific terminology.
Teaching methods
(2) In-class and online discussion