Unit American Literature I

Course
Foreign languages and cultures
Study-unit Code
A002630
Curriculum
In all curricula
Teacher
Mirella Vallone
Teachers
  • Mirella Vallone
Hours
  • 54 ore - Mirella Vallone
CFU
9
Course Regulation
Coorte 2021
Offered
2021/22
Learning activities
Caratterizzante
Area
Letterature straniere
Academic discipline
L-LIN/11
Type of study-unit
Opzionale (Optional)
Type of learning activities
Attività formativa monodisciplinare
Language of instruction
Italian
Contents
“Love is the bond of perfection”: cohesion and fragmentation in colonial America
The course, that will be the first formative step in the curriculum specializing in American literature and culture, will take into examination colonial America studying the transatlantic routes and the different types of dislocation at the origins of American identity. It will focus on the one hand, on the Puritan Great Migration and its contribution to American culture, on how American Puritans developed narratives of cohesion and continuity to face the perils of the New World and forged a religious rhetoric out of a doctrinal belief in inextricable links between the temporal and the transcendent, the visible and the invisible - a rhetoric that moving into national oratory testifies the permanence of the American Dream. On the other hand, it will analyze, through the reading of Toni Morrison’s novel A Mercy, how colonial history was also a history of fragmentations and dispersions caused by expropriations, forced dislocations, exploitation, and unequal power relations.
Reference texts
The Puritans in America: A Narrative Anthology, ed. Andrew Delbanco, Harvard UP, 2009. (available on PRIMO)
Toni Morrison, A Mercy.
A selection of ciritical texts will be provided at the beginning of the course.
Educational objectives
The course aims to provide students with a comprehensive overview of the origins of American history and literature, and of the complex and debated issues related to these origins, along with the tools for the analysis of literary texts. At the end of the course students should be able 1. to situate the primary texts included in the reading list in their historical, cultural, and literary context; 2. to read and translate the literary works, and perform a formal text analysis; 3. to comment on the literary works and debate the issues of the course with an appropriate critical language.
Prerequisites
Basic notions for the analysis of literary texts.
Teaching methods
Lectures and seminars.
Learning verification modality
Oral examination.
Extended program
“Love is the bond of perfection”: cohesion and fragmentation in colonial America
The course, that will be the first formative step in the curriculum specializing in American literature and culture, will take into examination colonial America studying the transatlantic routes and the different types of dislocation at the origins of American identity. It will focus on the one hand, on the Puritan Great Migration and its contribution to American culture, on how American Puritans developed narratives of cohesion and continuity to face the perils of the New World and forged a religious rhetoric out of a doctrinal belief in inextricable links between the temporal and the transcendent, the visible and the invisible - a rhetoric that moving into national oratory testifies the permanence of the American Dream. On the other hand, it will analyze, through the reading of Toni Morrison’s novel A Mercy, how colonial history was also a history of fragmentations and dispersions caused by expropriations, forced dislocations, exploitation, and unequal power relations.
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