- Docente: Rosa Maria Bollettieri
- Credits: 4
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Forli
- Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Applied cross-language Communication (cod. 0545)
Learning outcomes
The course aims to provide students with critical tools to analyze literary texts, with specific reference to the genre short story that are mainly set in Ireland. Post-colonial writers are also included.
Course contents
The aim of the course is to enrich students' experience in the understanding and enjoyment of literary language. The course consists in the close reading and analysis of short stories selected from collections by Irish and Indian women writers, and two stories from James Joyce's Dubliners. Specific attention will be given to the definition of the short story as a genre and to gender perspectives as they emerge from the analysis of the stories, in terms of point of view, plot, theme, character, and socio-cultural setting.
Readings/Bibliography
Gerry Adams, The Street and
Other Stories, Brandon, 1992
"The Mountains of Mourne" pp.
45-65
Evelyn Conlon and Hans
Christian Oeser, Cutting the Night in Two. Short Stories
by Irish Women Writers, Dublin: New Island, 2002:
Frances Molloy, "Women Are
the Scourge of the Earth" pp. 193-197
Nora Hoult, “Nine Years Is a Long
Time” pp.10-23
L. R. Finlay, "A bona fide husband"
pp.59-70
Leland Bardwell “Out-patients” pp.
107-114
Evelyn Conlon “Park-going days” pp.
267-74
Anne Devlin "Five Notes After a Visit" pp.
241-249
Evelyn Conlon, Telling, Dublin: The Blackstaff Press,
2000
“Telling”, pp. 17-21
Chitra Banerjee Divakaruni, The Unknown Errors of Our Lives,
London: Abacus, 2001
“Mrs. Dutta Writes a Letter”
pp. 1-34
James Joyce, Dubliners, London: Penguin
The sisters
Eveline
Jhumpa Lahiri, Interpreter of Maladies, London: Flamingo,
2000
Interpreter of Maladies pp.43-69
Parker, Michael, ed. The Hurt World. Short Stories of the
Troubles, Belfast: The Blackstall Press, 1995
“Walking the Dog”, pp.
154-161
Reference books:
Allen, Walter The Short Story in English, Oxford:
Clarendon Press, 1981
Averill, Dorothy. The Irish Short Story from George Moore to
Frank O'Connor, University Press of America, 2002
Boada-Montagut, Irene, Women Write Back. Contemporary Irish and
Catalan Short Stories in Colonial Context. Irish
Academic Press, 2002
Head, Dominic. The Modernist Short Story: A Study in Theory and
Practice. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 1992.
Lohafer, Susan - Reading for Storyness. Preclosure Theory,
Empirical Poetics and Culture in the Short Story. The John
Hopkins UniversityPress, 2003
Ziemer, Mary - Literary Odysseys. An Interactive Introduction to
the Short Story.
University of Michigan Press, 2000
Teaching methods
The selected stories will be read and commented during class time, with the students' active participation, with the aim of highlighting themes, viewpouints, narrative voices, keywords, registers.
Assessment methods
During the course students will be asked to present individual or group reports on their readings. Before the end of the course they will have to sit for a mock-exam, consisting of a written test. The final exam consists in an oral interview during which candidates will be asked to contextualize, interpret and comment upon quotations from the stories discussed in class. They will also be asked to present three short stories of their choice by any author they like, in addition to the reading program discussed in class time.
Teaching tools
Overhead projector
projector and computer for PPT presentations and DVD projections.
Office hours
See the website of Rosa Maria Bollettieri