- Docente: Luigi D'Amelia
- Credits: 6
- SSD: L-FIL-LET/07
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
- Corso: Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Philology, Literature and Classical Tradition (cod. 9070)
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from Apr 01, 2025 to May 15, 2025
Learning outcomes
The course aims to provide an overall overview of Byzantine literature and of the different genres that were practiced starting from late Antiquity up to the Greek literature during the humanistic age. The student will have acquired the necessary tools for a correct analysis of Byzantine literary sources and will have possessed an adequate methodology for the historical knowledge of the ways and forms of their production and transmission, also through an anthology representative of the wide range offered by the manuscript tradition.
Course contents
The course aims to offer an introduction to the history of Byzantine literature, understood as the Greek literary production from Late Antiquity to the Humanistic period (4th-15th centuries). The program is structured through thematic pathways on some of the most significant literary genres of the Byzantine era, outlining their formal and content characteristics, diachronic development, major authorial personalities, and elements of continuity and discontinuity with classical and late antique models and traditions. These pathways are substantiated by reading and commenting on an anthology of passages, both in verse and prose, read in the original language and translated in class. Students will have the opportunity to gain a basic understanding of the richness and variety of Byzantine literature, appreciating its specificity and originality compared to the classical heritage, as well as the enduring significance of some expressive forms and literary and ideological themes even after the fall of the Empire.
In the academic year 2024/2025, the course will focus on two of the most typical and representative literary genres of Byzantine production: hymnography (poetry intended for liturgical singing) and hagiography (Passions, Lives, and Miracles of saints).
Readings/Bibliography
- A. Kambylis, “Compendio della letteratura bizantina”, in Introduzione alla filologia greca, ed. H.G. Nesselrath; Italian ed. by S. Fornaro, Roma 2004, pp. 446-478.
- F. D’Aiuto, “L’innografia”, in Lo spazio letterario del Medioevo, III: Le culture circostanti, ed. M. Capaldo [et al.], 1: La cultura bizantina, ed. by G. Cavallo, Roma 2004, pp. 257-300.
- A. Acconcia Longo, “Vite passioni miracoli dei santi”, in Lo spazio letterario del Medioevo, III: Le culture circostanti, ed. M. Capaldo [et al.], 1: La cultura bizantina, ed. by G. Cavallo, Roma 2004, pp. 183-228.
- Passages of sources to be read in Greek or Italian during the lessons will be provided by the professor.
Non-attending Students
In addition to the above program:
- P.A. Agapitos, “The Periodization of Byzantine Literature: From a Historical to a Literary Model”, in Anekdota Byzantina. Studien zur byzantinischen Geschichte und Kultur. Festschrift für Albrecht Berger anlässlich seines 65. Geburtstags, ed, by I. Stadelmann-Grimm [et al.], München 2023 (Byzantinisches Archiv, 41), pp. 1-20.
Non-attending students are requested to contact the professor well in advance before starting exam preparation to receive the list and texts of the sources read and commented on during the course, which are also an integral part of the final examination.
Students with SLD or Temporary or Permanent Disabilities
It is suggested that they get in touch as soon as possible with the relevant University office (https://site.unibo.it/studenti-con-disabilita-e-dsa/en ) and with the lecturer in order to seek together the most effective strategies for following the lessons and/or preparing for the examination.Teaching methods
The method adopted will be frontal lectures; students will be actively involved during the lessons in reading and commenting on the examined texts.
Assessment methods
Oral examination. The oral exam will assess the student’s ability to historically and culturally contextualize the studied works, demonstrating a solid understanding of the main authors, genres, and themes covered during the course. Competencies in translation, critical analysis, and text interpretation will be examined, with particular attention to the use of philological methodologies and literary criticism.
Students with SLD or Temporary or Permanent Disabilities
It is necessary to contact the relevant University office (https://site.unibo.it/studenti-con-disabilita-e-dsa/en ) with ample time in advance: the office will propose some adjustments, which must in any case be submitted 15 days in advance to the lecturer, who will assess the appropriateness of these in relation to the teaching objectives
Exam sessions are scheduled for the following months of the academic year:
1st session: January
2nd session: February
3rd session: March
4th session: April
5th session: May
6th session: June
7th session: September
8th session: October
Teaching tools
During the course, reproductions of manuscripts, specimens of critical editions, and modern language translations of the examined texts will be provided in paper or digital format. Bibliographic material and teaching support will be downloadable from the course page on the platform https://virtuale.unibo.it/.
Office hours
See the website of Luigi D'Amelia