CULTURA INGLESE
ENGLISH CULTURE
Science and Religion: The Industrialization and Secularization of Britain (1770-1860)
Science and Religion: The Industrialization and Secularization of Britain (1770-1860)
A.A. | CFU |
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2020/2021 | 8 |
Docente | Ricevimento studentesse e studenti | |
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Jan Marten Ivo Klaver | students need to book office hours via email |
Didattica in lingue straniere |
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Insegnamento interamente in lingua straniera
Inglese
La didattica è svolta interamente in lingua straniera e l'esame può essere sostenuto in lingua straniera. |
Assegnato al Corso di Studio
Giorno | Orario | Aula |
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Giorno | Orario | Aula |
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Obiettivi Formativi
Nineteenth-century England is a period of change and progress. New discoveries in science and technology challenged traditions, religious creeds and the social fabric of the nation. It saw the birth of new influential sciences such as economics and geology; it profoundly changed the political landscape; it challenged the way people looked at questions of selfhood and nationality. It is the century of Charles Darwin, female emancipation and empire.
This course will concentrate on a series of related themes of a century that was essentially a period of transition towards the beginnings of modern industrial society. The Romantics greeted with enthusiasm the possibilities of the new world order which was heralded by the French Revolution. Later during the century Victorian men and women were acutely aware of the cultural change taking place and, in their writings, reflected a self-consciousness of their being part of this process.
The course aims at providing students with a firm understanding of the literary, cultural and historical scene of nineteenth-century England - it wishes to convey how Romantic and Victorian authors epitomized the so-called "spirit of the age". It also wants to show students how to study selected literary tropes through time. During the course students will acquire the necessary linguistic and critical tools to analyze the period in question, and will be encouraged to make autonomous judgments. Moreover, the course wishes to stimulate an open-minded approach to different historical periods.
Programma
Science and Religion: The Industrialization and Secularization of Britain (1770-1860)
- changing faith(s)
- social change and critique
- new scientific theories and prospects
Risultati di Apprendimento (Descrittori di Dublino)
- Knowledge and understanding: students will acquire a good understanding of the essential social-historical and social-cultural factors underpinning the period of study, and will be able to approach English Cultural Studies with the appropriate critical instruments and methods.
- Applying knowledge and understanding: students will have the linguistic, cultural and critical abilities to describe, analyse and understand cardinal aspects of English Culture.
- Making judgements: students will acquire the critical ability to judge and evaluate aspects of English Culture and will be able to express autonomous opinions on social-cultural subjects of different historical periods.
- Communication skills: students will be trained to have an open and unprejudiced attitude to different realities and historical periods and express themselves in appropriate language.
- Learning skills: students will possess the basic methodological skills, the critical abilities and bibliographical knowledge to continue their studies in the field.
Materiale Didattico
Il materiale didattico predisposto dalla/dal docente in aggiunta ai testi consigliati (come ad esempio diapositive, dispense, esercizi, bibliografia) e le comunicazioni della/del docente specifiche per l'insegnamento sono reperibili all'interno della piattaforma Moodle › blended.uniurb.it
Attività di Supporto
Use of audiovisual aids is an integral part of the programme.
The course will be held in English.
Modalità Didattiche, Obblighi, Testi di Studio e Modalità di Accertamento
- Modalità didattiche
lectures; audiovisual aids
- Obblighi
Students are invited to visit my page on Blended Learning Uniurb for further study materials.
- Testi di studio
Oliver Goldsmith - from The Deserted Village (1770)
Jeremy Bentham - from Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789) - On Utility; On the Rights of Animals
Jeremy Bentham - from Analysis of the Influence of Natural Religion (1822)
John Newton - Faith's Review and Expectation (1779)
William Blake - The Lamb (1789)
William Blake - The Tyger (1794)
William Blake - The Chimney-Sweeper (Innocence) (1789)
William Blake - The Chimney-Sweeper (Experience) (1794)
William Blake - London (1794)
Thomas Malthus - from An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798)
William Paley - from Natural Theology (1809)
P.B. Shelley - Ode to the West Wind (1819)
William Buckland - fom On the Excavation of Valleys (1822)
Charles Lyell - from Principles of Geology (1830)
William Buckland - from Geology and mineralogy considered with reference to natural theology (1836)
Alfred Tennyson - Ulysses (1833)
Alfred Tennyson - The Charge Of The Light Brigade (1854)
Thomas Carlyle - from: Sartor Resartus (1836)
Sarah Stickney Ellis - from The Daughters of England (chapter 1) (1842)
Robert Browning - My Last Duchess (1842)
Charles Kingsley - The Bad Squire (1848)
Charles Dickens - Hard Times (1854) ed. Paul Schlicke, Oxford World Classics, ISBN 0199536276
Matthew Arnold - Dover Beach (1856)
Dante Gabriel Rossetti - The Blessed Damozel (1850)
Thomas Hardy - Hap (1866)
Philip Henry Gosse - from Omphalos: An Attempt to Untie the Geological Knot (1857)
Charles Darwin - from The Origin of Species (1859)
Ford Madox Brown – Work (1865)
(All texts, except Dickens's Hard Times, will be made available on my Moodle Blended Learning page. Secondary literature will be made available here too).
- Modalità di
accertamento Knowledge and understanding of the essential social-historical and social-cultural factors underpinning the subject and period of study will be tested in a written exam. Students will be given 6 open questions, of which they should answer 5. Exam questions may be answered in any order. At least two questions should be answered in English. Time allowed is 50 minutes.
Students can score up to a maximum of 6 points per answer, following these criteria: 4 points (66,67%) for knowledge and understanding, and 2 points (33,33%) for coherent and correct expression of such knowledge and understanding. Students who score at least 2 point for each of the five answers will be awarded 1 extra point; students who score at least 3 points for each of the five answers will be awarded 2 extra points.
The final mark is epressed on a scale of 30.
The programme above is valid only till January/February 2022.
- Disabilità e DSA
Le studentesse e gli studenti che hanno registrato la certificazione di disabilità o la certificazione di DSA presso l'Ufficio Inclusione e diritto allo studio, possono chiedere di utilizzare le mappe concettuali (per parole chiave) durante la prova di esame.
A tal fine, è necessario inviare le mappe, due settimane prima dell’appello di esame, alla o al docente del corso, che ne verificherà la coerenza con le indicazioni delle linee guida di ateneo e potrà chiederne la modifica.
Informazioni aggiuntive per studentesse e studenti non Frequentanti
- Modalità didattiche
self study: non-attending students are expected to check out historical and cultural contexts, as well as detailed textual analyses, on the internet. They are also invited to visit my my page on Blended Learning Uniurb for further study materials.
- Testi di studio
Oliver Goldsmith - from The Deserted Village (1770)
Jeremy Bentham - from Principles of Morals and Legislation (1789) - On Utility; On the Rights of Animals
Jeremy Bentham - from Analysis of the Influence of Natural Religion (1822)
John Newton - Faith's Review and Expectation (1779)
William Blake - The Lamb (1789)
William Blake - The Tyger (1794)
William Blake - The Chimney-Sweeper (Innocence) (1789)
William Blake - The Chimney-Sweeper (Experience) (1794)
William Blake - London (1794)
Thomas Malthus - from An Essay on the Principle of Population (1798)
William Paley - from Natural Theology (1809)
P.B. Shelley - Ode to the West Wind (1819)
William Buckland - fom On the Excavation of Valleys (1822)
Charles Lyell - from Principles of Geology (1830)
William Buckland - from Geology and mineralogy considered with reference to natural theology (1836)
Alfred Tennyson - Ulysses (1833)
Alfred Tennyson - The Charge Of The Light Brigade (1854)
Thomas Carlyle - from: Sartor Resartus (1836)
Sarah Stickney Ellis - from The Daughters of England (chapter 1) (1842)
Robert Browning - My Last Duchess (1842)
Charles Kingsley - The Bad Squire (1848)
Charles Dickens - Hard Times (1854) ed. Paul Schlicke, Oxford World Classics, ISBN 0199536276
Matthew Arnold - Dover Beach (1856)
Dante Gabriel Rossetti - The Blessed Damozel (1850)
Thomas Hardy - Hap (1866)
Philip Henry Gosse - from Omphalos: An Attempt to Untie the Geological Knot (1857)
Charles Darwin - from The Origin of Species (1859)
Ford Madox Brown – Work (1865)
(All texts, except Dickens's Hard Times, will be made available on my Moodle Blended Learning page. Secondary literature will be made available here too).
- Modalità di
accertamento Knowledge and understanding of the essential social-historical and social-cultural factors underpinning the subject and period of study will be tested in a written exam. Students will be given 6 open questions, of which they should answer 5. Exam questions may be answered in any order. At least two questions should be answered in English. Time allowed is 50 minutes.
Students can score up to a maximum of 6 points per answer, following these criteria: 4 points (66,67%) for knowledge and understanding, and 2 points (33,33%) for coherent and correct expression of such knowledge and understanding. Students who score at least 2 point for each of the five answers will be awarded 1 extra point; students who score at least 3 points for each of the five answers will be awarded 2 extra points.
The final mark is epressed on a scale of 30.
The programme above is valid only till January/February 2022.
- Disabilità e DSA
Le studentesse e gli studenti che hanno registrato la certificazione di disabilità o la certificazione di DSA presso l'Ufficio Inclusione e diritto allo studio, possono chiedere di utilizzare le mappe concettuali (per parole chiave) durante la prova di esame.
A tal fine, è necessario inviare le mappe, due settimane prima dell’appello di esame, alla o al docente del corso, che ne verificherà la coerenza con le indicazioni delle linee guida di ateneo e potrà chiederne la modifica.
Note
Il corso sarà tenuto interamente in lingua inglese. The course will be taught entirely in English. The final exam and the bibliography are in English.
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