116-468 Italy in Close Up

Note

Formerly available as 116-078. Students who wish to take this subject but who have previously completed Italian Special Subject A or B should contact the coordinator.

Availability

3rd and 4th year

Credit Points

12.5

Coordinator

Dr Andrea Rizzi

Prerequisites

Usually completion of 37.5 points of Italian at intermediate or post-VCE level for third year, or admission to the postgraduate diploma or fourth-year honours in Italian for fourth year.

Semester

Not Offered (view timetable)

Contact

A 1-hour lecture and a 1.5-hour seminar per week

Subject Description

The subject examines social and political reality in postwar and contemporary Italy through film. It looks at topical issues such as the mafia, the representation of women, regionalism, religion, language and dialect, migration and consumerism as represented, explicitly and implicitly, in some of the best known films of Italian cinema. The subject covers films by some of the masters of Italian cinema, such as de Sica (Ladri di biciclette), Fellini (Amarcord), Bellocchio (L'ora di religione), Wertmuller (Travolti da un Insolito...) and some of the most interesting films of the 'new Italian cinema' including Giordana's Quando sei nato, Muccino's Come te nessuno mai, and Virzi's My Name is Tanino. By tracing the journey of postwar Italy's struggle for self-definition and quest for national identity, the films screened also offer an overview of the most important periods and genres in Italian film production, from neorealism to la commedia all'italiana, and introduce students to some of Italy's best-known filmmakers. According to availability the above selection of films may change.

Generic Skills

  • understanding of social, political, historical and cultural contexts and international awareness/openness to the world: through the contextualisation of judgements and knowledge, developing a critical self-awareness, being open to new ideas and new aspects of French and Italian culture, and by formulating arguments;

  • communicating knowledge intelligibly and economically: through essay and assignment writing, tutorial discussion and class presentations;

  • public speaking and confidence in self-expression: through tutorial participation and class presentations.

Assessment

One mini test in class 10% (during week 4), one assignment of 1,000 words (3rd year students) or 1,500 words (fourth year students) 30% (due mid semester), one 10 minute presentation 10% (due mid-semester), one essay on a film and relevant topics (2,000 words for 3rd year students, 2,500 words for 4th year students) 40% ( due at the end of semester), participation/attendance in class 10%.

Prescribed Texts

Reading material will be available from the School.



Status:                   Official 2007
Last Modified:            Tuesday October 31 22:20
SGML to HTML Conversion:  Information Division - CWIS (SDI)
Authorised by:            Academic Registrar
Enquiries:                http://unimelb.custhelp.com/

Valid CSS! Valid XHTML 1.0!