| Italian at Bryn Mawr College | |||||
| PS# | CRS# | CR | TITLE OF COURSE | Professor(s)/Instructor(s) | DIV |
| 1275 | B001 01 | 1.5 | Elementary Italian Intensive Enrollment limited to 15 students. Four additional hours to be arranged. Priority will be given to in coming freshmen and students completing the language requirement. | Caporale M-F 9:00 AM-10:00 AM Intensive | HU TH224 |
| 1276 | B001 02 | 1.0 | Elementary Italian Priority will be given to in coming freshmen and students completing the language requirement. | McAuliffe/Troncelliti M-F 10:00 AM-11:00 AM Non-Intensive | HU TH224 |
| 1277 | B101 01 | 1.0 | Intermediate Italian One additional hour TBA. | Ricci TTH 11:30 AM-1:00 PM non-intensive | HU BYC127 |
| 1278 | B105 01 | 1.5 | Intensive Intermediate Italian One additional hour TBA. | Caporale TTH 11:30 AM-1:00 PM | DAL10 |
| 1279 | B207 01 | 1.0 | Dante in Translation The Divine Comedy" is the main focus of attention. How did Dante arrive at the complexly structured, polysemous vision he unfolds in the tri-form symmetry of Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso? How does the four-fold allegorical method of interpreting "The Comedy", recommended by Dante himself, help us to understand the reality of life in 14th-century Italy. Is the reading of "The Comedy" an exercise in literary curiosity or does it possess the power to affect modern readers in our own lived reality? In order to address these and similar concerns, we will read translated selections from other works by Dante and his contemporaries and consider reactions to "The Comedy" from such perceptive readers as Boccaccio and T.S. Eliot. "The Comedy" will be read in its entirety in English translation. Conducted in English with an extra class option for students of Italian. | McAuliffe TTH 2:30 PM-4:00 PM | HU III TAYB |
| 1280 | B235 01 | 1.0 | Italian Women's Movement: NEW COURSE: This course aims to dispel the amazement of those who wonder how feminism could have taken root in a country where, for centuries, women have been wearing black shawls and their public life has been limited to an appearance at mass. Emphasis will be put on Italian women writers and film directors, who are often left out of syllabi adhering to traditional canons. Particular attention will be paid to: a) women writers who have found their voices (through writing) as a means of psychological survival in a patriarchal world; b) women engaged in the women's movement of the 70's and who continue to look at, and rewrite, women's stories of empowerment and solidarity; c) “divaism”, fame, via beauty and sex with a particular emphasis on the '60s (i.e. Gina Lollobrigida, Sofia Loren, Claudia Cardinale). | Ricci MW 2:30 PM-4:00 PM | HU III CARP25 |
| 1281 | B301 01 | 1.0 | Dante The Divine Comedy" is the main focus of attention. How did Dante arrive at the complexly structured, polysemous vision he unfolds in the tri-form symmetry of Inferno, Purgatorio and Paradiso? How does the four-fold allegorical method of interpreting "The Comedy", recommended by Dante himself, help us to understand the reality of life in 14th-century Italy. Is the reading of "The Comedy" an exercise in literary curiosity or does it possess the power to affect modern readers in our own lived reality? In order to address these and similar concerns, we will read translated selections from other works by Dante and his contemporaries and consider reactions to "The Comedy" from such perceptive readers as Boccaccio and T.S. Eliot. "The Comedy" will be read in its entirety in English translation. Conducted in English with an extra class option for students of Italian. | McAuliffe TTH 2:30 PM-4:00 PM | HU III TAYB |
| 1282 | B398 01 | 1.0 | Senior Seminar | Staff | HU |
| 1531 | B403 01 | 1.0 | Supervised Work | HU | |
| Italian at Haverford College | |||||
| H001A01 | 1.0 | Elementary Italian Enrollment limited to 18 students. | U.Striker MWF 9:30-10:30: TTh 9-10 | HU Rbts 007 | |
| H001A02 | 1.0 | Elementary Italian Enrollment limited to 18 students. | U.Striker MWF 10:30-11:30:TTh 10-11 | HU Rbts 007 | |