All courses will be taught at La SapienzaÌýby ³ÉÈËVRÊÓƵ professors.ÌýLocal faculty will be invited to give guest lectures, and weekly interactive workshop/activities will take place, allowingÌýstudents to engage with local communities and institutions.Ìý
- ³¢´Ç³¦²¹³Ù¾±´Ç²Ô:ÌýLa Sapienza University (LSU) Campus in Rome, Italy
- Duration:ÌýForty hours in 4 weeksÌý
- Dates: June 3rdÌýto June 27th, 2024
- Course Fee: $3,500
- Info sessions:
- November 28th, 2023,Ìýin Arts 150, from 4:35pm to 5:55pm
- January 30th, 2024, in SH 680, room 1041, from 4:35pm to 5:55pm
- Minimum CGPA:ÌýStudents must have a minimum CGPA of 3.0 to be considered for the program.
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LA ROMA ITALIANA E L’ITALIA ROMANA
The course aims to explore the history of Rome and its role as the center of Italy. To do this we will focus on 4 major periods of twentieth-century Italian history, focusing on the role of Rome. We will move from ancient Rome seen through the eyes of fascism to the Rome of the anti-fascist resistance, from the Rome of the economic boom to the contemporary Rome.
The itinerary will show the evolution of Roman society, a mirror of Italian society, over the last 100 years, and it will focus on the representation of the city in popular culture. The course aims to use a cinematographic (Rossellini – Fellini), literary (Pasolini - Gadda) and comics (Zerocalcare) path that takes students through the various moments in the history of the Eternal City.
Instructor: TBA; taught in Italian
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ENGL 382 - INTERNATIONAL CINEMA: HOLLYWOOD'S ROME
From Edwin S. Porter's 1915 silent film The Eternal City to the most recent entry in the Mission: Impossible franchise, Rome has provided an inviting location for Hollywood productions. This course traces a history of American movies filmed in Rome, exploring how the city has been imagined by Hollywood, and what these different "Hollywoodized" Romes can tell us about the relationship between the U.S. and Italy over the course of the 20th century.
Instructor: Prof. Derek Nystrom; taught in English
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CLAS 350 - LIFE IN ANCIENT ROME
"What was ancient Rome like? From its legendary past to its imperial rule, the "eternal city" was the inevitable hub for ancient historians, politicians, poets, and travelers alike. Through political, social, literary, and architectural lenses, this course will explore the many ways ancient authors and thinkers have viewed, experienced, described, and imagined life in Rome between the 3rd century BCE and the 1st c. CE. By reading a selection of Greek and Roman texts, we will investigate Rome's urbanitas, from the Romans’ (inside) and the Greeks’ (outside) perspective.
Instructor: Dr. Martin Sirois; taught in English