ITA3230 - Italian language and society
6 points, SCA Band 1, 0.125 EFTSL
Undergraduate Faculty of Arts
Leader(s): Susanna Scarparo
Offered
Not offered in 2009
Synopsis
This unit examines the Italian linguistic situation, with some historical background on pre-unification Italy, but with a focus on developments in the twentieth century. The most important features of the three main dialect areas (North, Centre and South) are analyzed, and the language-dialect continuum in the Italy of the 1990s is discussed. The unit also looks at the most important varieties of written standard Italian, such as the language of sports reports, of advertising, and of bureaucracy.
Objectives
Upon successful completion of the course, students will be able to:
- Understand the nature and the characteristics of linguistic usage in present-day Italy (geographical, social, situational varieties).
- Understand the historical and social reasons for language variation in Italy.
- Have an initial idea of the main features of geographical varieties of Italian (dialects and italiani regionali) and of the social varieties (italiano popolare).
- Understand and analyse the distinctive features of some Italian written languages for special purposes (linguaggi settoriali).
In addition, third-year students are expected to develop a deeper theoretical understanding of both linguistic and social issues.
Assessment
Written work: 40%
2 Hours Exam: 40%
Participation: 20%
Contact hours
3 hours (2 hour lecture and 1 tutorial) per week
Prohibitions
13 October 2017
18 November 2024