Italian

The Department of Italian offers an A.B. in Italiana minor in Italian, and a Master’s of Arts in Italian Studies.

Major in Italian

The Italian major takes an integrative approach to prepare students to explore connections and understand the continuum from past to present. From the Gateway course to the Senior Seminar, all courses are designed to introduce students to Italian culture in all its manifestations. Students develop their critical and analytical skills through intellectual dialogue in small class settings while the program’s integrated overseas experience gives students new perspectives and approaches to world issues.

Italian majors at Georgetown are required to complete 10 to 12 courses depending on the results of the student’s placement exam (12 if they begin in Intensive Basic, 11 if they begin in Intensive Intermediate, and 10 if they begin in Intensive Advanced). One course toward the major may be taught in English. Italian Majors are also required to spend a semester or an academic year in Italy studying at an Italian university.

Requirements for the A.B. in Italian

  • 10 Courses in the Italian Department  (unless initial placement requires additional language study), one of which may be taught in English.
  • Students who are already fluent in Spanish or another Romance Language may take ITAL 009 Italian for Speakers of Spanish or Other Romance Languages instead of ITAL-011 Intensive Italian Language and Culture: Beginner. Students interested in ITAL 009 should contact the professor teaching it before they register.
  • Upon successful completion of ITAL 009, students may enroll in ITAL 010 or ITAL 111 depending on the recommendation of the professor.
  • Upon successful completion of ITAL 010, students may enroll in a 200 level class depending on the recommendation of the professor.  Students who wish to enroll in a 200 level class are required to take the placement test before enrolling.
  • Students may also take three 1 credit courses instead of one of the 200 level courses to fulfill their course requirements

Note: courses followed by “(E)” are taught in English.

  • ITAL-009 Italian for Spanish and Romance Language Speakers
  • ITAL-010 Advanced Italian for Spanish and Romance Language Speakers
  • ITAL-011 Intensive Italian Language and Culture: Beginner
  • ITAL-032 Intensive Italian Language and Culture: Intermediate
  • ITAL-111 Intensive Advanced Italian I: Italian through Contemporary Culture and Society
  • ITAL-112 Intensive Advanced Italian II: Italian through Contemporary Culture and Society
  • ITAL-231 Contemporary Italy (before oversea-study) another 200-level course:
    • ITAL-233 Writing: Literature/Culture
    • ITAL-234 Italian Translation
    • ITAL-237 Business Italian
  • One-Credit Courses
    • ITAL-120 Italian Society and Pop Culture (E)
    • ITAL-232 Italian Through Art: Sexuality, Gender, and Art in Early Italian Renaissance (1350-1550) (E)
    • ITAL-408/409 Italian Conversation Practicum

Note: all courses with an asterisk (*) can be used to fulfill either group requirement based on the student’s final paper. Courses followed by “(E)” are taught in English.

A. Foundations

  • ITA-335 Sacred and Secular Poetry
  • ITAL-338 Medici, Patriarch of the Renaissance: A Dynasty
  • ITAL-347 Theater, Politics, and Art in the Italian Renaissance
  • ITAL-350 Italian Renaissance Women: Writing and Art
  • ITAL-355 Bella Ciao! Women in Italian Culture*
  • ITAL-361 Monster and Monstrosity in Medieval Italy
  • ITAL-368 Politics, Society, and Culture in Renaissance Italy
  • ITAL-372 Dante and Medieval Mind
  • ITAL-373 Italian Actors and Actresses (E)
  • ITAL-374 Theater, Politics, and Art: Italian Renaissance
  • ITAL-375 Boccaccio: The Intervention of Storytelling
  • ITAL-383 Dante’s Afterlife in Popular Culture (E)
  • ITAL-385 Madness in Italian Literature and Theater*
  • ITAL-387 Love and Friendship in Medieval Italy
  • ITAL-392 The Theater in Power: Dynasties, Politics, and Theater (AD 1500-1800)
  • ITAL-395 The Dark Prince (E)
  • ITAL-460 Dante—The Divine Comedy

B. Becoming Italy

  • ITAL-321 Poetics of Lightness: Italo Calvino and Post-War Italian Culture
  • ITAL-337 Italian Cinema
  • ITAL-358 Literature of United Italy
  • ITAL-359 Women’s Identity in Twentieth-Century Italy
  • ITAL-360 Giallo! Italian Detective Fiction
  • ITAL-366 Primo Levi and the Holocaust (E)
  • ITAL-386 Made in Italy: Fashion and Food (E)
  • ITAL-388 Italian Songs: Cantautori to Rap
  • ITAL-389 Italian Mysteries from Dante to Terrorism
  • ITAL-380 Identity and Renaissance in Fascist Italy
  • ITAL-390 Mafia: Reality and Fiction
  • ITAL-393 Contemporary Italy and its Regional Varieties
  • ITAL-394 Italian-American Language/Literature/Film (E)
  • ITAL-398 Fictions of Europe (E)
  • ITAL-404 20th Century Italian Novels
  • ITAL-420 Language and Migration (E)
  • ITAL-425 From Mazzini to the Euro
  • ITAL-426 Encounters with the Other: The Ethnographic Imagination in Italian Literature
  • ITAL-444 Discourse and Identity Narrative (E)
  • ITAL-445 Betrayals of Translation
  • ITAL-473 Fairwell to Realism: Decadence, Avant-Garde, Modernism

ITAL-489 Senior Seminar

ITAL-460 Dante—The Divine Comedy

Integrated Writing Requirement

Writing is central to the teaching of Italian at Georgetown. This emphasis comes from a Curriculum Renewal Project initiated by the Italian Department in 2005, which identified writing skills as a crucial area for unifying the curriculum from the language foundations to the upper courses and for the development of critical abilities that become necessary at higher levels of study. The Curriculum Renewal Project involved the design of specific writing tasks reflective of expected learner development at distinct levels of the language curriculum, the implementation of process writing throughout the curriculum, and the elaboration of specific writing goals. To learn more about writing goals at each level of instruction, please see http://italian.georgetown.edu/writing_project/outcomes


Overseas Studies

Georgetown has approved academic programs at the University of Florence (Middlebury), University of Bologna (Brown), and at universities in Milan through IES.  For further information, consult the Office of Global Education website: studyabroad.georgetown.edu.


Minor in Italian

Minors are required to complete 6 courses taught in Italian or 5 courses in Italian plus ITAL-394 Italian American Language, Literature and Film, which is taught in English.  Students placing above 011, 032, 111, and/or 112 will substitute upper-level electives taught in Italian.

Requirements for the Minor

  • ITAL-011 Intensive Basic Italian
  • ITAL-032 Intensive Intermediate Italian
  • ITAL-111 Intensive Advanced Italian I
  • ITAL-112 Intensive Advanced Italian II
  • ITAL-233 Writing and Culture/Literature
  • ITAL-231 Contemporary Italy or one course at the 200 or 300-level  (including ITAL-394)
     

(For course listings for Italian see Schedule of Classes)