IT324-15 Topics in Renaissance Culture & Thought
Introductory description
This module aims to provide an exploration of key figures and topics within Renaissance cultural and intellectual history, usually starting with Italy but developing in a pan-European context. Topics vary every year. In the past, we have explored personalities such as Machiavelli, writings on utopias, discussions on power and resistance, or particular disciplinary fields in the Italian and European Renaissance (such as science and medicine; philosophy).
Module aims
This module's main aims are:
(a) to introduce students to a number of key figures and a wide range of selected written materials related to these topics
(b) to build on their skills in mediating between text and context
Outline syllabus
This is an indicative module outline only to give an indication of the sort of topics that may be covered. Actual sessions held may differ.
Module structure (in term 1 or 2 —according to that year's module list).
Topics in Renaissance Italy is available in three formats; only one format will run
each year.
Topic 1: Machiavelli and Renaissance Political Thought (Term 2, 2021-22)
Wk 1: Introduction to 16C Italy
Wk 2: The background of Renaissance political thought (I)
We 3: The background of Renaissance political thought (II)
Wk 4: Machiavelli as political thinker: The Prince
Wk 5: Machiavelli and The Prince (cont'd)
Wk 6: Reading Week
Wk 7: Machiavelli as political thinker: the Discourses on Livy
Wk 8: Machiavelli as political thinker: the Discourses on Livy (cont'd)
Wk 9: Machiavelli and history: the History of Florence
Wk 10: Machiavelli and history: the History of Florence (cont'd)
Topic 2: Renaissance Science and Medicine
Wk 1: The landscape of learning
Wk 2: The influence of the past: Aristotle, Galen, Ptolemy
Wk 3: Natural philosophy: the study of animals and plants in Ulisse Aldrovandi
Wk 4: Natural philosophy: physics and motion in Galileo
Wk 5: Natural philosophy: cosmology in Galileo
Wk 1: Reading week
Wk 6: Renaissance mathematics and Galileo
Wk 7: Renaissance medicine: theory and practice in Bologna and Padua
Wk 8: Renaissance medicine: theory and practice in Bologna and Padua
Wk 9: The role of astrology, alchemy and 'pseudo-science'
Topic 3: Italian and European Thought in the Renaissance
Wk 1: Petrarch, humanism and letters
Wk 2: Petrarch, the Secret
Wk 3: Leon Battista Alberti, I libri della famiglia
Wk 4: Lorenzo Valla, De vero falsoque bono
Wk 5: Ficino, De religione
Wk 2: Reading week
Wk 6: Machiavelli, The Prince
Wk. 8: Erasmus, selections from his Colloquies
Wk 9: Thomas More, Utopia
Wk 10: Montaigne, the Essais
Learning outcomes
By the end of the module, students should be able to:
- Use knowledge acquired in lectures, seminars and from prescribed reading as a basis for individual research
- Demonstrate relevant factual knowledge about the Italian Renaissance, and contexts and issues under discussion and demonstrate
- understanding of the texts at a thematic as well as linguistic and stylistic level
- Successfully communicate what they have learnt both orally and in writing.
- Critically analyse the texts and engage where appropriate with scholarly debates surrounding the extract texts and cultural issues studied
- Develop IT skills
Indicative reading list
Reading List:
Topic 1: Machiavelli
The Cambridge Companion to Renaissance Political Thought, ed. James Hankins (Cambridge, 2008).
Francesco Bausi, Machiavelli (Salerno, 2005).
Davide Canfora, Prima di Machiavelli: Politica e cultura in eta umanistica (Laterza, 2005).
Quentin Skinner, The Foundations of Modern Political Thought, 2 vols. (Cambridge, 1978).
Felix Gilbert, Machiavelli and Guicciardini: Politics and History in Sixteenth- Century Florence (Norton, 1984).
Roberto Ridolfi, Studi sulle commedie del Machiavelli (Nistri-Lischi, 1968).
James Hankins, Virtue Politics (Harvard University Press, 2020)
Topic 2: Science and Medicine
Stillman Drake, Galileo at Work: His Scientific Biography (University of Chicago,1978).
Brian W. Ogilvie, The Science of Describing: Natural History in Renaissance Europe (University of Chicago, 2006).
Natural Particulars: Nature and the Disciplines in Renaissance Europe, ed. Anthony Grafton and Nancy Siraisi (MIT, 1999).
Paula Findlen, Possessing Nature: Museums, Collecting and Scientific Culture in Early Modern Italy (University of California, 1994).
Nancy Siraisi, The Clock and the Mirror: Girolamo Cardano and Renaissance Medicine (Princeton, 1997).
Nancy Siraisi, Medicine in the Italian Universities, 1275-1600 (Brill, 2001).
Paul Lawrence Rose, The Italian Renaissance of Mathematics (Droz, 1975).
Topic 3: Italian and European Thought
Jill Kraye, ed., The Cambridge Companion to Renaissance Humanism (1996).
Brian Copenhaver and Charles B. Schmitt, Renaissance Philosophy (Oxford, 1992).
Quentin Skinner, The Foundations of Modern Political Thought, 2 vols. (Cambridge,1978).
Marcia Colish MedievalFoundations of the Western Intellectual Tradition (Yale,1997).
James Hankins, Plato in the Italian Renaissance (Brill, 1991).
Ronald G. Witt, In the Footsteps of the Ancients: The Origins of Humanism from Lovato to Bruni (Brill, 2000).
Research element
Independent reading and the writing of an essay will depend on and develop skills in research.
Interdisciplinary
Interaction between historical, linguistic, literary, and philosophical elements.
International
All modules delivered in SMLC are necessarily international. Students engage with themes and ideas from a culture other than that of the UK and employ their linguistic skills in the analysis of primary materials from a non-Anglophone context. Students will also be encouraged to draw on the experiences of visiting exchange students in the classroom and will frequently engage with theoretical and critical frameworks from across the world.
Subject specific skills
This module will develop students’ linguistic skills through engaging with primary materials in the target language. It will build students’ capacity to engage with aspects of Italian culture through analysis of this primary material and through seminar discussion aimed at deeper critical thinking. In particular, students’ awareness of Renaissance culture & thought will be enhanced through lectures and seminars which engage in scholarship in the field.
Transferable skills
All SMLC culture modules demand critical and analytical engagement with cultural products and the context(s) in which they developed. In the course of independent study, class work and assessment students will develop the following skills: written and oral communication, creative and critical thinking, problem solving and analysis, time management and organisation, independent research in both English and their target language(s), intercultural understanding and the ability to mediate between languages and cultures, ICT literacy in both English and the target language(s), personal responsibility and the exercise of initiative.
Study time
Type | Required |
---|---|
Lectures | 9 sessions of 1 hour (6%) |
Seminars | 9 sessions of 1 hour (6%) |
Private study | 132 hours (88%) |
Total | 150 hours |
Private study description
Reading of primary and secondary sources; use of library resources.
Costs
No further costs have been identified for this module.
You do not need to pass all assessment components to pass the module.
Students can register for this module without taking any assessment.
Assessment group A2
Weighting | Study time | Eligible for self-certification | |
---|---|---|---|
Assessment component |
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Longer essay | 70% | Yes (extension) | |
An essay on an assigned topic, or one devised by the student in consultation with module tutor. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
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Assessment component |
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Shorter essay | 30% | Yes (extension) | |
An essay on an assigned topic, due in the first half of term. |
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Reassessment component is the same |
Feedback on assessment
Feedback will be provided in the course of the module in a number of ways. Feedback should be understood to be both formal and informal and is not restricted to feedback on formal written work.
Oral feedback will be provided by the module tutor in the course of seminar discussion. This may include feedback on points raised in small group work or in the course of individual presentations or larger group discussion.
Written feedback will be provided on formal assessment using the standard SMLC Assessed Work feedback form appropriate to the assessment. Feedback is intended to enable continuous improvement throughout the module and written feedback is generally the final stage of this feedback process. Feedback will always demonstrate areas of success and areas for future development, which can be applied to future assessment. Feedback will be both discipline-specific and focussed on key transferrable skills, enabling students to apply this feedback to their future professional lives. Feedback will be fair and reasonable and will be linked to the SMLC marking scheme appropriate to the module.
Courses
This module is Core optional for:
- Year 2 of UHPA-QR34 Undergraduate English and Hispanic Studies
- Year 4 of ULNA-R1A3 Undergraduate French with Italian
This module is Optional for:
- Year 2 of ULNA-QR38 Undergraduate English and Italian
- Year 4 of UITA-R3V2 Undergraduate History and Italian
- Year 2 of UITA-R3W5 Undergraduate Italian with Film Studies
- Year 4 of UPOA-M165 Undergraduate Politics, International Studies and Italian
This module is Core option list A for:
- Year 3 of UFRA-QR3C Undergraduate English and French (3 year)
- Year 4 of UHPA-QR34 Undergraduate English and Hispanic Studies
- Year 4 of ULNA-R1L4 Undergraduate French and Economics (4-year)
- Year 4 of ULNA-R1A8 Undergraduate French with Japanese
-
ULNA-R2L4 Undergraduate German and Economics (4-year)
- Year 2 of R2L4 German and Economics (4-year)
- Year 4 of R2L4 German and Economics (4-year)
-
UHPA-R4W4 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies and Theatre Studies
- Year 2 of R4W4 Hispanic Studies and Theatre Studies
- Year 4 of R4W4 Hispanic Studies and Theatre Studies
This module is Core option list B for:
- Year 2 of ULNA-QR37 Undergraduate English and German
- Year 2 of UITA-R3V3 Undergraduate Taught Italian and History of Art
This module is Core option list D for:
- Year 2 of UFRA-R101 Undergraduate French Studies
This module is Core option list E for:
- Year 4 of ULNA-R4L1 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies and Economics (4-year)
This module is Core option list G for:
- Year 4 of ULNA-R1A4 Undergraduate French with Spanish
This module is Option list A for:
- Year 3 of UFRA-QR3A Undergraduate English and French
- Year 4 of UGEA-RW24 Undergraduate German and Theatre Studies
This module is Option list B for:
- Year 2 of UFRA-R10P Undergraduate French Studies
- Year 2 of ULNA-R1WB Undergraduate French and Theatre Studies
-
UPOA-M165 Undergraduate Politics, International Studies and Italian
- Year 2 of M165 Politics, International Studies and Italian
- Year 3 of M165 Politics, International Studies and Italian
This module is Option list C for:
- Year 4 of UFRA-QR3A Undergraduate English and French
- Year 2 of ULNA-R1L5 Undergraduate French and Economics (3 year)
- Year 2 of ULNA-R4L1 Undergraduate Hispanic Studies and Economics (4-year)
This module is Option list D for:
- Year 2 of ULNA-R1L4 Undergraduate French and Economics (4-year)
This module is Option list G for:
- Year 2 of UFRA-QR3A Undergraduate English and French