VIC Victoria College CoursesVIC110Y1 The European literary tradition from the Bible and classical antiquity through the Middle Ages. Readings in English translation from the classical epic, Greek tragedy and philosophy, the Biblical tradition and Dantes Divine Comedy. By introducing students to practical criticism and to the interpretation of texts and their intertexts, the course seeks to develop a theoretical and comparative language for literary analysis. VIC120Y1 Systems and processes of verbal and non-verbal communication. Processes of constituting texts out of sign systems in a variety of contemporary modes and genres: language, literature, cinema, advertising, the media, art, gestures. VIC210Y1 Central traditions of Western Literature from the Renaissance to the end of the nineteenth century: Chrétien de Troyes, Yvain; Cervantes, Don Quixote; plays by Shakespeare and Calderon; Montaigne, Essays; Pascal, Pensees; Milton, Paradise Lost; Mozart, Don Juan; Rousseau, Reveries of a Solitary Walker; Goethe, Faust; Kierkegaard, Diary of a Seducer; Nietsche, Zarathustra (Part 4); Whitman, Song of Myself; Dostoevsky, Brothers Karamazov. VIC211Y1 Issues of adaptation from various literary genres; novel, short story, novella, poetry,
drama, folk tale, comics, and discourse prose. VIC220Y1 Studies the international culture emerging in media and literature and examines recent
communication theory as it applies to literary, social and cultural issues. VIC221Y1 Using semiotic analysis to understand impact of postmodernism on professional fields,
including education, medicine, law, and the church. VIC240Y1 An interdisciplinary introduction to the civilization of the Renaissance illustrated by
a study of the institutions, thought, politics, society and culture of both Italy and
Northern Europe. Italian city states such as Florence, Urbino and Venice, Papal Rome and
despotic Milan are compared with the northern dynastic monarchies of France and England. VIC299Y1 Credit course for supervised participation in faculty research project. See page 42 for details. VIC300H1/Y1 Interdisciplinary approach to a specific historical period or movement (such as Romanticism, Late-Antiquity, Post-modernism, etc.) within the development of European arts and letters: emphasis on the literature, fine arts, music and philosophy of the period. VIC300Y (See Victoria College) VIC310Y1 The avant-garde and its querying of language, representation, and interpretation. In the first term, intensive study of Joyces Ulysses. In the second term, works by writers such as Robbe-Grillet, Borges, Brecht, Beckett, Rilke, Neruda, Levi, Wolf, Shalamov, Marquez. VIC312Y1 (See Victoria College) VIC320Y1 Theories and models of applied semiotics: structural analysis of sign systems as
articulated in various forms of artistic and cultural production. VIC321Y1 Studies of social space, art works, and their interaction with social subjects.
Semiotic investigations into the visual cultures of story space in mythic narrative,
ritual and liturgical enactment, and modern texts; studies of architecture, iconography
perspective, cinema, digitialised media, post-colonial art. VIC341H1 A study of the changing conception of the human self in the Renaissance, and of its representation by major authors: Erasmus, Rabelais, Marguerite de Navarre, Castiglione, Machiavelli and others. VIC342H1 Examination of central issues in Renaissance thought on the conduct and justification
of war, and discussion of representations of war and the life of soldiers in historical
writing, literature, and the visual arts. Core readings from Erasmus, Machiavelli,
Vitoria, Montaigne, Shakespeare, and Cervantes. VIC343H1 Sex and Gender in the Renaissance (See Victoria College Courses) VIC343Y1 (formerly VIC343H) 52S VIC344H1 (formerly VIC242H) 26S VIC350Y1 Practice and instruction in writing poetry and fiction, paired with study of literature
and theory introducing the multicultural richness of contemporary English writing.
Approximately three-quarters of class periods are writing workshops, one-quarter lecture
discussions. Work by many writers from contemporary and traditional literatures are read
in English translation. VIC390Y1/391H1 Victoria College Independent Studies TBA VIC410Y1 For students enrolled in the Literary Studies program, although other students are
welcome. Intensive study of general issues of poetics and critical theory, including
representative literary and philosophical texts from the Western tradition. VIC411H1 Study of current filmic and literary theories, with emphasis on the rhetoric of film:
the concept of the trope, metaphor, metonymy, allegory, irony, repetition, and specific
thematic tropes like the eye, the face, the death mask, the mirror, the dream, etc. VIC420Y1 The major theories of semiosis and signification. Definition of the sign from the
ancient world to the 20th Century (Saussure, Peirce, Morris, Greimas, Eco, Hjelmslev,
Jakobson). Historical genealogy of analytical models and methodological practices that
characterize contemporary semiotics. Main theories on the origins of sign and
communication systems in humans. VIC440Y1 An interdisciplinary seminar on Florence in the 15th and 16th centuries: humanism,
culture and society in the republican period, the rise of the Medici, Florentine
neoplatonism, the establishment of the Medici principate, culture, society and religion. VIC490Y1/491H1 These courses provide an opportunity to design an interdisciplinary course of study not
otherwise available within the Faculty. Written application (detailed proposal, reading
list and a letter of support from a Victoria College faculty member who is prepared to
supervise) should be made through the Program Director for approval by Victoria College
Councils Academic Advisory Committee by April 30 for a Fall course or by November 30
for a Spring course. |
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