Students may design a program which centers on a particular field of interest, such as history, art history, Italian studies, political science, humanities, or fine arts, thereby creating a thematic study plan.
Students interested in this option should consult with their advisors at their home institutions, whenever possible, in order to develop the customized curricular concentration that best fits their needs and interests.
Presented here are a variety of curricular concentrations with a list of the courses that would be appropriate to each. Students would enroll in the Florence Experience interdisciplinary language course (required) and then choose two or more or the following, together with one or two electives in related fields:
Art History Concentration
The Art of Florence: Exploring Visual Culture
Special Topics: Michelangelo (Fall terms)
Special Topics: Leonardo (Spring terms)
The Villa and the Garden
Architecture in Italy: History and Preservation
Vasari and the Florentine Masters (Fall 2007 only)
Two or more of these could be combined with Florence: the Story of the City, Ancient Rome: Civilization and Legacy, or a Renaissance Literature course in translation (Shifting Identities; The Three Crowns; Dante’s World)
Italian Studies Concentration
The Florence Experience (language; required)
Identity and Culture in Italy: A Comparative Approach
History and Politics of Modern Italy
The History and Culture of Food: a Comparative Analysis
Readings in Modern Italian Literature ( in Italian)
The Three Crowns of Florence (Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio) (in translation)
Shifting Identities: Society and Individual in Renaissance Florence
Dante’s World: The Pilgrimage from Florence to the Holy Jerusalem
Florence: the Story of the City
Ancient Rome: Civilization and Legacy
The Business of Art: the Economics and Management of Culture
Family Business in Italy
The European Union
History Concentration
Florence: the Story of the City
Ancient Rome: Civilization and Legacy
History and Politics of Modern Italy
The History and Culture of Food: a Comparative Analysis
The European Union
Two or three of these could be combined with a literature course in translation (Shifting Identities; The Three Crowns; Dante’s World) or an art history course.
Renaissance Studies Concentration
The Art of Florence: Exploring Visual Culture
Special Topics: Michelangelo (Fall terms)
Special Topics: Leonardo (Spring terms)
Florence: the Story of the City
The Three Crowns of Florence (Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio) (in translation)
History of Italian Art II: Michelangelo to Bernini (Spring terms)
Shifting Identities: Society and Individual in Renaissance Florence
Modern Italy Concentration
Identity and Culture in Italy: A Comparative Approach
History and Politics of Modern Italy
Readings in Modern Italian Literature (in Italian)
The Business of Art: the Economics and Management of Culture
Family Business in Italy
The History and Culture of Food: a Comparative Analysis
The European Union
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