Students may create an interdisciplinary experience by integrating two or more courses dealing with the same period or related subject matter such as art and history, literature and history, history and political science, psychology and anthropology, etc. They do this by arranging to submit one paper on an interdisciplinary topic for both courses, rather than two separate shorter papers. Some examples of courses that lend themselves to this kind of interdisciplinary integration are:
Contemporary Italy: An Anthropological Perspective
History and Politics of Modern Italy
Contemporary Italy: An Anthropological Perspective
Readings in Modern Italian Literature
The Art of Florence: Exploring Visual Culture
Italy in the Renaissance
The Art of Florence: Exploring Visual Culture
The Three Crowns of Florence (Dante, Petrarch and Boccaccio) (in translation)
Business Ethics: a European Perspective
The European Union
Topics in International Marketing: The European Union
The European Union
History and Politics of Modern Italy
The European Union
History of Italian Art I: Symbolism and Meaning, 1300-1500
Italy in the Renaissance
Special Topics: Michelangelo (fall semesters)
Italy in the Renaissance
Special Topics: Leonardo (spring semesters)
Italy in the Renaissance |