20711397 - PHILOSOPHY OF LITERATURE

teacher profile | teaching materials

Mutuazione: 20711397 FILOSOFIA DELLA LETTERATURA in Filosofia L-5 BAGGIO GUIDO

Programme

The Philosophy of Literature course aims to explore the transdisciplinary intersection between philosophy and literature from a theoretical perspective, highlighting concepts and themes that testify how philosophical thought relates to literature in different ways, not so much as an object of analysis, rather in terms of their interaction and proximity.
The course will examine the link between philosophical enquiry and its pathological declination in the fiction and non-fiction of the American writer David Foster Wallace, highlighting some conceptual knots - solipsism, addiction, boredom, self-deception - that reveal the fascinating yet problematic interweaving between philosophizing and writing.
The programme will focus on the following topics:
- Introduction to the relationship between philosophy and literature.
- Introduction to the life and work of D.F. Wallace
- Critical analysis of the concepts of solipsism, alienation, boredom in their problematic intertwining of philosophy, literature and pathology
- Exposition of the relationship between addiction, self-deception, and logical paradoxes

Core Documentation

Texts for examination

D.F. Wallace, The Empty Plenum: David Markson's Wittgenstein's Mistress, in Both Flesh and Not, Little, Brown and Co 2012.
D.F. Wallace, Good Old Neon, in Oblivion, Little Brown & Co 2004.
D.F. Wallace, The Planet Trillaphon as It Stands in Relation to the Bad Thing, in The Amherst Review, vol. XII (1984).
D.F. Wallace, The depressed person, in Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, Back Bay Books 2000.
D.F. Wallace, Suicide as a sort of present, in Brief Interviews with Hideous Men, Back Bay Books 2000.
G. Baggio, Filosofia e patologia in D.F. Wallace. Solipsismo, noia, alienazione… e altre cose (poco) divertenti, Rosenberg & Sellier 2022.
D. Laing, The Divided Self: An Existential Study in Sanity and Madness, Penguin 2005 (first part).
C. Scarlato, Attraverso il corpo. Filosofia e letteratura in David Foster Wallace, Mimesis 2020 (primo capitolo)
M. Piazza, La scrittura dei filosofi e la filosofia degli scrittori, in «Bollettino Filosofico», n. 210, 2013.



Type of delivery of the course

The course consists of Lectures; Seminars; students' talks. Any written papers, valid for the exam, will be organized during the course and communicated through the website FILCOSPE, in the "Didactics" section of Prof. Baggio’s personal page (http://www.uniroma3.it/en/persone/SUQvVGsrWERoMUV6dHBTY0docklza0NpeEhxN2FMQkhKdlhVMGEwN1RTMD0=/insegnamenti/). In the case of an extension of the health emergency caused by COVID-19, all the instructions that regulate the modalities of educational activities and student evaluation will be implemented. In particular, the following modalities will be applied: remote teaching through the University's platforms (Moodle and Microsoft Teams).

Attendance

Attendance is not mandatory but particularly recommended. Not attending students have to study for the oral exam an additional text to choose from those indicated in the section “References”.

Type of evaluation

The evaluation takes place through a final oral examination on the topics and texts considered during the course and an evaluation of the active participation in class and in group works. The study by students attending the course of one of the "Recommended Texts" will be properly taken into account for the evaluation of the exam. Not attending students are required to study an additional text to be chosen from those indicated, for each module, in the "Recommended Texts" section of this program. In the case of an extension of the health emergency caused by COVID-19, all the instructions that regulate the modalities of educational activities and student evaluation will be implemented. In particular, the following modalities will be applied: oral distance exams through the Microsoft Teams platform