SWEDISH LANGUAGE - LANGUAGE AND TRANSLATION 1

Academic year
2022/2023 Syllabus of previous years
Official course title
LINGUA SVEDESE - LINGUA E TRADUZIONE 1
Course code
LM50AB (AF:390237 AR:207418)
Modality
On campus classes
ECTS credits
12
Degree level
Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
Educational sector code
L-LIN/15
Period
2nd Semester
Course year
1
Moodle
Go to Moodle page
Swedish Language for MA is offered at the first year of the MA-programme in Language Sciences (Scienze del Linguaggio) and at the first year of the MA-programme in European, American and Postcolonial Language to the students who choose Swedish as their language/literature of specialization at this level. Swedish language for MA is not included in the MA-programme in Comparative International Relations, but it is open, as a freely chosen subject, to the students attending this programme, who have previously studied Scandinavian languages, culture and literature at BA-level.
Swedish language teaching consists of a one-year practical language course (two semesters) kept by the lecturer, and of a theoretical module (one semester) kept by the professor. It aims to develop the students’ skills up to level C1 in the Common European Framework of Reference for Foreign Languages (CEFR).

Knowing and learning to understand: knowledge at an high level of Swedish phonetics, grammar, vocabulary, of sociolinguistic, stilistic and pragmatic use of language.
The theoretical module explores the idea and reality of the Swedish nation as it developed in the latter half of the nineteenth century - what were its origins and what remains of it today? The first part of the module considers central theories of the nation-state and nationalism in connection with Sweden. The second part looks more closely on the role that the Swedish language and Swedish literature have played in constructing the nation. The course will be held in Swedish.

Applied knowledge and learning to understand: improving reading and listening comprehension with the help of authentic material; increasing oral production and improvisation; increasing written production through summaries, compositions and short essays; recognizing contexts and registers in the production of texts.

Independent assessment: learning to express an opinion and develop an oral or written argument in a clearly articulated and effective way; learning to interact using Swedish in the classroom.

Communicative skills: the aim is to reach level C1 of the Common European Framework of Reference for Foreign Languages as for written comprehension and production, oral understanding, production and interaction. As well as this, the aim is to develop an independent use of language, in order to understand and produce complex texts.

Learning to learn: acquiring autonomy in the learning process through the materials proposed by the teachers as well as through one’s own sources; developing the attitude to self-assessment and reinforcing the acquired abilities.
Level B2 of the ECFR, reached by passing the tests of Swedish Language 3.
The course is supposed to be held partially in Swedish, as it is addressed to former students of Scandinavian studies at BA-level. Swedish texts in the original language will be used.
Swedish Language 1, kept by the Swedish mother-tongue lecturer ("CEL"), starts at the beginning of the academic year and lasts two semesters, whereas the module kept by Sara Culeddu takes place in the second semester only.

Swedish language course:
Use of prepositions, phrasal verbs (partikelverb), irregular verbs, transitive/intransitive verbs, order of words in the sentence, coordination or parataxis, tense consistency, relative sentences, särskrivning (compound words and connecting morphemes), defective adjectives, definite/indefinite adjectives, singular/plural adjectives, predicate adjectives and grammatical consistency; complex orthography and punctuation (Svenska skriveregler); writing and analysing texts, essays and reportages.

Theoretical module:
The theoretical module explores the idea and reality of the Swedish nation as it developed in the latter half of the nineteenth century - what were its origins and what remains of it today? The first part of the module considers central theories of the nation-state and nationalism in connection with Sweden. The second part looks more closely on the role that the Swedish language and Swedish literature have played in constructing the nation. The course will be held in Swedish.
Swedish language course:
Paula Levy Scherrer, Karl Lindemalm, Rivstart. B1 + B2 Textbok, Natur och Kultur, 2015,
- Rivstart C1 Textbok
- Rivstart B1+B2 Övningsbok
- Rivstart C1 Övningsbok
Pia Forsberg, Språkriktighetsboken, NE Nationalencyklopedin, 2016
Hans Holmgren Ording, Se upp! Svenska partikelverb, Natur och Kultur, 1999
Per Montan, Håkan Rosenqvist, Prepositionsboken, Liber, 2013
Ola Karlsson (red.), Svenska skrivregler, Liber, 2017
Cecilia Fasth, Anita Kannermark, Form i fokus. Övningsbok i svensk grammatik, Del C, Folkuniversitetets förlag, 1997
Ulf Jansson, Martin Levander, Handbok i svenska språket, Liber, 2012

Theoretical module:
Benedict Anderson - Den föreställda gemenskapen, Daidalos, 1993.
Ernest Gellner - Nationalism, Nora, 1999.
Lars Trädgårdh - ”The Mysteries of a Pippi Longstocking Economy”, in Kurt Almqvist & Alexander Linklater (eds.), Images of Sweden, 2011.
Lars G. Sandberg - ”The Case of the Impoverished Sophisticate: Human Capital and Swedish Economic Growth before World War I”, The Journal of Economic History
Vol. 39, No. 1, The Tasks of Economic History (Mar., 1979), pp. 225-241.
Erik Bengtsson - ”The Swedish Sonderweg in Question”, Past & Present, Volume 244, Issue 1, August 2019, pp. 123–161.
Olle Josephson - ”Tala för skrift och skriva för tal: Ong tillämpad på tidig svensk arbetarrörelse”, in Talspråk, skriftspråk, bildspråk : en antologi, SIC, pp. 105-115, 1992.
Göran Hägg - ”Individ och gemenskap i svensk litteratur”, Svensk tidskrift (1987: nr. 4-5), pp. 276-29.
Björn Sundmark - ”Of Nils and Nation: Selma Lagerlöf’s The Wonderful Adventures of Nils”, International Research in Children's Literature, (Vol. 1, Nr. 2, 2011), pp. 168-186.
Selma Lagerlöf - Nils Holgerssons underbara resa genom Sverige
August Strindberg - Röda rummet, Modernista, 2023

Additional syllabus for students not attending the course
Additional materials will eventually be indicated at the professor’s office hours. A visit by the student is, in this case, compulsory.

The examination consists in a written paper and an oral examination.
The written paper is an essay on the theories and material discussed during the course. The paper will be written towards the end of the course.
The oral examination is a short discussion on the basis of the student paper. It lasts about 15 minutes and is in Swedish.

The students who have not attended the course must study the additional materials that will be indicated. They must come and talk to the professor at least once before the oral examination.
The course offers frontal lectures with student discussions about the idea and reality of the Swedish nation as it developed in the latter half of the nineteenth century.
Italian
If you have questions or need further explanations, please write to sara.culeddu@unive.it. Booking time with an e-mail is recommended if you want to meet the professor. Student who cannot attend the course must contact the teacher in order to discuss the syllabus with the supplementary reading.
written and oral

This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "Human capital, health, education" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development

Definitive programme.
Last update of the programme: 27/03/2023