ARTS, CULTURE AND SOCIETY
- Academic year
- 2026/2027 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- ARTS, CULTURES ET SOCIETÉ
- Course code
- LMF09L (AF:579276 AR:363629)
- Teaching language
- Francese
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Academic Discipline
- L-LIN/03
- Period
- 1st Semester
- Course year
- 2
- Where
- VENEZIA
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
2. Ability to place a work in its socio-historical context of production
3. Autonomy of judgment: ability to evaluate different approaches, methods and interpretations of the texts examined; ability to exercise critical spirit and analytical skills; ability to navigate among different critical perspectives.
4. Communication skills: ability to communicate course-related topics in French, clearly, coherently, with correct terminology.
5. Learning skills: Ability to synthesize, connect, order, convey ideas, forms and data.
Pre-requirements
Contents
This seminar examines the literary and symbolic forms of collecting in French literature from the nineteenth to the twentieth century. Collecting — accumulating, classifying, preserving — constitutes both a cultural practice and an aesthetic principle that shapes writing itself. The collection thus raises questions of value, memory, desire, and knowledge, while also offering a model for thinking about textual forms such as the inventory, the series, and the fragment.
The course will begin with Honoré de Balzac, whose interiors and cabinets of objects stage the social and symbolic dimensions of accumulation. In Charles Baudelaire and Joris-Karl Huysmans, collecting becomes an aesthetic — and sometimes obsessive — practice that reveals the sensibilities of modernity and fin-de-siècle aestheticism. The seminar will continue with Georges Perec, whose work explores the logics of inventory, classification, and archive as forms of writing. Complementary perspectives will be introduced through texts by Colette, Annie Ernaux, and Sophie Calle, in order to examine practices of collecting, archiving, and memory in contemporary writing.
Referral texts
- Balzac, Le Cousin Pons
- Nodier, Le bibliomane
- Baudelaire, « La collection de M. Eugène Piot »
- Poe, « Philosophie de l’ameublement »
- Huysmans, À rebours
- Goncourt, La Maison d’un artiste
- Uzanne, La Nouvelle Bibliopolis. Voyage d’un novateur au pays des Néo-Icono-Bibliomanes, 1897.
- Walter Benjamin, « Je déballe ma bibliothèque »
- Georges Perec, « Les Choses » / « Penser, classer »
Critical bibliography:
• Walter Benjamin, Je déballe ma bibliothèque. Une pratique de la collection ; Paris, capitale du XIXᵉ siècle (dans Le Livre des passages).
• Jean Baudrillard, Le Système des objets.
• Krzysztof Pomian, Collectionneurs, amateurs et curieux. Paris, Venise : XVIᵉ–XVIIIᵉ siècle.
• Susan Stewart, On Longing: Narratives of the Miniature, the Gigantic, the Souvenir, the Collection.
• Mieke Bal, Double Exposures: The Subject of Cultural Analysis.
• Bill Brown (dir.), Things.
• Arjun Appadurai (dir.), The Social Life of Things.
• Daniel Miller (dir.), Material Cultures.
• François Dagognet, Le Musée sans fin.
• Jean-Pierre Richard, Microlectures (pour l’analyse de l’objet et du détail).
• Philippe Hamon, Imageries : littérature et image au XIXᵉ siècle ; travaux sur la description et l’objet.
• Jean Baudrillard, Pour une critique de l’économie politique du signe.
• Dominique Pety, Poétique de la collection au XIXe siècle.
In addition to these texts, other extracts will be made available on Moodle during the course, as well as additional bibliographical information.
Assessment methods
L’examen oral en français se compose de deux parties : la première est relative aux contenus communs du cours : textes et documents analysés pendant les cours et disponibles sur Moodle, et requiert l’étude de la bibliographie signalée ci-dessus ; l’autre concerne l’approfondissement personnel d’un sujet en lien avec l’un des thèmes du cours, à définir avec l’enseignant.
Type of exam
The lecturer has a duty to ensure that the rules regarding the authenticity and originality of exam tests and papers are respected. Therefore, if there is suspicion of irregular conduct, an additional assessment may be conducted, which could differ from the original exam description.
Grading scale
Regarding the grading scale (criteria for assigning grades):
* 18–22: sufficient knowledge of the content; limited ability to discuss independently; limited knowledge of basic textual analysis tools; limited knowledge of the author's poetics; limited knowledge of the historical-cultural context and the issues present in the texts.
* 23–26: fair knowledge of the content; fair ability to discuss independently; fair knowledge of basic textual analysis tools; fair knowledge of the author's poetics; fair knowledge of the historical-cultural context and the issues present in the texts.
* 27–30: good or excellent knowledge of the content; good or excellent ability to discuss independently; good or excellent knowledge of basic textual analysis tools; good or excellent knowledge of the author's poetics; good or excellent knowledge of the historical-cultural context and the issues present in the texts.
* 30 with honors: honors are awarded when the knowledge of the content, the ability to discuss independently, the knowledge of basic textual analysis tools, the knowledge of the author's poetics, and the knowledge of the historical-cultural context and the issues present in the texts are all outstanding.
Teaching methods
Further information
Les étudiants qui ne pourraient pas suivre intégralement le cours sont invités à le signaler avant le début des cours.