OVERVIEW
                                    CEA CAPA Partner Institution: CEA CAPA Florence Center
                                                                    Location: Florence, Italy
                                                                    Primary Subject Area:  Sociology
                                                                    Other Subject Area: Anthropology, Cultural Studies
                                                                    Instruction in: English
                                                                    Course Code: SOC320
                                                                    Transcript Source: University of New Haven
                                                                    Course Details: Level 300
                                                                    Recommended Semester Credits: 3
                                                                    Contact Hours: 45
                                                                    Prerequisites: Two one-hundred or one two-hundred level courses in the subject area(s) of instruction
                                                                                                                                    Additional Fee: $110.00
                                                                    Additional Fee Description:This course requires payment of an additional fee to cover active learning components that are above and beyond typical course costs, such as site visits, entrance fees and other expenses.
                                                             
                            
                                    DESCRIPTION
                                    
                                        This course provides you with an interactive experience of contemporary life in Italy, by exploring a range of defining features of this country and its people.  In-class and on-site lectures will alert you to salient socio-political and cultural phenomena in current Italian life, triggering critical analysis and evaluation of your surroundings. In particular, you will observe and reflect on practices of identity formation, as these are expressed in class, gender, and community relations; political allegiance and conflict; cultural alignment or dissent; social solidarity and artistic innovation.  
You will actively and independently deploy the primary modes of sociological research to directly engage the host society: participant observation, interviews, and field-notes. These will provide opportunities to compare your own direct experiences with scholarly literature on contemporary Italy in an attempt to identify specific local expressions of broadly identified social patterns.
This course is taught in English and requires no prior study of Italian language, but your direct engagement with Italian society will expose you to the Italian language in a variety of contexts, and you will be encouraged to extend and apply your developing language skills at whatever level they are.  
This course was previously offered under the title: Living Italy: Contemporary Culture & Society
*This course is cross-listed as ANT320