Summer 2025 - HUM 333W B100
Italian Films, Italian Humanities (4)
Class Number: 4899
Delivery Method: Blended
Overview
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Course Times + Location:
May 12 – Aug 8, 2025: Wed, 2:30–5:20 p.m.
Burnaby
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Instructor:
Paul Garfinkel
pgarfink@sfu.ca
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Prerequisites:
45 units.
Description
CALENDAR DESCRIPTION:
Explores the representation of modern Italy through the medium of film. May be repeated for credit when a different topic is taught. Writing/Breadth-Humanities.
COURSE DETAILS:

This seminar makes an offer you can’t refuse: studying the Sicilian Mafia through Italian cinema.
Since the end of World War II, Italian filmmakers have taken a sustained interest in the Sicilian Mafia (a.k.a. Cosa Nostra), Italy’s most notorious crime syndicate, and represented it in cinematically diverse ways. The stories that they put on screen draw upon and experiment with a variety of forms, including the Italian “western,” political/investigative cinema, black comedy, melodrama, the police procedural, the biopic, and the social-justice film. Their dynamic approaches to exploring the problem of organized crime in contemporary Italy differ – often significantly – from Hollywood mafia films with which you may be more familiar.
To sharpen our skills of critical thinking, we will approach our subject in two complementary ways. First, we will read and contextualize our films as audio-visual histories, examining how the Mafia emerged in Sicily and why it flourished; why it has remained an endemic scourge in Italian society for so long; and the extent to which anti-mafia campaigns have succeeded in curbing its influence over time. Second, we will analyze our films as humanistic texts, interpreting their authors’ narrative and aesthetic strategies and, in turn, filmmakers’ contribution to historical knowledge, cultural debate, and civic action through their artistic works.
For this “blended” course, you will watch one film out of class each week. Films will be streamed on Canvas and subtitled in English. To situate films in their social and political contexts, supplemental readings will be assigned each week.
No background in Italian or film studies is necessary.
Grading
- Participation 30%
- Portfolio 30%
- Final paper 40%
NOTES:
This course fulfills the Global Humanities requirements for the
- Concentration in Mythologies
- Concentration in Public Engagement and Intellectual Culture
- Concentration in Art and Material Culture
Students should register for only one course between HUM 106 and HUM 333W.
If a student registers for both, then one will be dropped at the end of the week of their registration.
Students who took HUM 321W in Fall 2023 or Fall 2024 may not take this course for further credit.
Materials
REQUIRED READING:
John Dickie, Cosa Nostra: A History of the Sicilian Mafia
ISBN: 9781403970428
This text will not be sold via the SFU Bookstore but is widely available online. The e-book can be purchased on amazon.ca and Google Play for $1. A new paperback costs about $25.
REQUIRED READING NOTES:
Your personalized Course Material list, including digital and physical textbooks, are available through the SFU Bookstore website by simply entering your Computing ID at: shop.sfu.ca/course-materials/my-personalized-course-materials.
Registrar Notes:
ACADEMIC INTEGRITY: YOUR WORK, YOUR SUCCESS
At SFU, you are expected to act honestly and responsibly in all your academic work. Cheating, plagiarism, or any other form of academic dishonesty harms your own learning, undermines the efforts of your classmates who pursue their studies honestly, and goes against the core values of the university.
To learn more about the academic disciplinary process and relevant academic supports, visit:
- SFU’s Academic Integrity Policy: S10-01 Policy
- SFU’s Academic Integrity website, which includes helpful videos and tips in plain language: Academic Integrity at SFU
RELIGIOUS ACCOMMODATION
Students with a faith background who may need accommodations during the term are encouraged to assess their needs as soon as possible and review the Multifaith religious accommodations website. The page outlines ways they begin working toward an accommodation and ensure solutions can be reached in a timely fashion.