Close

February 22, 2022

Histories of Inclusion and Exclusion

INSTRUCTORS

Giovanni Tarantino, Monica Pacini, Maria Paiano, Valeria Galimi 

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Lesson 1 – prof. Giovanni Tarantino

Date: October 25th

Title: Feelings Matter: Public History and Emotion

Topics: Affective cartography; Emotional grammars of identity/alterity.

 

Lesson 2 – prof. Giovanni Tarantino

Date: October 26th

Title: (Visually) Labelling the Other: Between History and Memory

Topics: Genealogies of racial and ethnic representations; historical spaces as historical media; (de)commemorations

 

Lesson 3 – prof. Monica Pacini

Date: November 11th

Title: Going for Gender Balance

Topics: Classes together with the students of the MA course “Gender history”. Women’s representation in political and social decision making in Europe; International agreements, Diversity of settings (national and sectorial), Party gender cultures and electoral laws, good practices. Analysis by the students on gender gap in the Japanese education system (Eri Nishida); gender issues in the Philippines (Jeffersob Mendez); Women’s representation in politics: Portugal from 1911 to today (Catarina Levria).

 

Lesson 4 prof. Maria Paiano

Date: November 19th

Title: Human rights from the French Revolution to the present day: The Catholic perspective

Topics: The Catholic Church in the face of the Declaration of human rights and of the “modern freedoms”: intransigentism and liberal Catholicism. Initial attempts of conciliation by the papal magisterium: Pope Leo XIII (1878-1903), the age of Totalitarianism, the Vatican II Council and evelopments in the post-conciliar era. Class development: Nishida absent. Letria and Mendez took part in the lesson very actively, showing interest and critical thinking skills.

 

Lesson 5 prof. Valeria Galimi

Date: November 29th

Title: The construction of the “other”. Representations and stereotypes across history

Topics: Gender and race representation in the French Algeria during the 1930s. Discussion about how in French culture, and in particular in the colonial world during the interwar period, the topic of gender and race were used to represent a hierarchical and unequal society. Focus on the diffusion of visual stereotypes in popular culture (cartoons, caricatures).

Reading: Ethan B. Katz, An Imperial Entanglement: Anti-Semitism, Islamophobia, and Colonialism, The American Historical Review, Volume 123, Issue 4, October 2018, pp. 1190–1209.

 

Lesson 6 prof. Valeria Galimi

Date: December 1th

Title: Histories of inclusions and exclusions. Representations and stereotypes: three case studies

Topics: Students presented their research included in the general topic of “the construction of the Other” and the representation of visual and cultural stereotypes. Particular attention was paid to the construction of the research object, the methodology and the analysis of the sources.

February 22, 2022