Close

INSTRUCTORS

Marcello Verga, Rolando Minuti, Stefano Bottoni, Francesco Salvestrini, Igor Melani, Giorgio Bacci, Chiara Renzo, Francesca Tacchi, Lorenzo Venuti

COURSE DESCRIPTION

Lesson 1 – prof. Marcello Verga

Date: September 20th

Title: Cultural  Heritage

Topics: UNESCO, its history and its publications

Lesson 2 – prof. Marcello Verga

Date: September 21th

Title: Cultural Heritage and European Union

Topics: European cultural policy

Lesson 3 – prof. Marcello Verga

Date: September 22th

Title: Museums of History: the House of European History

Topics: European Parliament and History’s Museum (Bruxelles).

Lesson 4 – prof. Rolando Minuti

Date: September 27th

Title: Modernity: birth and development of a historical concept I. Approaches, concepts, methodological problems

Topics: An outline of the history of concepts. The historiographical meaning of modernity and related concepts. European modernity and ‘other’ modernities in early modern age.

Lesson 5 – prof. Rolando Minuti

Date: September 28th

Title: Modernity: birth and development of a historical concept II. From the age of Humanism to the Enlightenment

Topics: Classical heritage and the development of a new idea of modernity in early modern culture. Erudition, politics and religion in early modern historiography.

Lesson 6 – prof. Rolando Minuti

Date: September 29th

Title: Modernity: birth and development of a historical concept III. European historiography in the age of the ‘long’ Enlightenment

Topics: An outline of the approaches to historiography in the 18th century. Varieties and tensions of the idea of modernity. European expansion, ethnographical approaches and the problems of cultural diversity.

Lesson 7 – prof. Stefano Bottoni

Date: October 4th

Title: Social memory and politics of memory in post-authoritarian systems

Topics: The class examines the patterns of post-communist transition in Eastern Europe compared to post-1945 handling of Nazi and Fascist past, highliting similarities and differences

Lesson 8 – prof. Stefano Bottoni

Date: October 5th

Title: Obcjective truth? State security archives in Romania

Topics: The class examines the process that led to the opening of the communist-time archives in Romania and the controversies over the past that these materials have stirred up over the last decades

Lesson 9 – prof. Stefano Bottoni

Date: October 6th

Title: Lustratsia. How (not) to deal with the communist past

Topics: The class examines forms and outcomes of the “lustration” projects in post-communist Russia and Eastern Europe, paying special attention to the case of Romania and Poland

Lesson 10 – prof. Stefano Bottoni

Date: October 7th

Title: Representing the past in Hungary and Albania

Topics: The class compares how several museums and public institutions (House of Terror and Memento Park in Hungary; House of Leaves and the National Museum of History in Albania) have been representing the totalitarian past in the two countries, pointing out the different narratives put forward by curators and political stakeholders

Lesson 11 – prof. Stefano Bottoni

Date: October 12th

Title: Discussion of reaction papers

Topics: The class hosts a discussion of the three reaction papers presented by the students about the global role of contemporary nationalism (Florian Bieber àEri Nishida); on lustration practices in Eastern Europe (Cyntia Horne àJefferson Mendez); on memory “industry” and its future (Gavriel D. Rosenfeld à Catarina Levria)

Lesson 12 – prof. Francesco Salvestrini

Date: October 13th

Title: Rivers and human settlement in Medieval and Modern Italian cities. The case of Florence I

Topics: Medieval and Modern use of rivers in European cities. Economy, culture, religion, society. Examples from the continent and the case of Florence

Lesson 13 – prof. Francesco Salvestrini

Date: October 14th

Title: Rivers and human settlement in Medieval and Modern Italian cities. The case of Florence II

Topics: Protection of cities from river floods in Medieval and Modern periods. The case of Florence

Lesson 14 – prof. Igor Melani

Date: October 15th

Title: 20th century Authoritarian Regimes and World Expositions: “Esposizione Universale di Roma”, 1942

Topics: World Expositions between 19th and 20th centuries. The birth of the project for a World Exposition to be held in Rome in 1942. Fascism and the use of national-culture identitarian rethoric; Urban Planning and Musealization.

Lesson 15 – prof. Igor Melani

Date: October 18th

Title: Use and abuse of history: The Renaissance within the Exposition of Italian Civilization

Topics: Uses and meanings of Renaissance within Italian and European historiography (1860-1940); Italy and the Renaissance; Displaying Italian Renaissance: objects, people, meanings.

Lesson 16 – prof. Giorgio Bacci

Date: October 28th

Title: Borders, Identities and Migration in Contemporary Art

Topics: The class undertook a series of journeys into Contemporary art analysing different artists who are far from each other geographically but who often share experiences and thematic confluences.  In particular, we afforded anthropological, artistic and historical themes such as walls (Fiamma Montezemolo, Rula Halawani) and inhospitable landscapes (Richard Misrach and Guillermo Galindo’sborderscapes), analyzing the capacity of contemporary art to deal with contemporary society.

Lesson 17 – Dr. Chiara Renzo

Date: November 4th

Title: International humanitarianism and the refugee problem I: WWII and the Jewish refugees.

Topics: Refugee Crisis and Humanitarianism in the first half of 1900s with a focus on the Jewish refugees escaping Nazi territories and the role of Italy, the persecution of the Jews in Italy. Class linked to the related internship (4th November, pm).

Lesson 18 – Dr. Chiara Renzo

Date: November 5th

Title: International humanitarianism and the refugee problem II: Jewish displaced persons after 1945.

Topics: Refugee Crisis after World War II with a focus on the problem of the Jewish displaced persons (DPs) after the Holocaust; Jewish DPs in refugee camps in postwar Italy; Jewish DPs’ clandestine departures to Palestine and the political role of Italy. Class linked to the related internship (5th November, pm).

Lesson 19 – prof. Francesca Tacchi

Date: December 3th

Title: Representing the “others” in the long 19th century and beyond

Focus: Analysis of the “non European” world presented by some European illustrated periodicals in the long 19th century, focussing on Japanese, Portuguese and Philippine representations. The class hosts a discussion of the reaction papers presented by the students about Representing Asia (Eri Nishida); travel accounts in general (Catarina Levria); popular images of Orient (Jefferson Mendez).