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italian-studies: Scholarly discussions in any field of Italian studies



Italian Studies at NUI Galway is pleased to announce two events on identity
and sustainability:

The Moore Institute, The School of Languages, Literatures & Culture &
 Italian Studies 
 
SPATIAL ENCOUNTERS: Identity and sustainability
 
Monday, 26 March 2012, 4pm, Moore Institute Seminar Room
Dr Francesco Ricatti, University of the Sunshine Coast, Australia
 
Dealing with the (un)familiar: Italians' uncanny perceptions of otherness,
in Italy and abroad
It has often been argued, in academic studies as well as in media and public
discourse, that Italian hostility towards immigrants is largely due to a
sort of amnesia about Italy's past as a country of emigration. This
interpretation mirrors a similar understanding of Italian supposed amnesia
about its colonial past. Against this prevailing interpretation of the
relationship between emigration and immigration in Italy, this paper will
argue that memories of Italian emigration have not been forgotten and that
Italian hostility towards immigrants is to be related to a much more complex
attempt by Italians to cope with manifestations of otherness, both in Italy
and abroad. Employing the psychoanalytical frame of the uncanny -drawing
inspiration from the Freudian suggestions about the unheimliche, and later
interpretations by philosophers such as Martin Heidegger, Jacques Lacan,
Julia Kristeva and Slavoj Žižek- I will argue that at least since Italian
unification there has been a consistent and peculiar Italian way of reacting
to the void between the imaginary unity of the nation and its actual
fragmentation (due to both its geopolitical history and to mass migration).
 
 
Tuesday, 12 April 2012, 4pm, Moore Institute Seminar Room
 
Professor Paul Carter, Deakin University, Australia
 
Turbulent Zones: the poetics of sustaining places in unsustainable times
We experience a strange phenomenon: as our virtual geography extends, our
social life grows more intense. A cyber-sociability that redefines us as
parts of molecular structures stimulates an impatience with the inherited
protocols governing meeting. In this talk I want to discuss the implications
of this new dialectic for place-making. If new patterns of sociability are
not to spiral back into cultural kitsch, they need to incorporate the
foreign (a persistent trope in Galway's own mythopoetic constitution). The
foreign, which is also the global, has a different geography, archipelagic,
or relationally defined. From the point of view of intensification, the
globe is perhaps hollow or best imagined as a region of hollows.
Understanding intuitive relational geometries is a way of integrating
cultural heritage, cultural production and public planning. There is no
question that the institutionalized fissuring of these essentially similar
practices is one of the symptoms of the phenomenon mentioned above. I will
share some recent public place design work I have done in Australia, talk
about the choreo-topography project (Australia/Italy) that seeks to
understand the relationship between the 'movement form' of the crowd and
discuss a project called 'Turbulence' that looks at the role of the
humanities and creative arts in furnishing better public information about
the complexity of change.
 
 
 
Francesco Ricatti is Cassamarca Senior Lecturer at the University of the
Sunshine Coast, Queensland, Australia. He coordinates the Italian language
program and teaches migration history. He is the author of Embodying
Migrants: Italians in Postwar Australia (Bern, Peter Lang, 2011). He has
published various book chapters on migration and on football, as well as
articles in academic journals, including Australian Journal of Politics and
History, History Australia, Annali d'Italianistica and (forthcoming in 2012)
Women's History Review and Modern Italy. He is the co-editor with Penny
Morris and Mark Seymour of a recently published volume on Politica ed
emozioni nella storia d'Italia dal 1848 a oggi (Rome, Viella, 2012), and a
forthcoming special issue of the journal Modern Italy on Emotions in Italy.
 
Paul Carter is the author of many books including The Road to Botany Bay
(1987, 2010), The Lie of the Land (1996), Repressed Spaces (2002), Material
Thinking (2004), Dark Writing (2008). His new book is The Meeting Place: a
history, theory and practice of encounter, to be published in 2012. He also
writes regularly for Lettre International. He is also a sound artist and
public artist. His public space designs include Relay (Sydney Olympics,
2000, with Ruark Lewis), Nearamnew (Federation Square, Melbourne, with Lab
architecture studio) and Golden Grove (University of Sydney, 2007-2009 with
Taylor Cullity Lethlean). Born in the UK, educated at Oxford, Paul has lived
in Melbourne since the early 1980s; he is currently Chair of Creative Place
Research, Deakin University.
-- 
Professor Paolo Bartoloni
Head of Discipline, Italian Studies
Arts Millennium Building
National University of Ireland, Galway
University Road, Galway
Ireland
Tel. +353 (0)91 492392
Fax. +353 (0)91 495501
E-mail. [log in to unmask]
http://www.nuigalway.ie/italian/staff/paolo_bartoloni.html


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