Print

Print


Public Renaissance: Urban Cultures of Public Space in Early Modern Italy 


PhD Studentship - Art History and Visual Culture.


About the award


This PhD opportunity arises in conjunction with the exciting new
collaborative European project led by Prof Fabrizio Nevola:

Public Renaissance: Urban Cultures of Public Space between Early Modern
Europe and the Present and funded by Humanities in the European Research
Area (HERA). A fully funded studentship (at UK/EU rate) for one PhD student
to commence study in September 2019 has been generously provided by the
College of Humanities, University to Exeter.

The central concept of the project is that of a "Public Renaissance", by
which we intend to examine both the urban cultures of public space in the
early modern era, and to set this into dynamic dialogue with the recently
invigorated discourse around the agency of public space in shaping
contemporary events. An interdisciplinary team of architectural, social and
cultural historians, in collaboration with non-academic partners from the
museum/heritage sector, will probe the continuities and ruptures that shape
urban spaces of the past in relation to contemporary urban interaction in
the urbanised heart of Europe.

The PhD project will focus on two or more urban centres in Italy to develop,
through archival and primary research, a comparative analysis of how built
urban spaces and commissioned artistic programmes provided settings for
social interaction across a range of social groups. Public Renaissance is a
concept that evokes our non-elitist reading of Renaissance culture,
exemplified by our focus on ordinary people and the everyday (e.g. public
readings; preaching; social gatherings in the tavern; exchanges in the
marketplace; performance of street-singers; distribution of popular prints;
executions etc.). Your PhD project proposal will thus run parallel to the
project activities and you will participate in project meetings and
training.

You will have a previous degree in art history or urban history, some prior
knowledge of Italian sources, and a desire to conduct archival research.
Some prior training in digital humanities approaches (e.g. GIS) would be an
advantage, although training can be provided through Exeter's Digital
Humanities Lab.

For more information about the project and PhD opportunity read here
<http://www.exeter.ac.uk/studying/funding/award/?id=3464> .

 

 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~


########################################################################

To unsubscribe from the MAT-REN list, click the following link:
https://www.jiscmail.ac.uk/cgi-bin/webadmin?SUBED1=MAT-REN&A=1