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F1501 History of Venice (Italy core)

Pes Luca

Various things make Venice a place of particular interest: the fact that it was built on water and marshland; the way its inhabitants shaped the Lagoon and managed the environment; the relationship with Byzantium and the East; the way it became the capital of a merchant empire; its role as a center of the printing industry, art production and Humanism; its development into a city of pleasure; the sudden loss of independence in 1797; the 19th Century cultural myth of its death; its rebirth with the Risorgimento of Italy; the creation of a new urban order, with the industrial port of Marghera and the beach resort at the Lido; the great social transformations of the 1950's-1970's; the alleged development into a "theme-park"; the way the city still presents an alternative notion of urban space and living.

The course covers all of these themes through interactive lectures and a wide use of multimedia sources (images, videos, music), with a view to providing a broad introduction to ways of looking at the history of Venice. The main focus will be on the relationship between the environmental setting, the morphology of the city, its social life, its political institutions, as a more general approach to local history, appliable elsewhere. References to spots and places in the city will be made during lessons, so as to encourage students to see traces of what told in class while walking in the city.

The course will include site visits (Ghetto, Ducal Palace, Mobile Dams and the Industrial Port).

 

Students are expected to actively contribute to the class, through one oral presentation, and a final research paper, developing themes of personal interest, in agreement with the Professor. Topics can range from Literature to Economics, from Law to Cinema. Past themes have included: Venice and the Fourth Crusade, Venetian Courtesans, The Life of Casanova, The Bostonians in Venice, Fascist Architecture in Venice, Venice in the History of Mass Tourism.

Group work mixing nationalities will be encouraged. Research papers must include bibliographical references and notes.

Students are also expected to study a text (from the reading list below; but an alternative text could be decided in  agreement with Professor) and discuss it individually with the professor.