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DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20190301T080000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20190330T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20190309T170537Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190309T170652Z
UID:6782-1551427200-1553965200@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:CfP: Peterloo at 200 (1819-2019): Histories\, Narratives\, Representations
DESCRIPTION:Call for Proposals  \nPeterloo at 200 (1819-2019): Histories\, Narratives\, Representations \nKeats-Shelley House\, Rome \n5 July 2019 \n\nThe Peterloo Massacre has been dubbed “the bloodiest political event of the nineteenth century on English soil” (Poole 2007\, 111). Its psychological\, sociocultural and political reverberations reach far and wide. The approaching bicentenary of the Peterloo Massacre calls for reappraisal and questioning through the (sometimes) distorting\, yet revealing lens of narrative – that is\, through the numerous ways in which Peterloo has been represented and retold in literature\, art\, on stage and on film. Writing about popular protest in 1819\, John Gardner states that “Events are usually ephemeral and those present are often unclear about what actually happened. What does remain is the dominant representation of the event\, the story that is put before the public and believed” (2011\, 3). However\, hegemonic representations tend to engender competing\, counter-representations. These co-existing\, parallel narratives are the focus of the “Peterloo at 200” Conference as they point to the way in which texts (literary and otherwise) interact with events\, participate in their representation\, and interrogate the “uncertain” facts determining their shape and significance. In this regard\, these texts at once deconstruct and reconstruct the historical event\, either by questioning established or hegemonic narrations\, or by producing a version of the facts in and of itself\, whose truthfulness might be as debatable. From this perspective\, Peterloo may arguably be viewed not only as an event\, but as “an effect\,” to quote Slavoj Zizek\, “that seems to exceed its causes” (2014\, 15). \nIn search of complexity and counter-perspectives\, the organizers of “Peterloo at 200” welcome research that interrogates unconventional Peterloo-related texts (literary\, non-literary\, dramatic\, visual) and the resonance that Peterloo had outside English borders. We especially welcome proposals that highlight Peterloo as a cause in and of itself\, and the texts it spawned as the effects that “exceed” it – texts which started from it but are irreducible to it\, remediations (Bolter and Grusin 2000) of a brutal historical fact that recast it as real and imaginary\, factual and fictional at once. Papers may focus on one or more of the following: \n\n• Romantic poetry and drama \n• Romantic and Victorian periodical essays \n• Less canonical Victorian novels (such as Hale White’s 1887 Revolution on Tanner’s Lane) \n• Court transcripts (e.g. the Samuel Bamford trial) \n• Visual culture and satire (e.g. George Cruikshank) \n• Philosophical writings (e.g. Jeremy Bentham) \n• The European reception of Peterloo (the press\, letters\, essays\, poems) \n• Contemporary narratives (e.g. Mike Leigh’s Peterloo\, 2018) \n\nBy investigating different textual typologies and narrative modes\, we hope to recast Peterloo as a polysemic\, meaning-making site of textual exploration. \nAbstracts of 250 words should be sent to a.anselmo@univda.it\,marco.canani@unimi.it\, and giuseppe.albano@keats-shelley-house.org by 30 March 2019. Emails confirming acceptance will be sent out by 15 April 2019. \n\nRegistration fee 60€. \n\nSelect Bibliography \nBolter\, Jay David and Richard Grusin. 2000. Remediation: Understanding New Media. Cambridge (MA): The MIT Press. \nGardner\, John. 2011. Poetry and Popular Protest: Peterloo\, Cato Street\, and the Queen Caroline Controversy. Basingstoke: Palgrave. \nPoole\, Robert. 2007. “Reinterpreting Peterloo”. Teaching History 129: pp. 20-21. \nSlavoj Zizek. 2014. Event. London: Melville House Pubblications. \nNorth American Society for the Study of Romanticism\nhttp://www.nassr.ca/
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/cfp-peterloo-at-200-1819-2019-histories-narratives-representations/
CATEGORIES:News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20190405T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20190405T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20190326T083404Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190326T083427Z
UID:6818-1554456600-1554483600@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:Una Giornata di Studi per Laura Bandiera
DESCRIPTION:
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/una-giornata-di-studi-per-laura-bandier/
LOCATION:Sala Convegni – Dipartimento di Lingue e Letterature Straniere Moderne\, Via Cartoleria\, 5\, Bologna\, Emilia Romagna\, 40124\, Italy
CATEGORIES:News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20190617
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20190622
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20190306T111402Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190312T144212Z
UID:6743-1560729600-1561161599@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:International Summer School "Romanticism on the Coast"
DESCRIPTION:International Summer School – Romanticism on the Coast – Castle of Lerici \n“Literary Lerici: Itineraries between places and imagination” \nCoordinator: Lilla Maria Crisafulli (University of Bologna) \nThe Interuniversity Centre for the Study of Romanticism(branch of the University of Bologna)\, in partnership with Lerici City Council and the Cultural Association “Amiche e Amici di Mary Shelley”\, is organising a yearly Summer School in Lerici entitled ‘Romanticism on the Coast’. The first edition\, to be held between 17 and 21 June 2019\, will be devoted in particular to what might be called “ocean studies”\, or “Mediterranean and maritime studies”\, involving topics related to the sea\, marine life\, Mediterranean landscapes or anything concerning the idea of ‘the coast’. \nThe Summer School is addressed to postgraduate students and Early stage researchers (MA\, PhD students\, Post-docs)\, as well as scholars of Romantic literature and culture. Registration will be open to both national and international participants. The summer school will offer master classes and workshops in English\, on topics related to aesthetic\, artistic and cultural discourses\, as well as literary criticism\, methodology and creative writing. These classes will be held by national and international experts. Attention will be also addressed to the history of landscape and to its evolution/change across time. Particular emphasis will be given to the multilayered meaning of travel\, from the Grand Tour to contemporary Cultural Tourism. The different master classes and workshops offered by the Summer School will deal with issues related to British and European Romanticism\, focusing in particular on the personal and cultural connection between some of the most famous Romantic poets\, writers and critics (including PB Shelley\, Mary Shelley\, Lord Byron\, Women Romantic Poets)\, the city of Lerici and the famous Gulf of the Poets. The literary and cultural heritage of the Lerici area and its surroundings will also offer the occasion to investigate the work of travelers and writers of more recent periods\, including Henry James\, D.H. Lawrence\, Virginia Woolf and Charles Tomlinson. Surrounded by the evocative atmosphere of the Gulf of the Poets\, participants will have the opportunity to expand their knowledge of texts and contexts of the British literary tradition\, and of pre-Romantic\, Romantic and post-Romantic literature. Primary sources will be examined with reference to contemporary critical theories and a stimulating variety of methodological and disciplinary approaches.  The summer school will also focus on critical and literary texts that have contributed to the construction of the British and European cultural heritage and the dissemination of concepts such as inclusion/exclusion; construction/fragmentation of borders; migration/citizenship; gender/identity; nature /culture; landscape/cultural memory. The Summer School will host national and international scholars who will discuss these issues together with poets\, critics or novelists. Speakers will include: Jane Stabler\, Alan Rawes\, Rossana Bonadei\, Keir Elam\, Gioia Angeletti\, Norbert Lennartz\, Lilla Maria Crisafulli\, Michael Bradshaw\, Carlotta Farese\, Mirka Horova\, Diego Saglia\, Gilberta Golinelli\, Fernando Cioni.  Events open to the public\, organized in collaboration with the Association “Amiche e Amici di Mary Shelley”\, directed by Carla Sanguineti\, will include literary walks\, readings\, exhibitions\, theatrical performances and boat and bus trips to some of the most beautiful places of the area (such as Fiascherino and Portovenere). \nThe Summer School will last four days (arrival on the morning of June 17 and departure on the afternoon of June 21). The overall fee of 350 euros will cover the following: masters classes and workshops; welcome party on the17th; accommodation for 4 nights\, breakfast; 3 meals; events and cultural activities. It will also be possible to book further excursions or trips. \nThe deadline for registration is April 3\, 2019. Applications should be sent by email to  valentin.pramaggior2@unibo.it and carla.sanguineti@alice.it The deadline for payment of the fee of 350 is April 20\, via bank transfer to the Associazione “Amiche e Amici di Mary Shelley” (IBAN IT 69H0603010701000046467127). Please specify in the reason for payment your name and surname followed by: “Registration and fee Lerici Summer School”. \nThe registration form for Lerici Summer School is available here. It should be filled and sent to the above-mentioned email addresses within April 3\, 2019. \n 
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/international-summer-school-romanticism-on-the-coast/
LOCATION:Lerici\, Italy
CATEGORIES:Attività del Centro,News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20191003T110000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20191003T123000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20190928T172736Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20190928T172815Z
UID:6851-1570100400-1570105800@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:Stefano Evangelista\, "Romanticismo spettrale: tradurre Théophile Gautier nella fin de siècle"
DESCRIPTION:Giovedì 3 ottobre 2019 alle ore 11.00 il professor Stefano Evangelista (Trinity College – University of Oxford) terrà una conferenza dal titolo: \n“Romanticismo spettrale: tradurre Théophile Gautier nella fin de siècle” \nIntroduce per il CISR Carlotta Farese \nLocandina
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/stefano-evangelista-romanticismo-spettrale-tradurre-theophile-gautier-nella-fin-de-siecle/
LOCATION:Sala Giunta\, Via Cartoleria 5\, Bologna\, Italy
CATEGORIES:Attività del Centro,News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20210415T180000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20210415T193000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20210411T175935Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210413T084624Z
UID:7077-1618509600-1618515000@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:Geo & Eco Criticism – Returning to Romantic Italy
DESCRIPTION:Free online event \nGet your ticket here: https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/geo-eco-criticism-returning-to-romantic-italy-tickets-131867450093 \nOur roundtable aims to open up a discussion about the benefits to be derived\, in Romantic studies\, from an intersection of the methods and approaches of geo-criticism and eco-criticism. On the one hand\, we take our bearings from positions\, such as Kate Rigby’s\, that focus on the natural world as a dynamic\, active dimension enabling all cultural production\, which in turn bears traces of its more-than-human genesis. On the other\, we intend to suggest that geo-criticism\, as developed by Bertrand Westphal and others\, stresses the crucial importance of considering the geographical specificities of Romantic-era engagements with ecosystems\, and more particularly how such engagements are inextricably bound up with notions of geo-politics and geo-culture (the nation\, borders and boundaries\, economic geographies\, north vs south\, the national character). Indeed\, geo-criticism opens us specific insights into how literature can translate the experience of places into a critique of predominant modes of construction of reality. \nSince the notions of space and place are constantly shifting (the former encompassing conceptual space and the latter factual place)\, authors such as William Wordsworth\, Lord Byron\, Percy B. Shelley\, Mary Shelley and Leigh Hunt among many others\, represent environments as manifesting the variety of interconnected human and non-human spaces\, and their im/material valences\, in ways that are also always tied up with the political\, economic or cultural forces bearing upon and conditioning such spaces (which\, following Henri Lefebvre\, may be viewed as intersections of perceived\, conceived and lived space). \nExploring the possibilities of combining ecocritical and geocritical approaches\, the roundtable aims to propose this methodological intersection as a way of unlocking new features of Romantic-period treatments of the connections between the environment and humans\, their identities\, activities\, and institutions [Tuan\, Yi-fu\, Space and Place]. We believe that our approach may prove interesting to a wide audience by throwing light on Romantic representations of the environment as critical narratives (and counter-narratives) about the imbrications and overlappings of the identities of individuals\, human communities and polities\, and the environment. In particular\, we aim to discuss the potential advantages of this mixed approach by throwing new light on Romantic-period representations of Italy as a particularly complex and unstable crucible of issues of nature and nurture\, ecosystems and political systems\, environment and polities\, and so on. In Romantic-period literature\, the highly diversified and challenging natural world of Italy – from the Alps to Vesuvius and Etna\, its frayed coastlines\, Northern plains\, Venetian lagoon\, Roman marshes\, Campanian sulphur lakes\, etc. – is everywhere enmeshed with the country’s complicated\, fragmented and fraught cultural\, political and economic context. Our aim is ultimately to stimulate a lively debate on how ecocritical and geocritical outlooks can be made to interact in order to identify new and exciting ways of capturing the multifaceted complexity of Romantic-period representations of human-environmental interrelations. \nSpeakers and topics covered: \nSerena Baiesi (University of Bologna) \nLeigh Hunt’s Italian Green footsteps  \nI would like to discuss a less-known aspect of Hunt’s aesthetic: his deep involvement with the external world\, meaning the natural and urban landscapes which played an important role in his writings during the 1820s. In particular\, I will focus on his descriptions of Italian places from an eco- critical and geo-critical point of view that examines the interaction between the human and non-human in cities\, as well as in the natural environment. Indeed\, it is during his stay in a foreign land that Hunt developed a deep and controversial interest in urban and natural surroundings\, that is\, what we can call a “botanic” eye for the multifaceted environment of Italy. \nPaolo Bugliani (University of Pisa – ECR)  \nWilliam Hazlitt’s Italian Spots of Time  \nMy contribution aims at interpreting\, through an ecocritical lens\, some of the spots of time which William Hazlitt implanted in the Italian section of his Notes of a Journey through France and Italy (1826). Although these instants of highlighted sensation are more commonly associated with urban landscapes or indoors museum spaces\, I wish to explore circumstances in which they are aroused by a natural landscape\, most notably in the Appennines\, near lake Bolsena and on the Plain of Lombardy. \nLilla Maria Crisafulli (University of Bologna) \nGoing Green and Blue in Mary Shelley’s work  \nI intend to explore not only the process of inter-human relationship\, but also the conversation between humans and the world of signs or the religious universe that the works of Mary Shelley convey. It is such a self-dissolving opening up towards the universe that\, it seems to me\, deeply characterizes much of Shelley’s work in which the ‘biophysical environment’ deeply matters\, be it the marine life or the inshore\, with particular reference to Italy and Italian landscape. \nDiego Saglia (University of Parma) \nRe-Viewing Northern Italy  \nI will be looking at William Stewart Rose’s 1819 Letters from the North of Italy to demonstrate how\, in the literature of the period\, representations of Northern Italian landscapes such as those in Byron’s or Shelley’s poetry coexist with an attention to questions of agricultural and industrial exploitation\, deforestation and depopulation\, and climate change. \nElena Spandri (University of Siena) \nWordsworth’s Franciscan Ecology \nI will be looking at Wordsworth’s poems “Musings Near Acquapendente” and “The Cuckoo at Laverna” included in his late series Memorials of a Tour in Italy (1842) as specimens of a typically Romantic – and Wordsworthian – structure of feelings in which Italian monasteries provide geo-cultural environments both for a revitalized poetics of memory and for a reflection on the mutual imbrications of natural sites\, religious ethics\, and national consciousness.
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/geo-eco-criticism-returning-to-romantic-italy/
CATEGORIES:Attività del Centro,News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20210525T093000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20210525T233000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20210523T164747Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20210524T100200Z
UID:7088-1621935000-1621985400@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:Prof.ssa Serena Baiesi\, Mary Shelley and the Anthropocene: an Eco-feminist Reading of The Last Man
DESCRIPTION:Locandina Evento
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/prof-ssa-serena-baiesi-mary-shelley-and-the-anthropocene-an-eco-feminist-reading-of-the-last-man/
LOCATION:online
CATEGORIES:Attività del Centro,News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20211120T113000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20211120T113000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20211112T111218Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211112T112751Z
UID:7197-1637407800-1637407800@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:I Sabati del LILEC: Da Mansfield Park a Bridgerton: Jane Austen fra diversità e inclusione - 20/11/2021
DESCRIPTION:Evento dedicato a Jane Austen a cura di Serena Baiesi e Carlotta Farese (CISR Unibo) inserito nella rassegna “I Sabati del LILEC”\, che si terrà ONLINE il 20 novembre alle ore 11.30.\nTitolo dell’intervento: “Da Mansfield Park a Bridgerton: Jane Austen fra diversità e inclusione”.\n\nLINK ALL’AULA VIRTUALE\nLINK ALLA LOCANDINA
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/i-sabati-del-lilec-da-mansfield-park-a-bridgerton-jane-austen-fra-diversita-e-inclusione-20-11-2021/
LOCATION:online
CATEGORIES:Attività del Centro,News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=Europe/Rome:20211125T090000
DTEND;TZID=Europe/Rome:20211125T180000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20211107T195345Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20211112T105957Z
UID:7156-1637830800-1637863200@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:ECO-ROMANTICISM: HUMAN-NONHUMAN CONVERSATIONS
DESCRIPTION:ONLINE DAY CONFERENCE                                                                                                                    \nECO-ROMANTICISM:HUMAN-NONHUMAN CONVERSATIONS\n25 NOVEMBER 2021 \n  \n9.00 WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION\nMORNING SESSION: Eco-Engagements\nCHAIR: SERENA BAIESI (Università di Bologna) \n9.30-10 FRANCO NASI (Università di Modena e Reggio Emilia)\nAn Epistemology of Silence: Walt Whitman’s Ecopoetics \n10-10.30 ANTONELLA RIEM (Università di Udine)\nSamuel Taylor Coleridge’s Organicism and Environmentalism in“This Lime-Tree Bower My Prison” \n10.30-11 KATE RIGBY (Bath Spa University)\nGoethe’s Italian Gleanings: Eros\, Ecology and Sympoiesis \n11-11.30 DAVID HIGGINS (Leeds University)\nThomas Bewick’s Ecomimesis \n  \nAFTERNOON SESSION: Eco-Romantic Italies\nCHAIR: LILLA MARIA CRISAFULLI (Università di Bologna) \n14-14.30 FIONA STAFFORD (University of Oxford)\nOn Love and Leaves: Shelley\, Italy and the Environment \n14.30-15 SUSAN OLIVER (University of Essex)\nTransformative Geologies: Scott\, Byron and the Stones of ItalianRomance \n15-15.30 GIOIA ANGELETTI (Università di Parma)\n“Nature never disappoints”: Human/Nonhuman Dialectics in LadyMorgan’s\nItaly \n15.30-16 DIEGO SAGLIA (Università di Parma)\nThe British Romantics’ Northern Italy as a Human/NonhumanAssemblage \n16.00 FINAL DISCUSSION \n  \nContacts:\nDiego Saglia diego.saglia@unipr.it\nGioia Angeletti gioia.angeletti@unipr.it \nLINK ALL’AULA TEAMS DELL’EVENTO \nLOCANDINA EVENTO \n  \n 
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/eco-romanticism-human-nonhumanconversations/
LOCATION:online
CATEGORIES:Attività del Centro,News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;TZID=UTC:20220317T170000
DTEND;TZID=UTC:20220317T170000
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20220311T140018Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220311T140018Z
UID:7242-1647536400-1647536400@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:Mary Shelley\, Valperga.
DESCRIPTION:Intervengono:\nSerena Baiesi\, Università degli Studi di Bologna\nElisabetta Marino\, Università degli Studi di Roma Tor Vergata\nLilla Maria Crisafulli\, Università degli Studi di Bologna\, Associazione Orlando\nKeir Elam\, Università degli Studi di Bologna \nCoordina:\nElda Guerra\, Associazione Orlando
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/mary-shelley-valperga/
LOCATION:CDD Bologna\, Via del Piombo\, 7
CATEGORIES:News
END:VEVENT
BEGIN:VEVENT
DTSTART;VALUE=DATE:20220331
DTEND;VALUE=DATE:20220401
DTSTAMP:20260413T145017
CREATED:20220325T004008Z
LAST-MODIFIED:20220325T004008Z
UID:7259-1648684800-1648771199@www.lilec.it
SUMMARY:Mary Shelley e il grande schermo tra biografia e invenzione
DESCRIPTION:31 Marzo 2022\, ore 9.30 Seminario online\, Università di Cassino e del Lazio Meridionale Dipartimento di Scienze Umane\, Sociali e della Salute – Corso di Studi di Lingue\, Interviene la Professoressa Serena Baiesi
URL:https://www.lilec.it/romanticismo/event/mary-shelley-e-il-grande-schermo-tra-biografia-e-invenzione/
LOCATION:evento online
CATEGORIES:Attività del Centro,News
END:VEVENT
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