Windows to Italy: Year One

The 2023-24 academic year brought with it a new Chapman Italian Studies series presented by the Ferrucci Institute for Italian Experience and Research. The series took place in the beautiful Dee Henley Reading Room of the Leatherby Libraries of Chapman University during the fall and spring semesters. The calendar alternated presentations from external scholars and Ferrucci Institute fellows, providing the university community with a regular forum to explore new ways to understand Italy.

Four distinguished speakers explored various aspects of Italian culture and history. In “Bridges of Life in Italy,” Dr. Thomas Harrison from UCLA examined the Italian peninsula as a bridge, highlighting the role of connection in Italian art and history from ancient to modern times. Dr. Norma Bouchard, a Ferrucci Institute Fellow, discussed “The Global Italian Diaspora: Texts and Contexts of Italianness in an Era of Global Migration,” reflecting on Italy’s transformation from a land of emigration to immigration and its impact on national identity. Dr. Luca Cottini from Villanova University, in “What Do Stories Do? The Added Value of Italian Entrepreneurship,” analyzed how storytelling enriches Italian businesses, adding depth and authenticity to their products. Lastly, Dr. Shira Klein, also a Ferrucci Institute Fellow, in “A Place in the Sun: Jews and the Italian Empire,” delved into the complex relationship between Italian Jews and the colonization of Africa, revealing the paradoxes and consequences of their support for imperialism.

The questions raised by the symbolism of the bridge (which is visible in the institute logo), where the series started in October, resonated throughout all of the meetings. On the one hand, exploring connections between different shores of history, cultural expressions, and disciplinary paradigms, the symbol stood out as a meaning-making humanistic gesture ingrained in the Italian mindset. On the other hand, the metaphor of the bridge, with its assumption of universality, leads to the challenging task of finding common grounds and shared cultural projects. Indeed, the challenging nature of the project and the quest for solutions that are not entirely foreseeable at the onset make the intellectual experiment of the Ferrucci Institute particularly engrossing, worthwhile, and needed work in our fragmented contemporary milieu.

The audience, which included institute fellows, students, and community members, was invited to ponder the intellectual juxtapositions afforded by the different talks and consider how their study and experience of Italy related to the perspectives presented. Next year, the series will continue to feature a variety of disciplinary angles with contributions from philosophy and the sciences.

The lineup for next year is now available on the Ferrucci Institute website.

 

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