Descargar Gratis Women of the Caesars (1911)

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Descargar Gratis Women of the Caesars (1911) Register Free To Download Files | File Name : Women Of The Caesars (1911) PDF WOMEN OF THE CAESARS (1911) Tapa dura 2 junio 2008 Author : Guglielmo Ferrero A different take on the story of the house of Caesar Though the author's arch-conservatism is evident almost from the very first line, his take on the first imperial family of Rome is refreshing in that he refuses to take Tacitus' and Suetonius' most salacious and ridiculous accusations against the House of Caesar at face-value. He attempts to discover the truth behind some of the most puzzling incidents related by the ancient historians.Why was Caligula insistent that his sisters be honored alongside with himself? Why did Agrippina the Younger consent to marrying her uncle? Why did Livilla starve herself to death?Ferrero looks at these questions and more from the angle of what the beginning of the Principate must have been like for the female members of the great family and the unique pressures on them. The Women Of The Caesars (1911) [Ferrero, Guglielmo] on Amazon.com. *FREE* shipping on qualifying offers. The Women Of The Caesars (1911) The women of the C\u00e6sars by Ferrero, Guglielmo, 1911, The Century co. edition, in English The Women Of The Caesars (1911) by Guglielmo Ferrero ISBN 13: 9781164070313 ISBN 10: 1164070312 Paperback; Kessinger Publishing, Llc; ISBN-13: 978-1164070313 I will send one reminder. Email to friends Share on Facebook - opens in a new window or tab Share on Twitter - opens in a new window or tab Share on Pinterest - opens in a new window or tab Additional Physical Format: Online version: Ferrero, Guglielmo, 1871-1942. Women of the Caesars. Chautauqua, N.Y., Chautauqua Institution [\u00a91911] Guglielmo FERRERO / The Women of the Caesars 1911. See photos for details. Feel free to message me about any questions or if you want to see more photos. :) \u267b\ufe0fShipped with USPS Media Mail using recycled packaging.\u267b\ufe0f Shipped with USPS Media Mail. 1911 Women of the Caesars Tiberius and Agrippina illustrated. $22.09. $25.99 previous price $25.99 previous price $25.99 + $4.49 shipping + $4.49 shipping + $4.49 shipping. Vintage Postcard Unposted Sisters Cats On Afghan Sweater plastichrome P12383. $2.95. Free shipping Free shipping Free shipping. Contains 14 pages and 4 illustrations. Email to friends Share on Facebook - opens in a new window or tab Share on Twitter - opens in a new window or tab Share on Pinterest - opens in a new window or tab Guglielmo Ferrero The Women of the Caesars HCDJ 1911 Loring & Mussey Illustrated. Dust jacket has considerable wear and is in a plastic protector, pages tanned. Shipped with USPS Media Mail. Buy The Women Of The Caesars 1911 [Leather Bound] by Guglielmo Ferrero (ISBN: ) from Amazon's Book Store. Everyday low prices and free delivery on eligible orders. The Women Of The Caesars (1911) Guglielmo Ferrero, Five Star Science Fiction/Fantasy - New Coyote Michael Bergey, Never Forget: The Sequel To Forever And Always Sonni Lagodinski, 101 Business Insurance Mistakes You Don't Want To Make Rich Rozman Contains 13 pages and 8 illustrations. SKU # 6836. Email to friends Share on Facebook - opens in a new window or tab Share on Twitter - opens in a new window or tab Share on Pinterest - opens in a new window or tab Share on Facebook - opens in a new window or tab Share on Twitter - opens in a new window or tab Share on Pinterest - opens in a new window or Hello Select your address Prime Day Deals Best Sellers New Releases Books Electronics Customer Service Gift Ideas Home Computers Gift Cards Sell Amazon.in - Buy Women of the Caesars (1911) book online at best prices in India on Amazon.in. Read Women of the Caesars (1911) book reviews & author details and more at Amazon.in. Free delivery on qualified orders. Find helpful customer reviews and review ratings for The Women Of The Caesars (1911) at Amazon.com. Read honest and unbiased product reviews from our users. A Roman Girl of the Time of the Caesars Costumes of Roman Men, Women, and Children in the Procession of a Peace Festival Bust of Tiberius in the Museo Nazionale, Naples Types of Head- dresses Worn in the Time of the Women of the Caesars A Roman Feast in the Time of the Caesars 399 \u00b7 The Women Of The Caesars. Third Paper: The Daughters Of Agrippa \u00b7 Guglielmo Ferrero \u00b7 ar 415 \u00b7 Edison On Invention And Inventors: An Interview By Waldo P. Warren \u00b7 in 420 \u00b7 The Stepmother \u00b7 Katharine Metcalf Roof \u00b7 ss 429 \u00b7 The Return \u00b7 John Erskine \u00b7 pm 430 \u00b7 The Struggle For Existence In China \u00b7 Edward Alsworth Ross \u00b7 ar Vibia Sabina died before her husband, some time in 136 or early 137. There is a strong ancient tradition that Hadrian treated his wife little better than a slave, and may have driven her to suicide. Hadrian's stone elegy for his wife "depicts the apotheosis, or divine ascent of Sabina in accordance with her posthumous deification on the order of Hadrian." Directed by Frank R. Benson. With Frank R. Benson, Constance Benson, Murray Carrington, Guy Rathbone. Roman Senators conspire to assassinate their ruler. The Women of the Caesars Contents: Woman and marriage in ancient Rome -- Livia and Julia -- The daughters of Agrippa --Tiberius and Agrippina -- The sisters of Caligula and the marriage of Messalina -- Agrippina, the mother of Nero. Language: English: LoC Class: DG: History: General and Eastern Hemisphere: Italy, Vatican City, Malta: Subject It is the helpless cry of these lost women who are the victims of centuries of wrong; it is the unspoken plea of thousands of women now standing on the brink of similar ruin; it is the silent appeal of the army of women in all lands who in shops and factories are demanding fair living and working conditions; it is the need to turn the energies ... Major Works. Lombroso's essential work is the five volumes of Criminal Man, first published between 1876 and 1897.As suggested in DeLisi 2012 (cited under Contemporary Responses: Paradigm Shifts), Lombroso's work can be effectively characterized as good, bad, and ugly based on the assorted claims that he made.Whereas much of his work can easily be dismissed and condemned, other aspects ... The 1911 killings of 303 Chinese men, women and children occurred during the chaotic period of the Mexican Revolution, when revolutionary troops overran Torre\u00f3n, sealing the fate of long- time ... Watch full episodes of your favorite HISTORY series, and dive into thousands of historical articles and videos. To know History is to know life. Nearly 50% of women sterilized had three or four births. Over 1/3 of women who reported being sterilized were sterilized in their twenties, with the average age of sterilization being 26. A survey by a team of Americans in 1975 confirmed Presser's assessment that nearly 1/3 of Puerto Rican women of childbearing age had been sterilized. Women's College, Duke University, East Campus. ca. 1928. Aerial view of the Women's College, showing all present-day buildings on the quadrangle completed. Note railroad sidings across Main St. and the residential section along N. Buchanan Blvd. Archives & History, Neg.#75.2.249: E061: Durham Hosiery Mill. Meeting of Management. ca. 1920. Pliny the Elder, in his Natural History (4.17.105), claims that Armorica was the older name for Aquitania and states Armorica's southern boundary extended to the Pyrenees.Taking into account the Gaulish origin of the name, that is perfectly correct and logical, as Aremorica is not a country name but a word that describes a type of geographical region, one that is by the sea. Online Library of Liberty The OLL is a curated collection of scholarly works that engage with vital questions of liberty. Spanning the centuries from Hammurabi to Hume, and collecting material on topics from art and economics to law and political theory, the OLL provides you with a rich variety of texts to explore and consider. Publius Cornelius Dolabella (c. 85-69 BC - 43 BC, also known by his adoptive name Publius Cornelius Lentulus) was a Roman general and commander of the Dictator Julius Caesar.He was by far the most important of the Cornelii Dolabellae but he arranged for himself to be adopted by a plebeian Cornelii Lentuli so that he could become a plebeian tribune. ... .
Recommended publications
  • The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini
    University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2013 The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini Valentina Follo University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the History Commons, and the History of Art, Architecture, and Archaeology Commons Recommended Citation Follo, Valentina, "The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini" (2013). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 858. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/858 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/858 For more information, please contact [email protected]. The Power of Images in the Age of Mussolini Abstract The year 1937 marked the bimillenary of the birth of Augustus. With characteristic pomp and vigor, Benito Mussolini undertook numerous initiatives keyed to the occasion, including the opening of the Mostra Augustea della Romanità , the restoration of the Ara Pacis , and the reconstruction of Piazza Augusto Imperatore. New excavation campaigns were inaugurated at Augustan sites throughout the peninsula, while the state issued a series of commemorative stamps and medallions focused on ancient Rome. In the same year, Mussolini inaugurated an impressive square named Forum Imperii, situated within the Foro Mussolini - known today as the Foro Italico, in celebration of the first anniversary of his Ethiopian conquest. The Forum Imperii's decorative program included large-scale black and white figural mosaics flanked by rows of marble blocks; each of these featured inscriptions boasting about key events in the regime's history. This work examines the iconography of the Forum Imperii's mosaic decorative program and situates these visual statements into a broader discourse that encompasses the panorama of images that circulated in abundance throughout Italy and its colonies.
    [Show full text]
  • Arthur Livingston
    Arthur Livingston: An Inventory of His Papers at the Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center Descriptive Summary Creator: Livingston, Arthur, 1883-1944 Title: Arthur Livingston Papers Inclusive Dates: 1494-1986 Extent: 22 document boxes, 3 galley folders, 1 oversize folder (9.16 linear feet) Access: Open for research Administrative Information Acquisition: Gift, 1950 Processed by: Robert Kendrick, Chip Cheek, Elizabeth Murray, Nov. 1996-June 1997 Repository: Harry Ransom Humanities Research Center The University of Texas at Austin Livingston, Arthur, 1883-1944 Biographical Sketch Arthur Livingston, professor of Romance languages and literatures, publisher, and translator, was born on September 30, 1883, in Northbridge, Massachusetts. Livingston earned the A. B. degree at Amherst College in 1904, continuing his work in Romance languages at Columbia University, where he received the Ph. D. in 1911. His teaching positions included an instructorship in Italian at Smith College (1908-1909), an associate professorship in Italian at Cornell University, where Livingston also supervised the Petrarch Catalogue (1910-1911), and an associate professorship in Romance Languages at Columbia University (1911-1917). Among the various honors bestowed upon Livingston were membership in Phi Beta Kappa and the Venetian academic society, the Reale deputazione veneta di storia patria; he was also decorated as a Cavalier of the Crown of Italy. Livingston's desire to disseminate the work of leading European writers and thinkers in the United States led him to an editorship with the Foreign Press Bureau of the Committee on Public Information during World War I. When the war ended, Livingston, in partnership with Paul Kennaday and Ernest Poole, continued his efforts on behalf of foreign literature by founding the Foreign Press Service, an agency that represented foreign authors in English-language markets.
    [Show full text]
  • Characters and Events of Roman History, from Csar to Nero
    LIBRARY UMtVEMSITY Of CAUFORNIA 1 SANOtEGO J Digitized by the Internet Arciiive in 2007 with funding from IVIicrosoft Corporation http://www.archive.org/details/characterseventsOOferriala ^- uJ^ THE GREATNESS AND DECLINE OF ROME BY GUGLIELMO FERRERO Authorited Translation 5 vols. 8vo. Each |2. 50 net Vol. I.—The Empire Builders Vol. II.—Julius Caesar Vol. III. —The Fall of an Aristocracy Vol. IV.—Rome and Egypt Vol. V. —The Republic of Augustus CHARACTERS AND EVENTS OF ROMAN HISTORY From Caesar to Nero (60 B.C.-70 A.D.) AMthorited Translation by Frances Lance Ftrrero 8vo. \e^i6i Characters and Events of Roman History From Caesar to Nero iTbe XoweU Xectuces of 1908 By Guglielmo Ferrero, Litt. D. Author of "The Greatness and Decline of Rome," etc. Translated by Frances Lance Ferrero G. P. Putnam's Sons New York and London ^be ftniclierbocher press 1909 Copyright, iqoq BY G. P. PUTNAM'S SONS Published, May, 1909 Reprinted, October, 1909 «be fmicketbociiec fhress, «ew Vwk PREFACE IN the spring of 1906, the College de France in- * vited me to deliver, during November of that year, a course of lectures on Roman history. I accepted, giving a r6sum6, in eight lectures, of the history of the government of Augustus from the end of the civil wars to his death ; that is, a r6sum6 of the matter contained in the fourth and fifth volumes of the English edition of my work. The Greatness and Decline of Rome. Following these lectures came a request from M. Emilio Mitre, Editor of the chief newspaper of the Argentine Republic, the Nacion, and one from the Academia Brazileira de Lettras of Rio de Janeiro, to deliver a course of lectures in the Argentine and Brazilian capitals.
    [Show full text]
  • The Greatness and Decline of Rome Volume 4
    FHE GREATNES AND. DECLIN OF ROME GOG LI ELMO THE GREATNESS AND DECLINE OF ROME THE GREATNESS AND DECLINE OF ROME By GUGLIELMO FERRERO I. THE EMPIRE-BUILDERS II. JULIUS CAESAR III. THE FALL OF AN ARISTOCRACY The Press on Volumes I. and II. "The characters are made to live upon their stage and their innermost souls are laid bare with the ruthless penetration of Balzac ; situations and classes are summed up in incisive para- graphs. Whatever be the reader's opinion, he cannot help being struck by the force with which Signer Ferrero puts his argument and the admirable way in which he supports it from authorities. Other merits in the work can only be named the insight into the social life and the psychology of the Roman people, the full justice done to Lucullus and Cicero, and the excellent appendices. Mr. Zimmern has done his work most admirably, and has succeeded in reproducing, in a great measure, the vivacity of the original." Times. " The reader who starts to read the young Italian scholar's book will find a fresh and vigorous treatment of a great subject, with a new handling of the evidence. The whole book is very stimulat- A thenteum. ing."" Everywhere he gives us the impression of mastery of his com- plicated subject. The great merit of the book is that it is not only scholarly, but also thoroughly readable. History is meant to be read, and no amount of laborious exposition by the most pains- taking specialist is of any use, if the specialist cannot write." Notes and Queries.
    [Show full text]
  • The Women of the Cæsars
    Class^ Uo| i^^Ji- BookJlj^ COIYRIGHT DEPOSIT. MJii*** THE WOMEN OF THE C.ESARS ng by Andr6 Castaigue LIVIA, THE WIFE OF AUGUSTUS, SUPERINTENDING THE WEAVING OF ROBES FOR HER FAMILY THE WOMEN OF THE CiESARS BY GUGLIELMO FERRERO NEW YORK THE CENTURA CO. MCMXI v^^ ^<< <{H Copyright, 1911, by The Century Co. Published, October, 1911 TheDeVinne Press ©CI.A297756 CONTENTS I Woman and Marriage in Ancient Rome .......... 3 II LiviA and Julia 46 III The Daughters of Agrippa . 96 IV Tiberius and Agrippina 152 V The Sisters of Caligula and the Marriage of Messalina . .212 VI Agrippina, the Mother of Nero . 276 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Livia, the Wife of Augustus, Superintending the Weaving of Robes for her Family Frontispiece PAGE A Roman Marriage Custom 8 Eumachia, a Pubhc Priestess of Ancient Rome 13 The Forum under the Caesars 22 The So-called Bust of Cicero 28 Julius Caesar 37 The Sister of M. Nonius Balbus 43 Livia, the Mother of Tiberius, in the Costume of a Priestess 49 The Young Augustus 60 The Emperor Augustus 66 A Silver Denarius of the Second Triumvirate 71 Silver Coin Bearing the Head of Julius Caesar 71 The Great Paris Cameo 82 vii LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS PAGE etavia, the Sister of Augustus 87 A Reception at Livia's Villa . 94 Mark Antony 103 Antony and Cleopatra 110 Tiberius, Elder Son of Livia and Stepson of ^ Augustus 115 Drusus, the Younger Brother of Tiberius . 126 Statue of a Young Roman Woman . 131 A Roman Girl of the Time of the Caesars . 138 Costumes of Roman Men, Women, and Chil- .
    [Show full text]
  • Italy's Colonial Future According to Giovanni Pascoli
    Italy’s Colonial Future According to Giovanni Pascoli Adriana Baranello Pascoli Politico: the Historical and Ideological Context At the hundredth anniversary of Italy’s invasion of Libya, as the effects of European imperialism continue to reverberate in Africa, it seems an especially appropriate time to reconsider the texts that helped shape the discourse in that era and to reflect on the continuing effects that they exert. In this context, I present the translated text of Giovanni Pascoli’s “La grande proletaria si è mossa.”1 Pascoli was a poet, prose writer, pedagogue, political activist and public speaker who assumed a prominent role in the public debates that surrounded both the 1911 Italian invasion of Libya and the nation’s projected colonial future in the Mediterranean. Pascoli’s interventionist politics were not unique in Italian intellectual circles, which were intimately involved in the run-up to the 1911 war (Cunsolo 1965). Pascoli’s rhetoric, like that of Enrico Corradini and Gabriele D’Annunzio, helped to shape the public mind and to create feelings of patriotism, of fraternal pride, and of a shared destiny in a still emotionally divided nation.2 The work, which originated as a public oration, was delivered at the Teatro di Barga near Bologna on November 26, 1911 at a benefit for the dead and the wounded of the Libyan war (Pascoli 1946). The text is both densely poetic and stridently ideological. Although rarely analyzed in any detail, this text has been widely cited in discussions of Pascoli’s political ideology and of the political discourse in Italy in the years preceding World War I.3 Pascoli’s rhetoric was timely; the process of building loyalty to the Savoy kings and to the Italian state had been ongoing throughout his lifetime.
    [Show full text]
  • COPING with IOWCE Essays from the Copenhagen Symposium
    COPING WITH IOWCE essays from the Copenhagen Symposium edited by Morris Beja & Shari Benstock COPING WITH JOYCE Essays from the Copenhagen Symposium EDITED BY Morris Beja and Shari Benstock Coping with Joyce brings together eighteen scholars who contributed to making the 1986 International Joyce Symposium a land­ mark in Joycean studies. Their diverse ap­ proaches to the intricate Joyce corpus, from Dubliners and Exiles to Ulysses and Fin­ negans Wake, reflect the important changes that have taken place in the scholarly world during recent years, as traditional and post- traditional theorists and critics have found in James Joyce a major area of investigation and interpretation. Five major addresses of­ fer a litany of perspectives: historical, bio­ graphical, cultural, thematic, linguistic, textual, and sexual. These perspectives are further developed in the subsequent critical studies. Coping with Joyce provides a cross-section of the latest in James Joyce studies, the most recent views of several well-established Joyce scholars and the work of some newer critics in the field. Morris Beja is Professor of English at the Ohio State University and author of several works of literary criticism, including Epi­ phany in the Modern Novel. Shari Benstock is Professor of English at the University of Miami (Florida) and author of several books, including Women of the Left Bank: Paris 1900-1940. COPING WITH JOYCE Woodcut by Sid Chafetz, 1978. COPING WITH JOYCE Essays from the Copenhagen Symposium Edited by MORRIS BEJA and SHARI BENSTOCK Ohio State University Press Columbus ACKNOWLEDGMENT The editors wish to thank Dennis Bingham for his help before the Copenhagen Symposium, and in the preparation of this volume.
    [Show full text]
  • Characters and Events of Roman History
    Characters and events of Roman History Guglielmo Ferrero The Project Gutenberg EBook of Characters and events of Roman History by Guglielmo Ferrero This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.net Title: Characters and events of Roman History Author: Guglielmo Ferrero Release Date: August 17, 2004 [EBook #13208] Language: English Character set encoding: ASCII *** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ROMAN HISTORY *** Produced by Ted Garvin, S.R.Ellison and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. CHARACTERS AND EVENTS OF ROMAN HISTORY FROM CAESAR TO NERO THE LOWELL LECTURES OF 1908 BY GUGLIELMO FERRERO, LITT.D. AUTHOR OF "THE GREATNESS AND DECLINE OF ROME," ETC. TRANSLATED BY FRANCES LANCE FERRERO [Illustration] The Chautauqua Press CHAUTAUQUA, NEW YORK [Copyright deleted] By G.P. Putnam's Sons Fifth Printing The Chautauqua Print Shop Chautauqua, N.Y. PREFACE In the spring of 1906, the College de France invited me to deliver, during November of that year, a course of lectures on Roman history. I accepted, giving a resume, in eight lectures, of the history of the government of Augustus from the end of the civil wars to his death; that is, a resume of the matter contained in the fourth and fifth volumes of the English edition of my work, _The Greatness and Decline of Rome_. Following these lectures came a request from M. Emilio Mitre, Editor of the chief newspaper of the Argentine Republic, the _Nacion_, and one from the _Academia Brazileira de Lettras_ of Rio de Janeiro, to deliver a course of lectures in the Argentine and Brazilian capitals.
    [Show full text]
  • Reviews and Criticisms
    Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology Volume 7 | Issue 1 Article 12 1916 Reviews and Criticisms Follow this and additional works at: https://scholarlycommons.law.northwestern.edu/jclc Part of the Criminal Law Commons, Criminology Commons, and the Criminology and Criminal Justice Commons Recommended Citation Reviews and Criticisms, 7 J. Am. Inst. Crim. L. & Criminology 139 (May 1916 to March 1917) This Book Review is brought to you for free and open access by Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology by an authorized editor of Northwestern University School of Law Scholarly Commons. REVIEWS AND CRITICISMS. CESARE LOMBRoSO; STORIA DELLA VITA E DELLE OPERE NARRATA DALLA FIGLIA. (CAESAR LOMBROSO; STORY OF HIS LIFE AND HIS WORK WRITTEN BY His DAUGHTER). By Gina Lombroso- Ferrero.Bocca, Turin, Italy, 1915. Pp. 435 with numerous photo- graphs and illustrations. Cesare Lombroso was born in Verona, Italy, November 6th, 1835. He was the son of Argonne Lombroso and Zefora Levi who were wealthy Hebrews coming of distinguished and ancient lineage. His parents lived with his maternal grandfather until this relative died. At the time of his grandfather's death his parents were visiting his mother's relatives at Cheiri. Cesare Lombroso who was then five years old was then intrusted to the care of his uncle, David Levi, with whom he remained three years. David Levi taught him to read and write, gave him lessons in poetry and instilled into his childish mind thoughts and ambitions concerning liberty and politics which had a marked influence on Lom- broso's character throughout his life.
    [Show full text]
  • The United States of Europe
    © 2011 Salvatore Pappalardo ALL RIGHTS RESERVED THE UNITED STATES OF EUROPE: MUSIL, SVEVO, JOYCE AND THE LITERARY INVENTION OF A POSTCOLONIAL COMMUNITY by SALVATORE PAPPALARDO A dissertation submitted to the Graduate School – New Brunswick Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey In partial fulfillment of the requirements For the degree of Doctor of Philosophy Graduate Program in Comparative Literature Written Under the direction of Professor Fatima Naqvi And approved by _________________________________ _________________________________ _________________________________ _________________________________ New Brunswick, New Jersey MAY, 2011 ABSTRACT OF THE DISSERTATION The United States of Europe: Musil, Svevo, Joyce and the Literary Invention of a Postcolonial Community By SALVATORE PAPPALARDO Dissertation Director: Professor Fatima Naqvi This dissertation is a comparative study of literary Europeanism in the late-Habsburg Empire. The biographies and aesthetic projects of Robert Musil, Italo Svevo and James Joyce are deeply embedded in the multinational fabric of the Austrian-Hungarian Empire, and their novels become part of what might be defined as a ―transnational Habsburg literary canon.‖ Their works create a highly politicized, fictional projection of multicultural Austria–and by extension, of a multicultural Europe–anchored in the polyglot border town Trieste. The primary texts I examine are Musil‘s The Man without Qualities (Der Mann ohne Eigenschaften), published between 1930 and 1942, Svevo‘s 1923 novel Zeno’s Conscience (La Coscienza di Zeno), and Joyce‘s Finnegans Wake of 1939. I read these texts against the background of Austrian history and in combination with current theoretical debates on nationalism. I argue that the origins of a cultural and political Europeanism in the Habsburg Empire can be traced back to forms of early modern regional patriotism, which was divorced from national identity and characterized by loyalty to the local ii traditions of linguistically and culturally heterogeneous territories or cities.
    [Show full text]
  • Italians and the Invention of Race: the Poetics and Politics of Difference in the Struggle Over Libya, 1890-1913
    Italians and the Invention of Race: The Poetics and Politics of Difference in the Struggle over Libya, 1890-1913 Lucia Re 1. Race and Italian identity The manifestations of racism and xenophobia in Italy since the 1990s, especially in response to the new waves of immigration from “the other side” of the Mediterranean, have prompted scholars and cultural critics to take up once again the question of the role of race in Italian history. 1 Once thought to be only a temporary aberration of the Fascist era and essentially alien to the Italian “character,” racism has emerged as a recurrent trait in the behavior and cultural assumptions of Italians, including some of its most prominent political leaders. It is a trait that can arguably be traced back to the nineteenth century, even before the country’s unification. 2 The myth of the “good Italian” finally seems to have crumbled, while race-oriented studies have started to unveil an Italian “tradition” of racism that most textbook accounts of Italian history had long obfuscated or entirely elided. Yet even as racism re-emerges, and is sanctioned by discriminatory laws and policies against immigrants, current political discourse continues to minimize it, while downplaying or denying the historic faults of Italian colonialism and resuscitating the proverbial myth of Italian kindness and moral superiority. 3 The contemporary 1 This study is part of a book in progress about Italy and Africa in the modern and modernist Italian literary imagination and cultural identity, from d’Annunzio to Ennio Flaiano’s Tempo di uccidere (1947). I would like to thank the anonymous peer-review readers of this study for their useful comments.
    [Show full text]
  • Cesare T. Lombroso
    Intellectuals Displaced from Fascist Italy Firenze University Press 2019- Cesare T. Lombroso Go to personal file Considered today among the founding fathers of child neurology, Cesare Link to other connected Lives on Lombroso was a student when in 1939, immediately following the the move: promulgation of the racial laws, he left, alone, for the United States, like his Roberto Bolaffio sister and his cousins. There, he spent years that were decisive for his Giuseppe Borgese Guglielmo Ferrero education, at Johns Hopkins Medical School, and for his political development Leo Ferrero among anti-fascist exiles and in the American youth movement. As soon as Nina Ferrero Raditsa Nino Levi his father returned as a professor to the University of Genoa in 1946, he Gina Lombroso Ferrero returned too, bringing his young wife and their first child to Italy. Nora Lombroso Rossi After five years, they crossed the ocean again. And so he did, many times, Ugo Lombroso Renato Poggioli between two countries and two careers, which were not parallel: in Italy, he Bogdan Raditsa Renzo Ravà possessed the qualifications for a chair in a discipline that was not his and, in Bruno Benedetto Massachusetts, he was professor at Harvard Medical School and director of a Rossi Gaetano Salvemini prestigious international center on epilepsy at Boston Children’s Hospital. An anti-fascist family Cesare Lombroso was born on 9 October 1917 in Rome, where his father Ugo was pursuing his university career at the Institute of Physiology, and was given the important name of his paternal grandfather, the criminal anthropologist Cesare Lombroso (1835-1909), a physician and psychiatrist.
    [Show full text]