2019 Calendar of Events, Italy
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
And Bernardo Bertolucci's 1900
The “Betrayed Resistance” in Valentino Orsini’s Corbari (1970) and Bernardo Bertolucci’s 1900 (1976) Dominic Gavin The connections between Italian film and history have been the object of renewed attention in recent years. A number of studies have provided re-readings of Italian cinema, especially from the perspective of public memory. Charting the interrelations of cinema, the public use of history, and historiography, these studies include reevaluations of the cinema of the Resistance, the war film, the Holocaust and the Fascist dictatorship.1 The ongoing debates over Resistance memory in particular—the “never-ending liberation,” in the words of one historian—have provided a motive for reconsidering popular cultural productions as vehicles of collective perceptions of the past.2 If Italian film studies came relatively late to the issues of cinema and public memory, this approach has now become mainstream.3 In this essay, I am concerned with films on the Resistance during the 1970s. These belong to a wider grouping of contemporary cinematic productions that deal with the Fascist dictatorship and antifascism. These films raise a series of critical questions. How did the general film field contribute to the wider processing of historical memory, and how did it relate to political violence in Italy?4 To what extent did the work of Italian filmmakers participate in the “new discourse” of international cinema in the 1970s concerning the treatment of Nazism and the occupation,5 or to what extent were filmmakers engaged in reaffirming populist -
EVENTI Il Centro Storico Si Attraversa in Quindici Minuti: Camminare Fa Bene E, Alzando Lo Sguardo, Si Apprezza La Bellezza Attorno
Benvenuti a Firenze! Vi auguro un lieto soggiorno nella nostra città. E’ di noi tutti perché è patrimonio dell’umanità; sentitevi a casa e amatela. Fiorenza, la città del fiore, culla del Rinascimento. Facciamola rinascere ogni giorno, riscopriamo i talenti e la creatività che ne hanno fatto la gloria e che continuano a sbocciare. Abbiamo liberato dal traffico e restituito a cittadini e visitatori luoghi importanti: piazza Duomo, piazza Pitti, via Tornabuoni. Con oltre 6 ettari di nuove pedonalizzazioni, diventiamo un modello di città sostenibile, bella e vivibile nello stesso tempo. EVENTI Il centro storico si attraversa in quindici minuti: camminare fa bene e, alzando lo sguardo, si apprezza la bellezza attorno. Nel 2011 è nata la Firenze Card, che permette di visitare 50 musei senza fretta, evitando code e prenotazioni, e di viaggiare sui bus. Abbiamo dato una nuova meravigliosa casa al Maggio Musicale Fiorentino inaugurando il APRILE 2012 Nuovo Teatro dell’Opera. Il 2012 è l’anno di Amerigo, un’occasione non solo per ricordare i 500 anni dalla morte di Vespucci ma soprattutto “per dare un nome al futuro”. Abbiamo allargato la superficie espositiva del museo di Palazzo Vecchio inaugurando una nuova sezione chiamata “Tracce di Firenze”: diamo più spazio all’arte e alla storia della nostra città con mostre permanenti ed esposizioni temporanee. Aprile è un mese ricco di cultura e di sport, ma è anche periodo pasquale. Quest’anno per la prima volta la cerimonia dell’accensione del fuoco con le pietre del Santo Sepolcro sarà celebrata la sera precedente allo Scoppio del carro. Per chiudere: torna la notte fiorentina più lunga dell’anno, il 30 aprile vivremo un’altra Notte Bianca facendoci coinvolgere in spettacoli di luce, musica e installazioni artistiche nelle piazze di Firenze. -
Full Name Field Dates Project Title Abbondanza, Roberto History 1964
Full Name Field Dates Project Title Abbondanza, Umanesimo giuridico, giovinezza di history 1964/1965 Roberto Andrea Alciato George Eliot, the Florentine Abbott, Ruth literature 2016/2017 Renaissance, and the History of Scholarship Literary criticism of the Hungarian Acs, Pal literature 1993/1994 Renaissance Addona, Victoria art history 2015/2016 Dissemination of the Manner of the Adelson, Candace art history 1976/1977 1st School of Fontainebleau as evidenced in 16th-c Italian art The Bolognese villa in the age of Aksamija, Nadja art history 2012/2013 Cardinal Gabriele Paleotti I Disegni di Michelangelo per il Alberio, Elena art history 2017/2018 Cristo Risorto: Problemi di committenza e sviluppi iconografici Histoire de la dépose des peintures Albers, Geraldine art history 2001/2002 murales en Italie. Mémoire des lieux, voyage de oeuvres The humanist and his dog: the social and anthropological aspects of Almasi, Gabor literature 2006/2007 scholarly dogkeeping in the Italian Renaissance American Drawing, Renaissance Anania, Katie art history 2017/2018 Historiography, and The Remains of Humanism in the 1960s 1. A monograph on Giovanni Bellini 2. An exhibition on late Titian to Anderson, Jaynie art history 2000/2001 travel to Canberra and Melbourne, Australia A biography of Giovanni Morelli Anderson, Jaynie art history 2008/2009 (1816-1891) 'Florentinis ingeniis nihil ardui est': Andreoli, Ilaria art history 2011/2012 The Florentine Illustrated Book (1490-1550) Andreoni, Benedetto Varchi lettore di Dante e literature 2007/2008 Annalisa Petrarca all'Accademia Fiorentina The employment of 'religiosi' by Andrews, Frances history 2004/2005 governments of early Renaissance Italy Religion and Public Life in Late Andrews, Frances history 2010/2011 Medieval Italy Andrews, Noam history 2015/2016 Full Name Field Dates Project Title Genoese Galata. -
Virtual Spring Fayre Red Zone Restrictions Book Club EJSU
Welcome to the April Newsletter! With Minimum Manning and Easter fast approaching this newsletter is coming to you a little bit early! March has been a funny one with zones changing and children returning to Virtual School. Hopefully the warmer weather of April will bring a bit of light relief and the chance to get back out of our homes and into the wider community once again. We have the Virtual Spring Fayre competitions running for the beginning of the month which I hope that the whole con- tingent will get involved in, there’s something there for everyone. Also, with changes to EJSU regulations there is a big push for more volunteers for events and groups. Further details for all of this can be found further down the newsletter. I hope that everyone enjoys their leave over the Easter period and that the Easter Bunny is generous this year Take care and stay safe. Virtual Spring Fayre I have previously sent out details of the Spring Fayre Com- petitions, I will include them again at the bottom of the Post newsletter. This is an opportunity for the whole communi- ty to be involved in some light hearted fun, with the added As with the last newsletter, currently there is still a parcel bonus of some prizes! There are categories that are just ban in place from BFPO Northolt for our location. Letters for the children, but plenty of others for adults as well. The entry deadline is April 8, the panel of EJSU CLO judges will can still be sent back to the UK through the BFPO system announce the winners in the week commencing April 12. -
Florence City Guide ®
FLORENCE CITY GUIDE ® SEPTEMBER 2019 WWW.WHEREITALIA.COM/FLORENCE The Grandof Art Gala st Kick-off for the 31 Biennial Antiques Fair SIGHTSEEING | MUSEUMS | SHOPPING | DINING | ENTERTAINMENT | MAPS Florence September 2019 VIA SESTESE 14 INSIDER TIPS 32 DINING CASTELLO SESTO the guide apertura SIGHTSEEING FIORENTINO SVINCOLO SESTO FIORENTINO V I A 20 SHOPPING S AUTOSTRADA FIRENZE-MARE E S VI VIA XXV APRILE T A E VIA DEL CHIUSO DEI PAZZI G S E In The Merchant of . DUPRÈ VIA REGINALDO GIULIANI VIA DELLE PANCHE Venice boutique you can VIA ANDREA COSTA immerse yourself in the VIA ANDREA COSTA VIA G. DUPRÈ Teatro Romano brand’s new, enveloping VIA FAENTINA VIA DE' PERFETTI RICASOLI VIA CARLO DEL GRECO Museo Bandini VIA MARINI VIA PORTIGIANI Cattedrale di San Romolo fragrance, which draws SCONI BO STRAD A PROV INCIALE 54 DEI PIAZZA PIAZZA G.GARIBALDI MINO DA FIESOLE its inspiration from a VIA MASSICINI V. LUCCHESE A VIALE XI AGOSTO LUC V VIA SANT’APPOLINAR AUTOSTRADA FIRENZE-MARE fascinating animal. I VIA S.CHIARA A E VIA SALVADOR ALLENDE F R À VIALE SAN G VIALE GAETANO PIERACCINI I VIA GI O ULI AENTINA V O CACCIN A N I N VIA F SOLANA I PONTE D A 32 FOOD&WINE VIA DELLA BADIA DEI ROCCETTINI F I NUOVO E VIA REGINALDO GIULIANI S H I A F I E VIA DELLE PANCHE O FIESOLE L ALLA CC E D PIAZZA E Aeroporto A stay at Eataly Firenze T Amerigo V I A V E T ENRICO O Vespucci PIGNONE BADIA L MATTEI VIA MANTELLINI ' A N G E VIA PRATESE L I C is the ideal solution for PIZZERIA O TOP BRANDS V I A U G O C O R S I SAN DOMENICO V. -
April 2019 P&F Newsletter LONG
WELCOME Easter fills Italy with colour and pageantry, as the spring flowers reflect the honouring of rebirth and renewal. Enjoy time with your loved ones, sharing special easter bread and eggs with surprises inside. Music and art fill the city as Tuscany warms up beneath the sunshine, and the nights remain cool. Revel in laughter for April Fools Day and seek out the gardens of Florence as they come into bloom, with best wishes from SUZANNE, CORSO, BEI, LESLIE, VANNI, ANNA PIA, RAFFAELLA, AND MARISA. JUMP TO YOUR FAVOURITE SECTION PITCHER AND FLACCOMIO PICKS BEST OF THE REST EXHIBITIONS DANCE AND THEATRE FILMS, LECTURES, AND PRESENTATIONS MUSIC NETWORKS AND SOCIAL GATHERINGS OPEN MIC NIGHTS MARKETS EXHIBITIONS OUTSIDE OF FLORENCE FUN, FESTIVALS, AND FOOD OUTSIDE OF FLORENCE !1 Pitcher & Flaccomio Newsletter Copyright 2017 Direttore responsabile Raffaella Galamini - Pubblicazione con iscrizione n. 5697 del 23\01\09 presso il Tribunale di Firenze. Pitcher & Flaccomio - Lungarno della Zecca Vecchia 30 - 50122 - Florence - Italy • Phone +39 055 2343354 • Fax +39 055 5609916 Office Hours: 9am - 5pm (+1.00 GMT) PITCHER & FLACCOMIO PICKS FOR APRIL BEST EVENT: SCOPPIO DEL CARRO ON EASTER SUNDAY. April 21 The Scoppio del Carro, The Explosion of the Cart, has been celebrated in Florence for more than 350 years, dating back to the First Crusade. A thirty-foot carved and painted wooden cart (the present version is over 150 years old) is pulled by flower-bedecked white oxen from Porta al Prato to Piazza del Duomo. A very special Easter Sunday mass is held, a ritual that includes one of the best daytime fireworks displays in the world. -
Alfredo's Holy Orders
Alfredo's Holy Orders You may wonder how Latin got me into a very dangerous mission in the later stages of the Resistance, as a young partisan in 1945? It all started with my family troubles. I was born in Pavia, just south of Milan, in 1926. My parents ran a public house on the canal. Unfortunately, they didn’t get on well together, so before we were 16, my sister and I were taken from them and placed in two different industrial schools, on the order of a judge. I ended up in an institution called “Artigianelli”, where I went to school, learned skills and served as an altar boy. And that’s how I learned my Latin. When the war came, and as I turned 18, I was faced with a very tough decision: enlist in Mussolini’s fascist army, or face deportation to Nazi Germany. I chose the first option, as I wasn’t really keen on travelling — while I longed to have a gun to take with me to the nearest rebel camp. That’s how, in January 1944, I grabbed my army issue rifle, bayonet and dagger, went AWOL, and joined the 52nd Garibaldi Assault Brigade on the mountains above Lake Como. (The 52nd is the partisan brigade that captured Mussolini as he tried to escape to Switzerland. But all that happened after I’d been dispatched to a new destination.) I spent 12 months there. There was fighting, acts of bravery and fear. But above all there was cold, and hunger. Real hunger. We lived for months on end on acorn broth: That’s all we had to keep us poor anti-fascist rebels (barely) alive. -
2004 Italian Liberation Day Commemoration Report
TTHHEE NNEEWW JJEERRSSEEYY IITTAALLIIAANN aanndd IITTAALLIIAANN AAMMEERRIICCAANN HHEERRIITTAAGGEE CCOOMMMMIISSSSIIOONN REPORT and PROGRAM for the April 24, 2004 Italian Liberation Day Commemoration To Celebrate the Bonds of Friendship Between Italy and New Jersey Overview of 2004 Liberation Day The New Jersey Italian and Italian American Heritage Commission, the Office of the Governor of New Jersey and its community partners hosted a successful commemoration of Italian Liberation Day on April 24, 2004 at the Governor’s Mansion in Princeton, New Jersey. The celebration of Italian Liberation Day is designed to remember the shared sacrifices and the bonds of friendship between the citizens of Italy, the United States and the State of New Jersey. The event is the only statewide commemoration of its kind in the State of New Jersey and has been organized for the past several years. Commission Partners As the event is intended for the Italian American community of the entire State, the Office of the Governor reached out to various Italian American organizations for planning, financial and logistical support. This year six organizations joined the Commission: the New Jersey Italian American Heritage Foundation, the Coccia Institute, the Elizabeth Chapter of UNICO, the Bianchi Lodge of the Order of the Sons of Italy, the Ribera Italian American Club, and the Sicilian Federation. Selection of Speakers As this event is a formal statewide event, speakers were carefully selected for the ceremonies. In addition to Governor McGreevey, who hosted the event, Former Governors Donald DiFrancesco and James Florio were invited to represent the New Jersey Government, while Consul General of Italy Antonio Bandini was invited to represent the Italian Government in New Jersey. -
War, Resistance, and Memorialization in Tuscany, 1943-1945
Georgia Southern University Digital Commons@Georgia Southern Electronic Theses and Dissertations Graduate Studies, Jack N. Averitt College of Spring 2011 Heroes or Terrorists? War, Resistance, and Memorialization in Tuscany, 1943-1945 Lynda Lamarre Follow this and additional works at: https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/etd Recommended Citation Lamarre, Lynda, "Heroes or Terrorists? War, Resistance, and Memorialization in Tuscany, 1943-1945" (2011). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. 596. https://digitalcommons.georgiasouthern.edu/etd/596 This thesis (open access) is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate Studies, Jack N. Averitt College of at Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of Digital Commons@Georgia Southern. For more information, please contact [email protected]. HEROES OR TERRORISTS? WAR, RESISTANCE, AND MEMORIALIZATION IN TUSCANY, 1943-1945 by LYNDA LAMARRE (Under the Direction of Charles S. Thomas) ABSTRACT This thesis will delve into the unfolding of the Italian Resistance, from an underground association to a militant organization, which aided and facilitated the Allied advance to northern Italy. Particular emphasis will be placed on the actions and consequences of the Resistance in rural Tuscany and their affect on the local population. It will examine the changing views of Italian society, from the immediate post-war era and the decades that followed, with a brief examination of the cinematographic influences on the social views. It will include the debate over who deserves a commemorative monument and the divided and changed memory regarding the Resistance. Finally, the author will examine the current debate over the most appropriate way to memorialize the complicated and tumultuous struggle to free Italy over sixty years ago. -
FLORENCE Streets Athousandtalesofthepast:Medievaldyers Coloured Evokes Woolin Eve Beinghurledoutofparadise
© Lonely Planet Publications 92 lonelyplanet.com FLORENCE •• History 93 FLORENCE FLORENCE HISTORY and tact in dealing with artists saw the likes of Florence’s history stretches to the time of the Alberti, Brunelleschi, Luca della Robbia, Fra Florence Etruscans, who based themselves in Fiesole. Angelico, Donatello and Filippo Lippi flourish FLORENCE FLORENCE Julius Caesar founded the Roman colony of under his patronage. Florentia around 59 BC, making it a strate- In 1439 the Church Council of Florence, gic garrison on the narrowest crossing of the aimed at reconciling the Catholic and East- Arno so he could control the Via Flaminia ern churches, brought to the city Byzantine Return time and again and you still won’t see it all. Stand on a bridge over the Arno several linking Rome to northern Italy and Gaul. scholars and craftsmen, who they hoped After the collapse of the Roman Empire, would impart the knowledge and culture of times in a day, and the light, the mood and the view change every time. Surprisingly small Florence fell to invading Goths, followed by classical antiquity. The Council, attended as it is, this city is like no other. Cradle of the Renaissance and of the masses of globe- Lombards and Franks. The year AD 1000 by the pope, achieved nothing in the end, trotting tourists who flock here to feast on world-class art and extraordinary architecture, marked a crucial turning point in the city’s but it did influence what was later known as Florence (Firenze) is magnetic, romantic, unrivalled and too busy. A visit here is madness, fortunes when Margrave Ugo of Tuscany the Renaissance. -
Top10-Fun-Things-Tuscany-Winter.Pdf
TABLE OF CONTENTS 1 SKI, SLIDE, ROLL! Pg. 4 2 PAMPER YOURSELF WITH A HOT BATH Pg. 5 3 EXPERIENCE TUSCAN CUISINE Pg. 6 4 BOOK A NIGHT AT THE OPERA Pg. 7 5 HAVE A BREAK IN A HISTORIC CAFE Pg. 8 6 USE MUSEUMS AS YOUR PLAYGROUND Pg. 9 7 HOP ON SANTA CLAUS’ SLEIGH! Pg. 10 8 LIGHT UP WINTER DARKNESS Pg. 11 9 INDULGE WITH CHOCOLATE Pg. 12 10 IT’S CARNIVAL TIME! Pg. 13 * TIPS Pg. 14 Fancy a winter holiday among snowy mountains and spas, comfort food, opera concerts and museums? Or maybe are you dreaming about the Carnival parade of Viareggio, a fun cooking class or a cappuccino after a day of serious shopping? In any case, Tuscany is what you’re thinking about! 1 SKI, SLIDE, ROLL! There are lots of activities and sports that can be done in Tuscany SKIING, during the cold, snowy winter season. One of them is skiing. To prepare for snow season, you can find a list of all of the places to go skiing in Tuscany here. You can choose among large districts or smaller ski resorts, where SNOWBOARDING, the main activity is skiing but where you can also enjoy the natural BOBSLEDDING winter wonderland with snowshoes or trekking. Abetone is a paradise for skiing and snowboarding lovers. There is also a baby park and a nordic trail where you can even go bobsledding. AND MUCH MORE! In Cutigliano there is a trail for snow tubing; in Monte Amiata you can go on excursions into the forest; in Careggine, Casone di Profecchia and Passo delle Radici there are school camps, trails for experts, cross-country skiing and hiking routes in the snow for those equipped with crampons or snowshoes; finally, Zum Zeri ski resort with its baby park is ideal for families. -
Welcome to Ferrara
Welcome to Ferrara Version 2.0 – 24 April 2018 1 TABLE OF CONTENTS EMERGENCY PHONE NUMBERS .................................................................................................................... 4 COUNTRY CODE ................................................................................................................................................ 4 INFORMATION ON HOW TO USE THE PHONE .......................................................................................................... 4 INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................................................................. 5 ITALY ................................................................................................................................................................ 5 EMILIA ROMAGNA .............................................................................................................................................. 6 POGGIO RENATICO ............................................................................................................................................ 6 FERRARA .......................................................................................................................................................... 6 SHOPPING .......................................................................................................................................................... 7 CENTRO COMMERCIALES ..................................................................................................................................