From Monday to Friday, BigItalyFocus provides an information overview, ranged from development aid to made in Italy
May 11 - Some argue that the Italian Latin lover no longer exists; yet people like Rudolph Valentino and Raoul Bova perpetuate the myth. The idea of an Italian Latin lover continues to fascinate and interest (as evidenced by Cristina Comencini’s recently-released film "Latin Lover") and it should be remembered that it is often associated to the image of Italy and Italians. Niamh Cullen from University College Dublin has analyzed and re-elaborated this concept in an exhibition that will open on Thursday, May 14 at 6:30pm the Italian Cultural Institute in Dublin. The project wants to discover the reality behind the stereotype, exploring how concepts like courtship, love and marriage changed in Italy in the 1950s and 1960s. The exhibition, which will remain open until Friday, May 22, is held in the Italian Cultural Institute in Dublin, which organized the exhibition with the support of the Irish Research Council. During the inauguration Professor Emanuela Scarpellini (University of Milan) will talk about "A changing society: Family and consumer culture in Italy in the 1950s-1960s." Scarpellini collaborates with newspapers, cultural magazines and newspapers. She has organized theatrical evenings of historical commemorations, collaborated in exhibitions and produced media products; she has participated in many radio and television programs about history and current affairs. Her interests concern mainly the cultural, political and economic life of the 20th century. (PO / red)
EMANUELA SCARPELLINI
Emanuela Scarpellini has a PhD in History of European Society and is Professor of Contemporary History within the Department of Historical Studies at the University of Milan. After obtaining her PhD, she continued her studies with a two-year post-doctoral fellowship in Milan, and abroad, particularly in the US, after winning a Fulbright research grant at Stanford and a research fellowship at the Rockefeller Archive Center in New York. Scarpellini was also Visiting Scholar at Cambridge University and Stanford University; as well as Kratter Visiting Professor at Stanford University and as a Fulbright visiting professor at Georgetown University in Washington. She is a Researcher since 1998 and Associate since 2002, and has taught at the University of Turin, then at the Department of Literature and Philosophy, and at the Master in Journalism of the University of Milan. She has received the Hagley Center for Scholarly Research Grant in 2005 and in 2008 for her research on culture and economics; the Article Newcomen Prize 2004 for the best paper of the year published in "Enterprise & Society"; the 2010-2011 fellowship of the Netherlands Institute for Advanced Study in Humanities and Social Sciences; and the Henry Belin du Pont Research Grant (2013).