Petrarchism: Competing Models for Early Modern Community Building (1400-1700)
WORKSHOP
Idee und Organisation: Prof. Dr. Bernhard Huss (Freie Universität Berlin) und Dr. Roland Béhar (École
Normale Supérieure-PSL, Paris)
Teilnehmer:innen: Prof. Dr. Thomas Borgstedt (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München), Dr. Giacomo Comiati (University of Oxford), Prof. Véronique Ferrer (Université Paris Nanterre), Dr. Jacopo Galavotti (Freie Universität Berlin/Università degli Studi di Padova), Prof. Dr. Andrew James Johnston (Freie Universität Berlin), Dr. Nicolas Longinotti (Freie Universität Berlin), Prof. Ignacio Navarrete (University of California, Berkeley), Prof. Dr. Paul Smith (Universiteit Leiden) und Prof. Dr. Eva Struhal (Università di Trento)
In the wake of Francesco Petrarch's self-stylisation as a point of reference for the formation of literary, philosophical and philological groups, communities of intellectuals emerge, first in Italy, then throughout Europe, that refer to certain aspects of Petrarch's authorial figure and parts of his Italian and Latin oeuvre. Petrarch serves as a model for pre-modern literary, aesthetic, philosophical, philological, historical and artistic concepts and projects.
The workshop’s aim is to analyse the phenomenon of Petrarchism in a broad sense of a multifaceted international, interlinguistic, intergeneric and, by including the question of Petrarchism in the visual arts, also intermedial dynamics, always under the specific aspect of the formation of temporary cultural communities.
In englischer Sprache
In Zusammenarbeit mit dem Exzellenzcluster EXC2020 „Temporal Communities“
Teilnahme in Präsenz und digital per WebEx möglich. Bitte senden Sie uns eine Mail (italzen@zedat.fu-berlin.de) für den Erhalt der Zugangsdaten.
PROGRAMM
Donnerstag, 09.11.2023
14.30 Uhr | Prof. Dr. Bernhard Huss (Freie Universität Berlin) und Dr. Roland Béhar (École Normale Supérieure-PSL, Paris) Begrüßung und Einführung |
15:00 Uhr - 16:00 Uhr |
Prof. Dr. Andrew James Johnston (Freie Universität Berlin) "Nailed in his chest": The Competing Temporalities of Chaucer's Petrarchism Dr. Nicolas Longinotti (Freie Universität Berlin) Humanistic Fractures. Erudite, Religious and Lyric Communities in the Quattrocento Commentaries on Petrarch's Rerum vulgarum fragmenta |
16:00 Uhr | Pause |
16:30 Uhr - 17:30 Uhr |
Dr. Jacopo Galavotti (Freie Universität Berlin/Università degli Studi di Padova) Four Ways to Use Petrarch: Read, Imitate, Dismantle, Explore Prof. Véronique Ferrer (Université Paris-Nanterre) Christian Use of Petrarchan Love Language in French Late Renaissance. The Emergence of a Religious Lyric Sociolect |
Freitag, 10.11.2023
9:00 Uhr - 10:00 Uhr |
Prof. Ignacio Navarrete (University of California, Berkeley) The Invention of a Petrarchist Community in Spain: The First Generation Dr. Roland Béhar (École Normale Supérieure-PSL, Paris) Petrarch, an Intellectual Authority in Spain, but for which Communities? (15th - 17th centuries) |
10:00 Uhr | Pause |
10:30 Uhr - 11:30 Uhr |
Dr. Giacomo Comiati (University of Oxford) Translations and Adaptations of Petrarch's Poems in Girolamo Cicala's Carmina (1649) Prof. Dr. Eva Struhal (Università di Trento) Antonio Malatesti as a Critic of the Arts. Petrarch and Giambattista Marino in Seventeenth-Century Florence |
11:30 Uhr | Pause |
14:00 Uhr - 15:00 Uhr |
Prof. Dr. Paul Smith (Universiteit Leiden) Dutch Petrarchism and Petrarch Reception during the Twelve Years' Truce (1609 - 1621) Prof. Dr. Thomas Borgstedt (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München) 17th-Century German Petrarchism between Satire and Sensibility |
Zeit & Ort
09.11.2023 - 10.11.2023
Raum L 115 (Seminarzentrum),
Freie Universität Berlin,
Habelschwerdter Allee 45