COLD WAR HISTORY
- Academic year
- 2025/2026 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- STORIA DELLA GUERRA FREDDA
- Course code
- FM0628 (AF:568451 AR:325346)
- Teaching language
- Italian
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Academic Discipline
- M-STO/04
- Period
- 1st Semester
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
Pre-requirements
Contents
Referral texts
Manuals:
Odd Arne Westad, La guerra fredda globale. Gli Stati Uniti, L'Unione Sovietica e il mondo. Le relazioni internazionali del XX secolo (il Saggiatore 2022)
A biography or autobiography of your choice (other biographies to be agreed with the teacher):
Daniel Bensaid, An Impatient Life: A memoir (Verso 2015)
Antonio Bonelli, Fra Stalin e Tito. Cominformisti a Fiume, 1948-1956 (IRSREC FVG, 1994, only in Italian)
Luciana Castellina, Discovery of the World:A Political Awakening in the Shadow of Mussolini (Verso, 2015)
Lisa Milner, Swimming Against the Tide: A Biography of Freda Brown (Debbie Lee, 2017)
Angela Davis, Autobiography of a generation (any edition).
Patrick Karlsen, Vittorio Vidali. Vita di uno stalinista (1916-1956), (Il Mulino 2019, only in Italian)
Monika Krause, Queen of Condoms: Memoir of a Sex Educator in Revolutionary Cuba (Iliada editions 2022, available also in Spanish)
Sheila Fitzpatrick, A Spy in the Archives: A Memoir of Cold War Russia (I.B. Tauris 2015)
Eva Grlic, Memorie da un paese perduto (Scheiwiller 2005, only in Italian).
Miriam Mafai, Il lungo freddo. Storia di Bruno Pontecorvo, lo scienziato che scelse l'URSS (BUR, 2012, only in Italian)
Margaret Randall, I Never Left Home. Poet, Feminist, Revolutionary (Duke University Press, 2020).
Rossana Rossanda, The Comrade from Milan (Verso, 2005).
Jurgen Schreiber, The girl who avenged Che Guevara - Story of Monika Ertl (any edition, also available in Spanish)
Mokhtar Mokhtefi, I Was A French Muslim: Memories of an Algerian Freedom Fighter (Other Press, 2021).
Assessment methods
A sufficient grade (18-22/30) is given if the student is able to outline the historical context of the Cold War in broad terms, showing a basic understanding of the topics covered during the course; is able to deal with at least one country or key event of the period; provides a sufficient summary of the chosen biography.
A test is considered good (22-26/30) if the student is able to demonstrate a fair command of the historical context and its transformations, knows how to deal with some key countries or events of the period, and provides an exposition of the chosen biography that highlights the connections between the general context and individual experience.
The test is considered excellent (27-30 cum laude/30) if the student is able to explain the complexities of the historical period in question and its transformations over time, connecting the historical dynamics of the different countries and key events, and examining the chosen biography in depth in relation to the general historical context, providing specific examples based on biographical texts or primary sources.
Type of exam
Grading scale
Teaching methods
Further information
The topics covered in the lessons will be the following:
1. Introduction: History and historiography of the Cold War: perspectives of cultural history, social history and gender history
2. Trieste and the eastern border as a “microcosm” of the Cold War
3. The break between Yugoslavia and the Soviet Union and the battle between Stalinism and Titoism
4. The Korean War and women's pacifism in the atomic age
5. The United States and the Soviet Union, from the Second World War to the Cold War
6. McCarthyism and the “Iron Curtain”: the dissolution of the Congress of American Women
7. Decolonization and the Cold War
8. The Bandung Conference, Afro-Asian solidarity and the Non-Aligned Movement.
9. Third Worldism and Anti-Imperialism in the United States
10. Revolutionary Projects in Latin America Between Successes and Failures: From the Cuban Revolution (1959) to the Coup in Chile (1973)
11. Global 1968 and the New Feminist Movements between East and West
12. The UN Decade for Women and Feminisms between the First, Second and Third Worlds
13. 1989 and the End of the Cold War
14. Guest Lecture by an External Professor
15. Conclusions
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "International cooperation" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development