EUROPEAN POLITICAL HISTORY
- Anno accademico
- 2021/2022 Programmi anni precedenti
- Titolo corso in inglese
- EUROPEAN POLITICAL HISTORY
- Codice insegnamento
- LM6390 (AF:365052 AR:187369)
- Lingua di insegnamento
- Inglese
- Modalità
- In presenza
- Crediti formativi universitari
- 6
- Livello laurea
- Laurea magistrale (DM270)
- Settore scientifico disciplinare
- M-STO/04
- Periodo
- I Semestre
- Anno corso
- 2
- Spazio Moodle
- Link allo spazio del corso
Inquadramento dell'insegnamento nel percorso del corso di studio
Risultati di apprendimento attesi
The ability to critically read a source analysed in class, and to connect it critically to the historical and cultural context;
The ability to understand the relationship between historical, political and cultural phenomena, and to operate a form of critical conceptualization;
The ability to critically locate in time and space the historical roots of the issues dealt with in class, in particular: democracy and anti-democracy, Fascisms and the thinking of the European right;
The critical knowledge of major historiographic interpretations of phenomena and the ability to compare them in relation to the context
As for practical and communicative skills, students are expected to have developed:
The ability to interact actively and profitably with the lessons and especially with the comments and analysis of texts;
The ability to present effectively, personally and appropriately the topics, during the oral exam.
The selection of topics of particular interest is encouraged, in order to be further researched for the final dissertation.
Prerequisiti
Contenuti
-The case study of Italian Fascism compared with interwar European fascisms;
- The genealogies of democracy and anti-democracy since the French Revolution to the mid-XXth Century: organicism, nationalism, imperialism, antisemitism, racism ;
- Postwar: Individualism, Inequality, Cold war and neo-liberal thought; Neo-fascism and new Right.
A detailed outline of the contents, method and timetable of classes will be presented at the beginning of the course.
Testi di riferimento
Please consider that, as long as the "dual" mode is applied for classes due to Covid restrictions, and recordings are made available on moodle to registered students during the first semester, all students are considered "attending" for the January exams. "Non-attending" students are therefore allowed only for the June and September exams.
All students (attending and non-attending) will study three same texts:
- Kevin Passmore, Fascism. A Very Short Introduction, Oxford University Press, 2002;
- Zeev Sternhell, Introduction to The Anti-Enlightenment Tradition, Yale University Press, 2020, pp. 1-40;
- Federico Finchelstein, From Fascism to Populism in History, University of California Press, 2017, Chapter 1, What is Fascism in History.
All three texts will be made accessible on Moodle for registered students.
Attending students will also study a selection of articles uploaded in Moodle. The selection will be made available during the semester.
Non-attending students will study either Sternhell or Finchelstein in full, together with: J.W. Mueller, Contesting Democracy. Political Ideas in Twentieth Century Europe, Yale University Press, 2013.
Modalità di verifica dell'apprendimento
Modalità di esame
Metodi didattici
Please consider that this is a "slides-free" course: that is, slides that summarise the main concepts dealt with in class will not be provided. One reason is that the skill of taking class notes is a highly specialised but underrated one, and MA students are thus encouraged to practise it. The other reason is that texts and sources will be presented and commented upon during classes, and students are warmly invited to actively participate with their contributions, instead of relying on pre-assembled outlines.
Disclaimer: please check Ca' Foscari policy for academic activity during Covid-19 emergency