Alberto RIZZELLI

Position
PhD Student
Dottorato
CORSI SINGOLI DIPARTIMENTO DI STUDI UMANISTICI
37° Ciclo - Immatricolati nel 2021
Area tematica
Le tragedie dell’onore e dell’amore. Uxoricidi e altri omicidi di coppia nell'Italia della belle époque
Supervisore
Laura Schettini (Università di Padova, DISSGEA) / Matteo Millan (Univerità di Padova, DISSGEA) / Mark Seymour (Università di Otago)
E-mail
alberto.rizzelli@unive.it
977488@stud.unive.it
Website
www.unive.it/people/alberto.rizzelli (personal record)
Office
Department of Humanities
Website: https://www.unive.it/dep.humanities

Alberto Rizzelli (Lecce, 1997) is a PhD candidate in Modern History within the joint doctoral program in Historical, Geographical, and Anthropological Studies at the University of Padua and Ca’ Foscari University of Venice (39th cycle). His research project, titled Tragedies of Honor and Love: Uxoricide in Italy from Unification to the Great War, is supervised by Matteo Millan, Laura Schettini, and Mark Seymour.

In 2023, he earned his Master’s degree in Historical Sciences (110/110 summa cum laude) from the University of Padua with a thesis entitled “Art Thou not a Man?”: Adultery and Gender-based Violence in Plebeian Melodrama (1890-1905), under the supervision of Carlotta Sorba. This work was awarded the "Elisa Valent" Prize by the University of Padua, recognizing students who conducted thesis research abroad (2023).

He has completed study and research residencies at the European University Institute (2024), the University of Stockholm (2018-2019), and the University of Cambridge (2022).

He is a founding member of the permanent workshop Storie di Sessualità e Genere at the Department of Historical, Geographical, and Ancient World Sciences of the University of Padua (2021). Since 2023, he has appeared regularly as a historian jr. on the television program Passato e Presente (Rai 3, Rai Storia).

His research focuses on Liberal Italy and Belle Époque Europe through a social, cultural, and gendered lens. He specializes in the history of sexualities and gender-based violence in the public sphere (famous trials, theater, newspapers, etc.).