EARLY MODERN HISTORY
cod. 13094

Academic year 2024/25
2° year of course - Second semester
Professor
Paola VOLPINI
Academic discipline
Storia moderna (M-STO/02)
Field
"storia, archeologia e storia dell'arte"
Type of training activity
Characterising
60 hours
of face-to-face activities
12 credits
hub: PARMA
course unit
in ITALIAN

Learning objectives

The course intends to provide the student, within the framework of the European Descriptors for three-year degrees (Dublin descriptors), with the tools to develop knowledge and the ability to understand the founding processes of history, their meanings, their cultural role and of their social impact, through the study of history (1st Descriptor - Knowledge and understanding).
At the end of the course the student must be able to:

• apply this knowledge and understanding in addressing, with a professional approach and through the creation of arguments, various issues of the history of the early modern age from different aspects (political, religious, cultural, social) (2nd Descriptor - Knowledge and applied understanding skills);
• collect and autonomously interpret historical sources relating to the early modern age (3rd Descriptor - Autonomy of judgement);
• communicate information, ideas, problems and solutions on the history of the early modern age also in connection with the social contexts of reference to specialist and non-specialist interlocutors (4th Descriptor - Communication skills);
• develop further learning skills necessary to undertake subsequent studies with a high degree of autonomy in the historical sector (5th Descriptor - Ability to learn).

The minimum learning threshold means the student's ability to orient themselves in the field of history and its exegetical and methodological approaches, through knowledge of the founding processes of the early modern age, in relation to the previous and subsequent and connected periods to the various historical contexts of reference.

Prerequisites

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Course unit content

The course will be divided into two modules (Module a + Module b) of 6 credits each.

Module a.
In module A the course will address the key issues of early modern history from a political, economic, religious, cultural and social point of view through the analysis of historical processes, their historiographical interpretations and through a direct comparison with the sources, which will be read and discussed during the lessons. In this way, students will acquire the foundations of critical knowledge and the interpretative keys of historical research.

Module b.
Module b entitled Agents of diplomatic mediation in the modern age: ecclesiastics, men of letters, artists, travellers. It will consider the role of agents and mediators of politics, diplomacy and cultural exchange, central figures for growth and consolidation of social, political and cultural structures in the early modern age.

Full programme

Program for ATTENDING Students.
6 credit course: Module a.


Module a: 1+2+3

1. C. Capra, Storia moderna (1492-1848), Le Monnier (up to and including the chapter on the Congress of Vienna, chapter 26 or 27 depending on the edition).
2. P. Corrao, P. Viola, Introduzione agli studi di Storia, Rome, Donzelli, 2005.
3. Nel laboratorio della Storia. Una guida alle fonti dell’età moderna, Carocci, Rome, 2013 or subsequent editions: Chapters of S. Calonaci; A. Savelli, A. M. Cavarzere or from p. 169 on p. 235 and from 265 on p. 289.

NOT ATTENDING Students for the 6 credit course (Module a) must also bring the three chapters of Lavenia Bellabarba's book: V. Lavenia - M. Bellabarba, Introduzione alla storia moderna, Bologna, Il Mulino: chapters I, II, XII: I. Il pensiero del passato e l’idea di moderno; II. Misurare il tempo, and XII. Le stratificazioni sociali: norme e individui.

12 credit course: Module a+Module b.

Module b:4+5

4. Paola Volpini, Ambasciatori nella prima età moderna tra corti italiane ed europee, Rome, Sapienza University Press SUE, 2022.

5. The group of essays:

I. Marika Keblusek, Premessa, in “Quaderni Storici” 41, 122 (2) (2006), pp. 343–51;
II. Marika, Keblusek, Arens Luuk and Sabrina Corbellini, The intermediaries of the world of books in the early modern age, in “Quaderni Storici” 41, 122 (2) (2006), pp. 433–47;
III. Carlotta Brovadan, La «gita di Fiandra»: globi, libri e carte geografiche per Ferdinando II de’ Medici nella corrispondenza diplomatica di Giovan Battista Gondi (it will be uploaded on Elly);
IV.Barbara Furlotti, ‘Ambasciatori, nobili, religiosi, mercanti e artisti: alcune considerazioni sugli intermediari d’arte gonzagheschi’, in Raffaella Morselli, ed., Gonzaga. La ‘Celeste’ Galeria. L’esercizio del collezionismo, Milano: Skira, 2002, pp. 319-28 (it will be uploaded on Elly).



NOT ATTENDING Students of the 12 credit course (Module a+b) also: Maria Antonietta Visceglia, Roma papale e Spagna: diplomatici, nobili e religiosi tra due corti, Roma, Bulzoni, 2010.


NB. The exam program must be prepared in its entirety. Students who have prepared only part of the exam will not be admitted to the exam.
The exam bibliography may undergo changes which will be communicated at the beginning of the course. Sources and teaching material illustrated in class will be uploaded to Elly webpage

Bibliography

See the extended bibliography

Teaching methods

Lessons will take place in person. Where possible, students will be invited to actively participate during the analysis of the sources.

Assessment methods and criteria

Oral exam. On the basis of the number of participants, the possibility for students to carry out oral presentations will be evaluated during the course.
The exam is considered passed (18-23/30) if the student demonstrates, at a minimally sufficient level, knowledge of the key events and processes of early modern history, critically engaging with them, placing them accurately in space and time, expressing themselves in adequately correct Italian, and understanding the content of the primary sources discussed during the course lectures. Failure to meet these essential criteria results in a failing grade. The exam is considered passed (18-23/30) if the student achieves at least the minimum course objectives. An average score (24-27/30) is awarded to those who demonstrate a more than sufficient or good level of proficiency in the above-mentioned criteria. The highest scores (28-30/30 and honors) are reserved for students who achieve an excellent to outstanding level in the aforementioned evaluation indicators.

Other information

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2030 agenda goals for sustainable development

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