The unit consists of an introduction to history of 19th and 20th centuries with the aim of providing students, in a global and comparative perspective, with a picture of the great international economic, political, social and cultural transformations that have been happening in the two centuries by bringing the student closer to the use of documentary sources and to the complexity of historiographic interpretations.
The course deals with the great events of the 19th and 20th century history.
The unit gives students the fundamental knowledge of the history of the 19th and 20th century in order to acquire the ability to analyze and critically interpret, in a diachronic and synchronic key, the main problems of the contemporary age:
Knowledge of the Italian language. Basic geographical knowledge of the location of States.
The course will be held remotely through the Teams platform, code 22u6kb7
and Aulaweb.
Furthermore, regular face-to-face meetings are scheduled for freshmen, in a manner that will be detailed at the beginning of the lessons.
Specifically, the following topics will be covered:
Compulsory books:
Alberto Mario Banti, L'età contemporanea. Dalle rivoluzioni settecentesche all'imperialismo, Roma-Bari, Laterza, ultima edizione, a partire dal capitolo 13.
Alberto Mario Banti, L'età contemporanea. Dalla Grande Guerra a oggi, Roma-Bari, Laterza, ultima edizione.
One of the following texts:
Giovanni Bernardini, Parigi 1919. La Conferenza di pace, Bologna, il Mulino, 2019.
Gabriella Corona, Breve storia dell’ambiente in Italia, Bologna, il Mulino, 2015
G. Del Zanna, La fine dell’Impero Ottomano, Bologna, il Mulino, 2012.
D. Engel, L’Olocausto, Bologna, il Mulino, 2005.
Jörn Leonhard, Ulrike von Hirschhausen, Imperi e Stati nazionali nell’Ottocento, Bologna, il Mulino, 2014.
Ricevimento: Tuesday from 10 a.m to 12 a.m. by Teams and also by email.
MARIA ELISABETTA TONIZZI (President)
ANDREA CATANZARO
FEDERICO DONELLI
GUIDO LEVI
LARA PICCARDO
DANIELA PREDA
14 September 2020. Please see the DISPO website ("Didattica")
Oral exam. The exam is subdivided in two parts (one for the 19th and the other for the 20th century: both of them must be sufficient.
The achievement of the training objectives of the course is verified through two questions, one relating to the 19th century and the other to the 20th century. An additional question concerning the chosen reading indicated in the program.
The final exam will be oral but foreign students can apply to take it in writing, in English or Italian. The candidate must demonstrate critical knowledge of the topics and the ability to organize the speech using an appropriate vocabulary.