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Wednesday, September 30, 2015

Upcoming events featuring visiting Professor Alessia Ricciardi



Luncheon and Seminar for graduate students and faculty
Thursday, October 8. Folwell Hall 113, 11:00 A.M.-1 P.M.


Free Use/Monasticism/Digital Media
In The Highest Poverty (2013), the philosopher Giorgio Agamben sheds light on a surprising and perplexing affinity between contemporary digital culture and the Franciscan school of monasticism by revisiting the medieval theological controversy Alessia Ricciardi surrounding the notion of free use. In our discussion, we will consider the implications of Agamben’s thinking for the present-day problem of freely shared digital media and intellectual property. For this event only, please RSVP to hanza016@umn.edu regarding your participation in the luncheon and seminar on October 8 no later than 12 P.M. on Monday, October 5.


Public Lecture
Friday, October 9. Nicholson 135, 2:30 P.M.-5:00 P.M.


Red Desert: Woman as a Form of Life
This lecture focuses on the strategic role assigned to the character of Giuliana, who is played by Monica Vitti, in Michelangelo Antonioni’s landmark film, Red Desert (1964). Confronted by the signs of ecological crisis and unsettling technological change in the film’s setting of Ravenna, Giuliana undertakes a search for new ethical alternatives to the prevailing ways of thinking and being. We will assess her responses to her predicament with the help of the poet Anne Carson’s brilliant lyrical engagements with Antonioni’s masterpiece.


Both events are sponsored with the support of Cultural Studies and Comparative Literature, MIMS Graduate Group, and the Minneapolis-Saint Paul Italian Cultural Center.


Alessia Ricciardi is a Professor in the French and Italian Department and the Comparative Literary Studies Program at Northwestern Universitiy. Her first book, The Ends of Mourning, was published by Stanford University Press in 2003 and won the MLA's 2004
 Scaglione Prize for Comparative Literature. Her Alessia Ricciardi second book, After La Dolce Vita: A Cultural Prehistory of Berlusconi's Italy, was published by Stanford in 2012 and won the MLA’s 2013 
Scaglione Prize for Italian Studies. Currently, Professor Ricciardi is writing her third book, which is titled Woman as a Form of Life: Gender Politics in Antonioni's Films. Her essays have appeared in PMLA, Modernism/Modernity, Modern Language Notes, diacritics, and The Romanic Review, among other publications. Her most recent articles are about works by Pasolini, Antonioni, Foucault, Deleuze, and Agamben.

Tuesday, September 29, 2015

Two Upcoming Events with Christophe Wall-Romana


"Soirée Jean Epstein" 
Jeudi, le 1 octobre — 19h
Alliance Française Grande Salle,  113 N 1st St.
$3 pour les membres, sinon $5.
http://afmsp.org/events/soiree-jean-epstein/

Faites la redécouverte d’un des grands cinéastes du muet qui a influencé toute l’histoire du cinéma... Nous montrerons et discuterons des extraits de ses films, tout en touchant à sa biographie, en une soirée interactive servant d’introduction à la belle rétrospective qui aura lieu au Walker Art Center en octobre et novembre 2015. Cet événement sera présenté en français par Christophe Wall-Romana, professeur à l’Université de Minnesota et Directeur des études “Graduate” au département de français et italien.

Film Screening: FINIS TERRAE, 1928 (End of the Earth)
Directed by Jean Epstein
Part of The Intelligence of Cinema: Masterpieces of Jean Epstein
“A masterpiece of silent cinema.” —Arte

DATE       October 7, 2015
TIME        7:30 pm
PLACE     Walker Cinema
PRICE     $9 ($7 Walker members, students, and seniors)
Both sharing the experience of island life and the story of a group of kelp fisherman, the film becomes a psychological documentary seen through the eyes of a hallucinating character. Jean Epstein plays with subjective distortions of reality in one of the greatest films about fluid matter and sensation. 1928, DCP, 80 minutes.

Post-Screening Discussion
Following the screening, join Christophe Wall-Romana for a discussion about the film. Wall-Romana is associate professor in the Department of French and Italian at the University of Minnesota, where he is also affiliated with the new graduate major in Moving Image Studies. His research has focused on the textual intersections of French poetry and cinema, especially around the post–World War II narrative avant-garde in France. He is the author of Jean Epstein (Manchester, 2012), the first monograph in English on the filmmaker.
 

FUNDING
Support for this program is provided by the Cultural Services of the French Embassy, La Cinémathèque française, and the Cultural Service at the Consulate General of France in Chicago. This presentation is made possible by generous support from the Bentson Foundation.

In the Community: EXPO Milano 2015

FRIT French student, Hanna Worku, along with 120 other US undergraduate and graduate students served as student ambassadors at the USA Pavilion at Expo Milano 2015. Students from 94 universities, 34 states, together speaking 28 languages facilitated conversations with guests about the Expo theme "Feeding the Planet, Energy for Life". Tours were given to a variety of international dignitaries, business leaders, and celebrities including U.S.First Lady Michelle Obama and the presidential delegation from the USA Pavilion on June 18th, 2015.