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John D. Calandra Italian American Institute

Section: Academic & Cultural Programs


2000-2001 


Seminar Series in Italian American Studies

 

 

Thursday, September 7, 2000:  Maria Laurino, reading from her new book, Were You Always Italian? Ancestors and Other Icons of Italian-Americana.

Maria Laurino is a freelance journalist and essayist and was chief speechwriter for former Mayor Dinkins. Her new book (to be published this summer by Norton) combines memoir with social and cultural history.

 

Tuesday, October 3, 2000:  Lucio Ruotolo on “In Search of My Italian American Father: Onorio Ruotolo.”

Dr. Ruotolo, professor emeritus at Stanford University, is a distinguished scholar of English literature, and is currently writing a biography of his father, an important artist and sculptor in the Italian American radical movement.  Slides will be shown.

Thursday, November 2, 2000:  Paul D’Ambrosio on “Ralph Fasanella’s America.”                                                                             

Paul D’Ambrosio is chief curator of the New York State Historical Association in Cooperstown, NY. He is engaged in a major research project on the life and work of artist Ralph Fasanella and is preparing a major exhibit on Fasanella for next year. Slides will be shown.

 

Wednesday, December 6, 2000:  Holly Metz on “‘I Wanted to Do Something Big and I Did’: The Folk Art Environments of Six Italian Americans.” 

Holly Metz is an instructor in humanities at the New School for Social Research and a writer on cultural and social issues. She served as co-curator of a traveling exhibit on grassroots art environments. Slides and video will be shown.

 

Thursday, February 15, 2001:  Anna Lomax Chairetakis on “Portrait of a Country in Song: The Italian Recordings of Alan Lomax and Diego Carpitella, 1953-54.” 

Dr. Chairetakis, an anthropologist and daughter of  Alan Lomax, is president of the Association for Cultural Equity at Hunter College/CUNY, director of the Alan Lomax Archives, and executive producer of the Alan Lomax Collection on Rounder Records.  Recordings will be played.

 

Thursday, March 15, 2001:  Marcella Bencivenni on “Politics and Culture in the Italian American Community: The Experience of Il Fuoco and La Follia.”

Marcella Bencivenni, who is writing her dissertation in the PhD program in History at the CUNY Graduate School, examines the culturally rich experiences of two magazines published in New York before World War I by leading radical intellectuals in the Italian American community.

 

Thursday, April 19, 2001: Carol Kushner on “Concetta Scaravaglione, Italian American Sculptor.”

Carol Kushner is a writer and English professor at Dutchess Community College/SUNY. As a student she studied sculpture for two years at Vassar College with her great aunt Concetta Scaravaglione, whose work was featured in the exhibition on “The Italians of New York.” 

Slides will be shown.

 

Thursday, May 17, 2001:  Peter Vellon on “‘Sempre la Questione di Razza’: Ideas of Race in the Italian American Press, 1890-1915.”

Peter Vellon, who is writing his dissertation in the PhD Program in History at the CUNY Graduate School, explores how the early Italian American press reflected a variety of  unexpectedly complex views on racial matters concerning both African Americans and Italian Americans.

 

 

Refreshments are served at 6:00 PM. Lectures begin at 6:30 PM - Calandra Institute, 25 W. 43rd St. (between 5th & 6th Avenues), Suite 1000, in Manhattan. Call (212) 642-2094 for further information.  

Seating is limited.


[Return to the Academic & Cultural Programs page.]


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