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English Language Meeting – March 13, 2024

When: March 13, 2024
Speaker: Alex Minami
Topic: Seattle Opera’s The Barber of Seville
Location: St. Clement’s Church

Alex Minami is Associate Director of Community Engagement at Seattle Opera, where he curates the company’s community engagement initiatives and adult learning programs. Previously, Alex worked with foreign exchange students from Germany and Austria and served as Director of Operations of a youth leadership, foreign language, and global citizenship program for underserved high school students in Seattle. He holds a BA in German Cultural Studies and Political Science and an MA in Middle East Studies from the University of Washington, and he studied at the American University in Cairo on a Foreign Language and Area Studies Fellowship. He is originally from Kāne‘ohe, Hawai‘i.

Carnevale Mask

Italian Language Meeting – February 28, 2024 (Online)

When: February 28, 2024
Speaker: Prof. Beatrice Arduini
Topic: Dante’s Works
Location: Online

Advanced registration will be required. A link to the registration form will be sent to the Dante Alighieri Society mailing list.

There will be a “social hour” beginning at 7 pm. The presentation will start at 7:30.

About the Presentation:

Dante and his works, especially The Divine Comedy, seem to be inevitably present in writers and readers of Italian literature, from the fourteenth century to the present, even in those periods of time when the appreciation for his style was feeblest, most notably in the seventeenth century. Cultural memory is, however, highly selective, and later readers and writers responded to Dante and his legacy by tailoring him to their own contexts, especially in relation to issues of national identity, since Dante’s language was early recognized in Italy as the foundation of what Italian culture had become. For this reason, in my presentation I will explore some episodes of Dante’s reception and how they are defined by interpretative frameworks and filters through which readers and scholars have approached his work and life.

About the Presenter:

Beatrice Arduini is Associate Professor of Italian and current Chair of the Department of French and Italian Studies at the University of Washington. Her research centers on Medieval Italian literature, Dante studies, manuscript culture, and textual studies. Her book, Dante’s Convivio: the Creation of a Cultural Icon, examines the tradition of this work in manuscripts and early printed editions. Her projects include a book manuscript on the lyric production of a 13th-century Tuscan poet, Monte Andrea da Firenze, and a study on representations of domestic slavery in medieval and early modern Italy. Dr. Arduini has published on these and other topics in Mediaevalia, Heliotropia, Romance Philology, Textual Cultures, and Medioevo Letterario d’Italia.

English Language Meeting – February 14, 2024 (Online)

When: February 14, 2024
Speaker:
Iole Alessandrini
Topic: The World of Light as a Medium for Artistic Expression
Location: Online

Advanced registration will be required. A link to the registration form will be sent to the Dante Alighieri Society mailing list.

There will be a “social hour” beginning at 7 pm. The presentation will start at 7:30.

About the Presentation:

In this presentation, we explore the captivating world of light as a medium for artistic expression with Iole Alessandrini, an artist renowned for her groundbreaking use of Laser Plane Photography. Despite its intangibility, light plays a fundamental role in reshaping our perception of the world beyond traditional art forms. Iole’s journey in the Arctic Circle using light as an artistic medium is a tale of inspiration, and an unquenchable thirst for understanding. Her Laser Plane Photography brings yet an original insight into a place in the world that plays a crucial role in maintaining our overall ecosystem’s well-being.

About the Presenter:

Iole Alessandrini is an Italian-American artist known for her Laser Plane Photography and large scale installations. She holds Master’s degrees from both the University La Sapienza in Rome, Italy, and the University of Washington in Seattle, the USA. Alessandrini is the recipient of fellowships and awards including Betty Bowen Award; Pollock-Krasner; The Civita Institute; Rockefeller Film and Video Nominee. She has taught in Italy through the Comparative History of Ideas Department at the University of Washington before joining DigiPen Institute of Technology where she teaches Art History; and at Bellevue College, teaching Color Theory and Typography. Alessandrini is a licensed architect in Italy in the Lazio Region (1987-2001),

Among her public art-light installations feature prominently: The Raven and The Light; Counterbalance Park; Capitol Hill Library; Westlake Fountain all in Seattle, and Luminous Forest in Edmonds, using interactive technologies with a focus on sustainable resources using solar-powered technology. Her recent expedition to the Arctic Circle aligns with her interest in sustainable environments.

She has led award-winning grants through The Civita Institute TCI (1996-2022) resulting in the World Monument Fund nomination for the preservation of the 3000 years old Civita di Bagnoregio. She served as president of the TCI from 2016-2018. She is a SOIL member, Seattle artists-run gallery.

Her groundbreaking work on Laser Plane Photography (LPP), a photographic technique she invented, captures a light phenomenon in time exposure when objects and/or people move through the Laser Plane (Jack Straw Production 2004). She calls those photos Ioleograms™ her name + photograms. The LLP features in her recent expedition to the Arctic Circle.

 

Italian Language Meeting – January 24, 2024 (Online)

When: January 24, 2024
Speaker: Prof. Sergio Mauro, former Professor at UNESP in Sao Paolo, Brazil
Topic: Italian genius: Dante to Montale
Location: Online

About the Presentation:
Prof. Mauro will investigate whether there really is an Italian way of being a genius in literature, from Dante to Montale. He will highlight the original way of examining the human condition and the role of the human being in the universe, particularly in Dante, Leopardi and Montale.

About the Presenter:
Prof. Mauro was born in São Paulo, Brazil on 28/11/1961 to Italian parents from the province of Salerno. Doctor of Letters (USP) since 1995. From 1999 to 2013, he did 08 postdoctoral research in Italy (UNIBO, Normale di Pisa, UNISI) with 5 scholarships from the Brazilian government. Professor (retired) of Italian literature from 29/05/1986 to 04/12/2019 in UNESP (State University of São Paulo). Editor-in-chief of the journal “Revista de Letras” (since January 2010) He has given about 34 lectures on Italian and Brazilian literature at different Brazilian and international cultural institutes. He has written several scientific articles and two books: “O sorriso do carrasco” (short stories, 1994) and “O girassol enlouquecido” (novel, 2018).

Advanced registration will be required. A link to the registration form will be sent to the Dante Alighieri Society mailing list.

The Social “hour” begins at 7 pm. Presentation begins at 7:30

About the Speaker:

Prof. Mauro è nato a San Paolo del Brasile il 28/11/1961 da genitori italiani della provincia di Salerno. Dottore in lettere (USP) dal 1995. Dal 1999 al 2013, ha fatto 08 ricerche di post-dottorato in Italia (UNIBO, Normale di Pisa, UNISI) con 5 borse del governo brasiliano Professore (in pensione) di letteratura italiana dal 29/05/1986 al 04/12/2019 nell’UNESP (Università Statale di San Paolo). Direttore della rivista (journal) “Revista de Letras” (dal gennaio 2010) Ha dato circa 32 conferenze sulla letteratura italiana e brasiliana presso diversi istituti culturali brasiliani e una conferenza su Dante nel marzo 2021 per La Scuola Dante Alighieri di Asuncion, Paraguay.

English Language Meeting – January 10, 2024 (Online)

When: January 11, 2022
Speaker:
Gabrielle Orsi​
Topic: History and Story: Elsa Morante, Rome, La Storia and the Shoah
Location: Online

About the Presentation:
Elsa Morante (1912-1985), Roman author and poet, drew upon her own life, including her experience as a Jewish refugee in World War II, to write her bestselling 1974 novel La Storia. Dr. Orsi will provide the historical context to Elsa Morante’s novel– the multiple centuries of Jewish life on the Italian peninsula, Morante’s own life, and the questions surrounding the novel and its portrayal of the Holocaust which persist to this day. Elsa Morante– hailed by her husband Alberto Moravia as a genius and the better writer of the two, and viewed by many Italian writers, including Elena Ferrante, as a major 20th century figure and lasting inspiration– remains little known to English-speaking audiences (though that may change with the 2023 translation of her first novel and masterpiece, Menzogna e sortilegio by Jenny McPhee as Lies and Sorcery.)

About the Presenter:
A native of San Diego, California, Gabrielle Orsi earned her PhD in Italian at Columbia University in 2008, focusing on modern Italian literature and Holocaust Studies. She has taught at University of Denver, University of Kentucky, Lexington, City University of New York, Queens College Department of European Languages & Literatures, Barnard College, Columbia University, Colorado Mountain College, and Bellevue College in WA, and held fellowships at the American Academy in Rome, Northwestern University, the Getty Institute of Los Angeles, and the Institute of Modern Languages Research at University of London. She has published a number of academic articles and book chapters on Italian literature and Italian Jewish history as well as contributing original research on Italian female authors to the University of Chicago’s Italian Women Writers Database. She currently works for the University of Washington’s School of Medicine and resides in Oregon.

Advanced registration will be required. A link to the registration form will be sent to the Dante Alighieri Society mailing list.

There will be a “social hour” beginning at 7 pm. The presentation will start at 7:30.