History, magistra vitae, is traditionally linked with … magistra vitae, is traditionally linked...

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History, magistra vitae, is traditionally linked with children’s literature, both as the subject of course books, enriched with images and chronologies, and as narration, portraying events or characters / heroes / protagonists of a given historical period. In both instances, such relationship functions through the “emplotment” described by Hayden White as essential to the discursive nature of all texts – history included. Scientific Coordinator Francesca Orestano, Chair in English Literature Università degli Studi di Milano [email protected] Organizing Committee Marco Canani – [email protected] Angela Anna Iuliucci – [email protected] Children’s Literature in Italy A Website Devoted to the Study of Children’s Books and Literature in Italy http://users.unimi.it/childlit con il patrocinio di CHILDREN’S LITERATURE AND THE TEACHING OF HISTORY / LETTERATURA PER L’INFANZIA E INSEGNAMENTO DELLA STORIA 8 novembre 2013 Aula Crociera Alta di Giurisprudenza Via Festa del Perdono 7 – ore 9.30

Transcript of History, magistra vitae, is traditionally linked with … magistra vitae, is traditionally linked...

History, magistra vitae, is traditionally linked with children’s literature, both as the subject of course books, enriched with

images and chronologies, and as narration, portraying events or characters / heroes / protagonists of a given historical period. In

both instances, such relationship functions through the “emplotment” described by Hayden White as essential to the

discursive nature of all texts – history included.  

   

Scientific  Coordinator  Francesca  Orestano,  Chair  in  English  Literature  

Università  degli  Studi  di  Milano  [email protected]  

 Organizing  Committee  

Marco  Canani  –  [email protected]  Angela  Anna  Iuliucci  –  [email protected]    

 

Children’s Literature in Italy

A Website Devoted to the Study of Children’s Books and Literature in Italy

http://users.unimi.it/childlit

con il patrocinio di

CHILDREN’S LITERATURE AND THE TEACHING OF HISTORY /

LETTERATURA PER L’INFANZIA E INSEGNAMENTO DELLA STORIA

                           

 8  novembre  2013  

Aula  Crociera  Alta  di  Giurisprudenza    Via  Festa  del  Perdono  7  –  ore  9.30  

***************************************************   9:30 WELCOME AND INTRODUCTION 10:00 PETER HUNT

Emeritus  Cardiff  University,    Visiting  Professor,  Università  di  Venezia  Ca’  Foscari  Fiction  Writing  History:  Truth,  Illusion  and  Ideology  in  English  Language  Historical  Fiction  for  Children  

10:30 DAVID PAROISSIEN

University  of  Buckingham  Wringing  the  Necks  of  Parrots:  the  Mixed  Modes  of  Dickens’s  “little  history  of  England”

11:00 COFFEE BREAK 11:30 HANNAH FIELD

University  of  Lincoln  History  Unfolds:  Two  Victorian  Children’s  Panoramas  of  Kings  and  Queens  

12:00 JOHN MEDDEMMEN

Università  degli  Studi  di  Pavia  “God  for  Harry,  England  and  St.  George”.  Mediaeval  English  History  in  the  Novels  of  G.  A.  Henty.  

12:30 LAURA TOSI,

Università  di  Venezia  Ca’  Foscari  “These  plays  might  almost  serve  as  a  handbook  to  patriotism”:  Prose  adaptations  of  Henry  V  for  Children,  1893-­‐1911,  Nationalism,  Empire  and  War.  

13:00 LUNCH BREAK

***************************************************   14:00 LINDSAY MYERS

National  University  of  Ireland,  Galway  L’Aeroplano  di  Girandolino  -­‐  Un  romanzo  sulla  guerra?  

14:30 MARIANGELA MOSCA BONSIGNORE

Università  degli  Studi  di  Torino  Contemporary  History  in  Illustrated  Alphabets.  From  Charles  II  and  William  of  Orange  to  the  First  World  War.  

15:00 FRANCESCA ORESTANO

Università  degli  Studi  di  Milano  Salvator  Gotta,  the    “Piccolo  Alpino”  and  the  Young  “Balilla”:    Militarism  and  the  Rise  of  Fascism  in  Italian  Fiction,  from  the  1890s  to  the  1930s    

15:30 ANGELA ANNA IULIUCCI Università  degli  Studi  di  Milano  In  Flanders’  Fields:  Recent  Representations  of  the  War  

 16:00 COFFEE BREAK 16:30 MARCO CANANI

Università  degli  Studi  di  Milano  The   Displaced   Subjectivity   of   the   Refugee   Child:   Judith   Kerr’s  When  Hitler  Stole  Pink  Rabbit    

17:00 MARTINO NEGRI Università  degli  Studi  di  Milano  Bicocca  Memory  Threatened.  Story-­‐Telling  Trees  

17:30 MARGARET ROSE

Università  degli  Studi  di  Milano  Alan  Bennett’s    “The  History  Boys”:  A  Play  Addressing  How  We  Write  and  Teach  History    

18:00 CONCLUDING REMARKS