CASiLaC seminar – Dr Martina Piperno

On Monday, November 27, CASiLaC had the pleasure of inaugurating the CASiLaC seminar series with a paper by Dr Martina Piperno, an Irish Research Council Postdoctoral Fellow working in UCC’s Department on Italian whose research is focused on the notion of Italicity. A podcast of her seminar, entitled About Time (and Space): Vico and the Italian/Italic Identity, is available below.

Dr Martina Piperno – About Time (and Space): Vico and the Italian/Italic Identity (Audio Podcast)

About Time (and Space): Vico and the Italian/Italic Identity

PROJECT OUTLINE: ‘Italicity’ is a term recently coined to describe delocalized Italian identity (i.e. Italian communities abroad, writers of a different background who write in Italian) as opposed to nation-bound Italian-ness. However, Italian identity has for a long time confronted itself with the phantom of ‘Italics’, that is to say, those peoples who lived in the peninsula before the rise of Rome, which almost completely destroyed them. The term ‘Italic’/’Italicity’, therefore, has a history which I intend to uncover. Due to the mysterious nature of these peoples (they left little or no trace of themselves) and their being isolated in a remote past as well as in a peripheral space (the Italian South and the countryside), the culture of ancient Italians became in time a perfect ‘open’ space to project the obsessions and cultural tensions of modern times. My project will produce the first comprehensive study of the projections and manias originating from the myth of ancient Italians, from the Italian Unification period to date, including the tradition of Italian horror and science fiction that deals with the idea of the uncanny return of Italic peoples in ghostly, uncanny, phantasmic forms. I will devote special attention to how ‘Italic’ identity challenged the traditional line of descent from ancient Rome as a peculiar feature of Italian identity. This forces us to decentralize our viewpoint on Italy, muddling the notions of nationality and ethnicity as fixed in time and space.

MARTINA PIPERNO is currently an IRC Postdoctoral Fellow here at UCC. She graduated at Università La Sapienza, in Rome. She was awarded a PhD in Italian studies 2016 by the University of Warwick (UK). She has been a visiting fellow at Scuola Normale Superiore in Pisa, Seton Hall University, Queen Mary University of London. Her research tackles representations of time (timelines, time travel, time names, continuity and discontinuity of time) in Italian theory and literature, particularly of the 19th and 20th centuries. Her first book, “Rebuilding Post-Revolutionary Italy: Leopardi and Vico’s New Science”, is currently in press by the Voltaire Foundation of Oxford.