HISTORY OF EASTERN EUROPE
- Academic year
- 2022/2023 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- STORIA DELL'EUROPA ORIENTALE
- Course code
- LM1390 (AF:378678 AR:210024)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Educational sector code
- M-STO/03
- Period
- 2nd Semester
- Where
- VENEZIA
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
Expected learning outcomes
- to familiarize with and to be able to understand the main features of cultural and political phenomena of Pan-Slavist insipiration
- to be able to apply this knowledge to a critical understanding of the present time in terms of continuities/changes and public use of history
- to become acquainted with the most recent historiographical debate around notions like "Slavic brotherhood", "pan-national movements", and "politization of history"
- to refine your communication skills, both oral and written
Pre-requirements
Contents
- relationships betwenn pan-/supra-national movements and nationalism
- Illyrian Pan-Slavism
- Czech Pan-Slavism
- Russian Pan-Slavism
- Soviet Pan-Slavism
- actual Pan-Slavist phenomena
- examples of theories and practices of solidarity and rivalry of Pan-Slavist origin
Referral texts
2. Joep Leerssen, “Pan-Slavism.” In Joep Leerssen, ed. Encyclopedia of Romantic Nationalism in Europe. Amsterdam: Study Platform on Interlocking Nationalisms, 2015, http://show.ernie.uva.nl/sla-2
3. Tilman Lüdke, “Pan-Ideologies”, in: European History Online (EGO), published by the Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG), Mainz 2012-03-06. http://www.ieg-ego.eu/luedket-2012-en
4. Egidio Ivetic, Jugoslavia sognata. Lo jugoslavismo delle origini, Milano: Franco Angeli, 2012, introduzione.
5. Alexander Maxwell, “Effacing Panslavism: linguistic classification and historiographic misrepresentation”, Nationalities Papers, 2018, Vol. 46, No. 4, pp. 633-653 (in modo particolare pp. 633-644, 648-49).
6. Aslı Yiğit Gülseven, “Rethinking Russian Pan-Slavism in the Ottoman Balkans: N.P. Ignatiev and The Slavic Benevolent Committee (1856–77)”, Middle Eastern Studies, 2017, 53 (3), pp. 332-348.
7. Denis Vovchenko, “Gendering irredentism? Self and other in Russian Pan-Orthodoxy and Pan-Slavism (1856–85)”, Ethnic and Racial Studies, 2011, Vol. 34, No. 2, pp. 248-274.
8. Andrea Franco, “Ukraine as a ‘Pan-Slavic Keystone’: the Views of Nikolaĭ (Mykola) Ivanovich Kostomorov.” In: Krzysztof A. Makowski, Frank Hadler, eds. Approaches to Slavic Unity. Austro-Slavism, Pan-Slavism, Neo-Slavism, and Solidarity Among the Slavs Today. Poznań: Instytut Historii UAM, 2013, pp. 31-45.
9. Aaron J. Cohen, “'Our Russian Passport': First World War Monuments, Transnational Commemoration, and the Russian Emigration in Europe, 1918-39”, Journal of Contemporary History, 2014, Vol. 49, No. 4, pp. 627-651.
10. Irina Sirotkina, “The Sokol Movement in Russia: History and Contemporary Revival”, in Agnieszka Gasior, Lars Karl, Stefan Troebst (Hgg.): Post-Panslavismus. Slavizität, Slavische Idee und Antislavismus im 20. und 21. Jahrhundert, Göttingen:,Wallstein 2014, pp. 174-193.
11. Jože Pirjevec, “Slavic Solidarity in the Balkans since 1945”, in K.A. Makowski, F. Hadler, eds. Approaches to Slavic Unity, pp. 153-161.
12. Mikhail Suslov, “Geographical Metanarratives in Russia and the
European East: Contemporary Pan-Slavism”, Eurasian Geography and Economics, 2012Vol. 53, No. 5, pp. 575-595.
13. Tatiana Zhurzhenko, “Sisters into Neighbours. Ukrainian-Belarusian Relations after 1991”, in Crossroad Digest. The journal for the studies of Eastern European borderland, 2008/3, pp. 4-34 (in modo particolare pp. 4-16).
14. Ivanna Machitidze, “Popular Imagery, Competing Narratives and Pan-Slavism: the Case of Ukraine’s Break-away Regions”, The Journal of Cross-Regional Dialogues/La Revue de dialogues inter-régionaux, 2020 https://popups.uliege.be/2593-9483/index.php?id=139 .
Assessment methods
1. Group presentations (about 20 minutes) on a text in the syllabus.
The aim is to evaluate the oral communication skills, as well as the ability to work synergically with other students (10% of the final grade);
2. Written test (90% of the final grade)
The examination has three main goals:
1) to verifying the knowledge of the main historical facts and processes, as well as the most relevant personalities, with relation to the treated topics
2) to verify the analytical skills and the ability of the student to formulate critical reflections about the historiographical issues emerged during the lessons
3) to verify the knowledge of some elements of historical comparison in the framework of the East-Central and South-East European space.
The written examination (duration: 1½ hours) also aims at verifying the written communicative skills of the student.
Due to the COVID-19 emergency, the test could take place on-line, through the Moodle platform. Please, check the communications about this regard on the Moodle-section dedicated to this course.
For those who do not attend classes:
only the written examination (see above, point 2).
Teaching methods
Teaching language
Further information
Type of exam
2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development Goals
This subject deals with topics related to the macro-area "International cooperation" and contributes to the achievement of one or more goals of U. N. Agenda for Sustainable Development