HISTORY OF SOUTHEASTERN EUROPE
- Academic year
- 2022/2023 Syllabus of previous years
- Official course title
- STORIA DELL'EUROPA BALCANICA
- Course code
- LM5890 (AF:381775 AR:210026)
- Modality
- On campus classes
- ECTS credits
- 6
- Degree level
- Master's Degree Programme (DM270)
- Educational sector code
- M-STO/03
- Period
- 1st Semester
- Course year
- 1
- Moodle
- Go to Moodle page
Contribution of the course to the overall degree programme goals
The historical nature of the course contributes to the multidisciplinary goals of the MA Degree Programme. Furthermore, its geographical focus on South-Eastern Europe constributes to the teaching programmes specifically conceived for MA students interested in deepening their knowledge about that area. The thematic focus on social marginality and the public policies about it allows to deepening the knowledge related to some historical issues and their legacy in the actual public debates.
Expected learning outcomes
- to familiarize with and to be able to understand the historical development of the social and legal contexts wich structured the various forms of social marginalities and which oriented the official policies toward them
- to include South-East Europe in a comparative international context
- to become acquainted with the most recent historiographical debate around the course's issues
- to be able to apply this knowledge to a critical understanding of the present time
- to refine your communication skills
Pre-requirements
Guido Franzinetti, I Balcani: 1878-2001, Carocci, Roma 2006 (or later editions).
Francesco Guida, L’altra metà dell’Europa. Dalla Grande guerra ai giorni nostri, Laterza 2015, particularly pp. 33-84.
Stefano Bottoni, Un altro Novecento. L’Europa orientale dal 1919 a oggi, Roma, Carocci, 2011 (the parts about South-Eastern Europe).
For a long-term perspective:
Egidio Ivetic, I Balcani. Civiltà confini, popoli (1453-1912), Bologna, il Mulino, 2020.
Armando Pitassio, Corso introduttivo allo studio della storia dell'Europa orientale, Perugia, Morlacchi Editore, 2011 (the parts about South-Eastern Europe).
Giulia Lami, Storia dell'Europa orientale. Da Napoleone alla fine della Prima guerra mondiale, Firenze, Le Monnier, 2019 (the parts about South-Eastern Europe).
Contents
- interpretative issues regarding phenomena of social marginality: how did the public discourses about them evolve during the time
- to what extent measures of assistance are intertwined with forms of social disciplining
- to what extent can we speak of specifically Balkan forms of social marginality
- how can this analysis be useful for a better understanding of the recent history of that region, in an international comparativ perspective
Referral texts
- Nadir Özbek, “‘Beggars’ and ‘Vagrants’ in Ottoman State Policy and Public Discourse, 1876–1914”, Middle Eastern Studies, (2009), 45:5, 783-801.
- Paolo Sorcinelli, Viaggio nella storia sociale, Milano, Bruno Mondadori, 2009, capp. 2, 4.
- Nikolay Aretov, „Ricchi e Poveri: Images of Wealth and Poverty in Nineteenth-Century Bulgarian Literature“, in Davidova, Wealth in the Ottoman and Post-Ottoman Balkans, 229-254.
- Stefano Petrungaro, “La Jugoslavia postbellica: una moderna storia di conflitto e controllo sociale”, in Qualestoria, vol. 48, pp. 21-35.
- Emine Ö. Evered and Kyle T. Evered, „Protecting the national body: regulating the practice and the place of prostitution in early republican Turkey“, Gender, Place and Culture, 2013, 7, 839–857.
- Jelena Seferović, “Reflection on the (Un)Power of Men in the Context of Post-war Everyday Life of Croatian War Veterans with Mental Disorders from World War I”, in Synthesis Philosophica, 69 (2020), 1, pp. 25-44.
- Sevasti Trubeta, „‚Gypsiness‘, Racial discourse and Persecution: Balkan Roma during the Second World War“, Nationalities Papers, 31 (2003), 4, 495-514
- Stratos N. Dordanas, „‘Common women’ or ‘women of free morals’: the suppression of prostitution in post-war Thessaloniki (1945–1955)“, Byzantine and Modern Greek Studies, Vol. 35 No. 2 (2011) 212–232.
- Julija Sardelić, „Roma between ethnic group and an ´underclass´ as portrayed through newspaper discourses in socialist Slovenia´, in Rory Archer, Igor Duda, Paul Stubbs (Hrsg.), Social Inequalities and Discontent in Yugoslav Socialism (London-New York: Routledge, 2016), 95-111.
- Dimitri Monos, "Rebetico: The Music of the Greek Urban Working Class", The International Journal of Politics, Culture and Society", 1(2), 1987, pp. 111-119.
- Gerda Dalipaj, „Roma Communities in Elbasan“, in Andreas Hemming, Gentiana Kera, Enriketa Pandelejmoni (Hrsg.): Albania: Family, Society and Culture in the 20th century (Zürich-Wien: Lit, 2012), 131-146.
- Rory Archer, “Social Inequalities and the Studies of Yugoslavia’s Dissolution”, in Rory Archer, Igor Duda, Paul Stubbs (Hrsg.), Social Inequalities and Discontent in Yugoslav Socialism (London-New York: Routledge, 2016), ch. 6.
Assessment methods
1. Group presentations (30 minutes max.) 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).