Contemporary Italy: Black Italy
- Rossella Di Rosa
- College of Arts & Sciences, Department of Francophone, Italian and Germanic Studies
-
First-Year Seminar Grant
This course focuses on how the migration movements to Italy, mainly from the Maghreb and the Horn of Africa in the ‘80s and ‘90s contributed to change Italy’s status and image. From a country of emigration to other parts of the world, Italy became—as many historians, geographers, and scholars have observed—an immigration site, playing a pivotal role in the African diaspora. In the shadow of Italy’s colonialist heritage (a past that Italy still has not fully confronted), these phenomena of mass migration challenge, complicate, and develop the notion of Italian-ness and undermine the fixity of an Italian identity in favor of multicultural and transnational identities. This course focuses on several Black Italian artists, writers, filmmakers, and activists of Somali, Eritrean, Tunisian, Ethiopian, and Egyptian origins (e.g. migrants or children of immigrants who were born or raised in Italy and children of mixed-race unions) who contribute to broaden the definition of Italian-ness and to challenge its racial, social, and cultural boundaries.