April 25th, the day when Italians celebrate the anniversary of their liberation from the German Nazis and the Fascist regimes, holds yet another sense of interest for Italian Americans in New York. The John D. Calandra Italian American Institute has scheduled their annual conference, “Lingue Migranti: The Global Languages of Italy and the Diaspora” to start on the Italian national holiday and extend to the 27th of April.
Aside from Italy’s history surrounding both World Wars I and II, the country has had a turbulent timeline, its map having been rearranged through a myriad of appropriations and separations. Italy as it exists today has only been around for approximately 152 years, though its extensive cultural foundations stem to antiquity. While the country remains segmented into twenty distinct provinces, the stark division between them is owed to the dialects, which animate each region.
Following Italy’s unification, inhabitants speaking dialects ranging from Neapolitan to Venetian were expected to learn the Tuscan dialect, as it became the official language of the state. The Calandra Institute aims not only to focus on the polemics of such an imposition, especially when viewed in context of the mass emigration from Italy to the United States, but also to inspire conversation from the perspective of Italian American literature, minority groups in Italy and the Italian language today, as it operates in Italy and abroad.
The first full day of the conference, Friday April 26th, will feature speakers concerned with expressing views on topics ranging from Italian dialects in the theatrical sphere, whether this means performances in dialect or representations of Italians immigrant culture on stage, to Judeo-Italian culture of the Mediterranean. The conference’s afternoon session will feature an examination of minority groups and their languages as they appear in Italy, this including the Griko and Albanian cultures of central and southern Italy, as well as the German and Cymbrian people.
Friday’s discussions will also cover Italian literature written in dialect, best embodied by writers Luigi Capuana and Massimo Bontempelli, as well as the art of translating Italian-American authors. It will conclude with an analysis of the limits imposed on immigrant literature in Italy.
The discussion will continue on Saturday with another full day of thought-provoking topics that take a more modern approach to the Italian culture and language. The day will begin by taking a look at the question of authentic vs. inauthentic representations in Guido culture, moving further to the evolution of linguistic practices and identities, especially in Italian-American youth. The following panel will address Postcolonial languages and language in general as a “means of resistance” to colonization.
Additionally, speakers will approach the idea of dialects in everyday conversation, as well as consider the ways in which the Italian language is regarded abroad. Attendees may find the “Italian Language in Argentina” seminar especially interesting in light of Argentinian Pope Francis I’s Italian heritage. The evening will conclude with an entertaining discussion of the language in lyric form, as well as the diffusion of dialect into Italian music.
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ANNUAL CONFERENCE (the full program itinerary)
Lingue Migranti
The Global Languages of Italy and the Diaspora
April 26-27, 2013
John D. Calandra Italian American Institute
Queens College, City University of New York
25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, (between 5th and 6th Avenues), Manhattan
Program Subject to Change
THURSDAY EVENING. 6:00 pm will act as a welcoming reception to encourage opening comments and discussion.
The conference will be conducted in English.
FRIDAY, APRIL 26, 2013
9:00-9:30 am
Coffee and Pastries
9:30-10:45 am
Conference Room
Dialect and Performance
Chair: Anthony Julian Tamburri, John D. Calandra Italian American Institute
Multiple Dialects on the Italian Stage: Commedia Techniques in Vergilio Verucci's Li diversi linguaggi
Stefano Boselli, Independent Scholar
Performing the Sicilian: Angelo Musco in Nino Martoglio's L'aria del continente
Janice Capuana, John Jay College of Criminal Justice, CUNY
Staging Immigration: The Dramatic Dialect of Cocoliche
Elisa Legon, Baruch College, CUNY
11:00 am-12:15 pm
Conference Room
Judeo-Italian in the Circum-Mediterranean
Chair: Siân Gibby, John D. Calandra Italian American Institute
Italian Varieties in Mediterranean Areas during the Eighteenth and Nineteenth Centuries
Fabrizio Franceschini, Università di Pisa
The Italian/Italophone Jewish Trauma of "Forced Repatriation": The Case of Victor Magiar
Rosario Pollicino, University of Connecticut
"Submerged" Italian in Tunis: Italian and Its Dialects as Heritage Language
Alessandro Orfano, Università di Pisa
La Galleria
Language and Literature
Chair: Rosangela Briscese, John D. Calandra Italian American Institute
Language, Class, and Politics: The Use of Sicilian and Italian by Luigi Capuana in Gli "americani" di Ràbbato, 'Ntrrugatoriu, and 'U Cavaleri Pidagna
Santi Buscemi, Middlesex County College
Theorizing Migration: Realismo magico and Massimo Bontempelli's Giro del sole
Amelia Moser, Italian Poetry Review
12:15-1:30 pm
Lunch on your own
1:30-2:45 pm
Conference Room
Minority Languages in Italy
Chair: Peter G. Vellon, Queens College, CUNY
Examining Current Griko Identity through Oral Tradition, Folklore, and Cultural Manifestations
Angelyn Balodimas-Bartolomei, North Park University
Albanian Linguistic and Cultural Islands in Central and Southern Italy
Vincenzo Bollettino, Montclair State University
German as a Minority Language in Italy with Special Emphasis on Cymbrian/Zimbrisch/Cimbro
Ermenegildo Bidese, Università degli Studi di Trento, and James R. Dow, Iowa State University
La Galleria
[In]Translation
Chair: Fred Gardaphé, Queens College, CUNY
John Fante Was Not an Outlier
Mary-Faith Cerasoli, Mercy College
Ties That Bind: Translation and the Development of an Intergenerational Literary Tradition
Gil Fagiani, Italian American Writers Association
3-4:45 pm
Conference Room
Immigrant Literature in Italy
Chair: Teresa Fiore, Montclair State University
The Limits of the Italian Language for Immigrants' Acceptance into Italian Society: Amara Lakhous's Scontro di civiltà per un ascensore a piazza Vittorio
Elizabeth Venditto, University of Minnesota
The Language In-Between: The Interplay of Albanian and Italian in Gëzim Hajdari's Poetry
Anita Pinzi, Graduate Center, CUNY
Amara Lakhous's Clash of Civilizations over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio and Defining Italian Identity in a Globalized Italy
Grace Russo Bullaro, Lehman College, CUNY
Folktale, Legend, and the Novel in the Works of Ornela Vorpsi
Viktor Berberi, University of Minnesota
SATURDAY, APRIL 27, 2013
9:30-10:45 am
Conference Room
Language and Evolving Italian-American Identities
Chair: Donna M. Chirico, York College, CUNY
Authenticity and Inauthenticity in Italian-American Cultural Manifestations: Youth Reactions to Guido Culture
Jefferson Triozzi and Anna De Fina, Georgetown University
The New Wave of Italians: Linguistic Practices and Attitudes
Luciana Fellin, Duke University
Evolving Linguistic Identities among Second-Generation Italian-American Youths
Hermann W. Haller, Queens College/Graduate Center, CUNY
11 am-12:15 pm
Conference Room
Postcolonial Languages
Chair: George de Stefano, Independent Scholar
Language as a Means of Resistance in Gabriella Ghermandi's Regina di fiori e di perle
Melina Masterson, University of Connecticut
Re-Embracing Italian National and Linguistic Identity in Africa
Annemarie Tamis-Nasello, Fashion Institute of Technology, SUNY
"Tripoli era dolce, per gli italiani": Postcolonial Italian Writers in Tripoli and Benghazi
Daniele Comberiati, Université Libre de Bruxelles
La Galleria
Dialects in Everyday Communication in Italy
Chair: Robert Oppedisano, Editor
Narrative and Argumentative Discourse between Dialect and Italian: An Analysis of the "Linguistic Atlas of Sicily" Corpus
Giuseppe Paternostro, Università degli Studi di Palermo
Performing Eloquence in Public: The Interplay of Veneto Dialect and Standard Italian
Sabina Perrino, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor
Dialect in Peer Interaction in a Sicilian Elementary School
Anna De Fina, Georgetown University
12:15-1:30 pm
Lunch on your own
1:30-2:45 pm
Conference Room
Keynote
Is Italian a Global Language? Evidence from the History to the Near Future
Stefania Giannini, Senate of the Republic, Italy
3:00-4:15 pm
Conference Room
Italian Abroad
Chair: Nancy C. Carnevale, Montclair State University
Lingua Esule: The Risorgimento Exiles and the Teaching of Italian in the United States
Stefano Luconi, Università degli Studi di Padova
The Italian Language in Argentina: From Nostalgia to Practical Opportunities for the Future
Luciana Zollo, Independent Scholar
Is Italian on the Move in Toronto?
Naomi Nagy, University of Toronto
La Galleria
Everyday Use
Chair: Roberto Dolci, L'Università per Stranieri di Perugia
Linguistic Sustainability: A Look into the Venetian Dialect and Its Importance to Cultural and Regional Identity
Carmeline Morris, Goucher College
Blended Mind and Voice: Use of Italian and English-Hybridization, Italianization, Local Accents, Regional Dialects
Jane McCall Politi, Independent Scholar
Gender Assignment and the Italo-Romance Mass/Count Distinction: Perspective from Language Contact
Anna L. Moro, McMaster University
4:30-6:00 pm
Conference Room
The Language of Music
Chair: Joseph Sciorra, John D. Calandra Italian American Institute
"You Must Always Protect the Dialects": Regional Languages and Contemporary Southern Italian Music
George de Stefano, Independent Scholar
Sing, Wop, Sing: Reading Songs as a Political Nomadic Voice, from Almamegretta to Raiz
William Anselmi, University of Alberta, and Lise Hogan, Independent Scholar
"Non si capiscono le parole": When Italian Lyrics Deal with Italian Audiences in Subsonica's Music
Simona Martini, Università degli Studi, Milan
The Intersection of Languages and Cultures in Roberta Torre's
Tano da Morire
Francesca de Lucia, Independent Scholar
Free and open to the public.
You will need to show a photo ID to the building's concierge.
All presentations are held at the Calandra Institute.
John D. Calandra Italian American Institute
25 West 43rd Street, 17th floor, (Between 5th and 6th Avenues)
New York, New York 10036
RSVP (encouraged but not required) by calling
(212) 642-2094.
Please note that seating is limited and we cannot reserve seats.
For further information see our Web site at
www.qc.edu/calandra.