CES: The 2014 Salvemini Colloquium in Italian History and Culture: “Italy's Great War: A Centennial Perspective”

Date: 

Tuesday, October 21, 2014, 5:30pm to 7:00pm

Location: 

Center for European Studies, lower Level Conference Room, Busch Hall

Speaker(s): Charles Maier, Leverett Saltonstall Professor of History, Harvard University

The Salvemini Colloquium is named in honor of the Italian anti-fascist historian who spent much of his career as a professor in the Harvard Department of History. Since 2012, the Colloquium is an annual event at the Center, open to the Harvard academic community and to the public. It is organized with the generous support of the Consulate General of Italy in Boston. The lecture will be followed by a reception from 7-8 p.m.

Abstract: One hundred years ago next spring Italy entered World War I after a long and bitter debate whose divisions prefigured those that led to the advent of a fascist regime seven years later. The country lost as many solders as the British Empire; it suffered a catastrophic defeat in 1917. Yet paradoxically it fought a far more effective war than it would in World War II, and it preserved for the duration a liberal regime at home. As for results, its long-term adversary disappeared from the map and it was rewarded with great strategic territorial gains -- none of which assuaged, however, a growing illiberal nationalism. How should we judge this vastly paradoxical and transformative experience -- how should a nation remember so mingled a legacy?

https://ces.fas.harvard.edu/#/page/salvemini_lecture_series

Contact(s): Roumiana Theunissen, rtheunissen@fas.harvard.edu