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Italy and China, Europe and East Asia: Centuries of Dialogue / Italia e Cina, Europa e Asia orientale: Secoli di dialogo / 意大利与中国,欧洲与东亚:跨世纪对话
Organised by the Department of Italian Studies
University of Toronto
100 St Joseph Street
Toronto, ON M5S 1J4
Here is a tentative list of the speakers:
April 7
9:30-11:00
Confucius and Matteo Ricci’s On Friendship
John Meehan, S.J., University of Regina, “Humanism East & West: Matteo Ricci, Neo-Confucians and Friendship as Dialogue”
Sebastiano Bazzichetto, University of Toronto, “The Celestial Amicizia: Classical Reasons for Matteo Ricci’s Book About Friendship”
Sheng Ping Guo, University of Toronto, “Lineage Patterns of Conversion in the Late Ming Dynasty: Matteo Ricci and His Colleagues’ Christian Faith Accommodating in a Confucian Land”
11:15-12:45
Chinese Migrant Entrepreneurship in Fashion Industry and Coffee Bars
Antonella Ceccagno, University of Bologna, “Compression of Diversity as an Asset for the Fashion Industry: the Chinese-run Clothing Workshops in Italy”
Ting Deng, Harvard University and The Chinese University of Hong Kong,
“‘Invading’ Italian Coffee Bars: Business Choice and Family Entrepreneurship of
Chinese Migrants in Italy”
Chiara Giuliani, University of St. Andrews, “The ‘Chinese-Italian Threat’ to Italian
National Identity”
14:00-15:30
(parallel sessions)
1. The Italian Unification Viewed by Chinese Intellectuals and Travelers
Federica Casalin, Sapienza University of Rome, “A Chinese Investigator in Italy: Hong Xun and his Youli Yidali wenjian lu (1887)”
Federico Brusadelli, University of Napoli “L’Orientale”, “Catholicism and the Political Role of Religion in Kang Youwei’s Yidali Youji/Journey to Italy (1904)”
Martina Turriziani, Sapienza University of Rome, “The Italian Unification in Kang Youwei’s Yidali Youji”
1. Surprising Italian-Chinese Connections: The Press, Scholarship, and Colonial Architecture
Renata Vinci, Sapienza University of Rome, “The Contribution of the Shenbao to the Perception of the Italian Cultural Tradition in late-Qing China (1872-1911)
Angelo Paratico, Writer, “Leonardo Da Vinci: A Chinese Scholar Lost in Renaissance Italy”
Nino Rico, Independent scholar and architect, “Dreams and Delusions of Benevolent Colonialism: The Italian Concession in Tianjin”
15:45-17:15
(parallel sessions)
1. Italian Travel Literature on Twentieth-century China
Rosa Lombardi, University of Rome Tre, “Travel Accounts and Memoirs of Italians in China”
Linetto Basilone, University of Auckland, “Italian Intellectuals, Their Travelogues and the ‘New China’: Strategies of Discursive Production of People’s Republic of China in the 1950s”
Roberto Bertoni, Trinity College Dublin, “Italian Intellectuals as Travelers to China since the 1950s: Utopian Illusions, Realistic Perplexities, and Rebalancing of Perspectives”
1. Surprising Italian-Chinese Connections: Short Stories and Films
Chuhui Zeng, Autonomous University of Barcelona, “Decameron and huaben
xiaoshuo Compared”
Li Zeng, University of Louisville, “Jia Zhangke’s Film Xiao Wu: A Neorealist View”
Patricia Richards, Kenyon College, “Re-seeing Neorealism through Wang Xiaoshuai and Jia Zhangke”
18:00-19:30
Lecture and Q/A with Marco Wong
April 8
9:30-11:00
Chinese Migration, Interracial Intimacy, and Films
Daniele Brigadoi Cologna, Insubria University, “Societal Perceptions of Chinese Migrants and Chinese-Italian Marriages in Fascist Italy”
Paolo Frascà, University of Toronto, “The Effective Interaction of Cinematic Genres and the Portrayal of Migration in Io sono Li by Andrea Segre”
Paolo De Falco, filmmaker and director of the Liquid Archive of Identity, “Leonardo and Chinese Migration to Bari”
11:15-12:45
Surprising Italian-Chinese Connections: Military Strategies, Noodles, and Toys
Andrea Polegato, University of North Texas, “The Problem of Efficacy in Machiavelli and Sunzi”
Hong Li and Christine Ristaino, Emory University, “Noodle Narratives on the Silk Road: A Cultural Exploration of China and Italy Through Noodles”
Anthony Cristiano, University of Toronto, “China and Italy: A Look into the Meaning of the Exchange of Toys and Games”
14:00-15:30
(parallel sessions)
1. Jesuits between Catholicism, Buddhism, and Confucianism
Rui Sang, University of Toulouse-Jean Jaurès, “Alfonso Vagnoni and the Female Saints in His Chinese Work: A Preliminary Study on the Last Two Volumes of Tian Zhu Sheng Jiao Sheng Ren Xing Shi”
Guo Wei, Sichuan University, “War on the Paper: The Debate between Matteo Ricci and Late Ming Buddhism”
Antonio De Caro, Università Vita-Salute San Raffaele and Hong Kong Baptist University, “Angelo Zottoli’s Dissertae Sententiae”
Lucilla Bonavita, University of Rome “Tor Vergata,” “Father Alessandro Valignano sj: An Example of Dialogue between East and West”
1. Chinese Migrants in Italian Documentary Films
Valentina Pedone, University of Florence, “From a Galaxy Far, Far Away: Orientalism in Documentaries about Chinese in Italy”
Mary Ann MacDonald Carolan, Fairfield University, “Documenting Chinese Youth in Miss Little China (2009)”
Gaoheng Zhang, University of Toronto, “Morality and Italian Documentary Films on Chinese Migrants”
15:45-17:15
(parallel sessions)
1. Jesuits and Scientific Knowledge in Texts
Oana Baboi, University of Toronto, “Saving the Jesuit Body: Francesco Brancati’s Medicinal Recipes in 17th-century China”
Francesco Guardiani, University of Toronto, “Li Madou (Matteo Ricci) and the Dawn of Typographic Modernity in Chinese Culture”
Allen Haaheim, University of Toronto, “Self as Other: Possibilities of Difference and Affinity in China-West Studies”
1. Traveling Arts
Eiren Shea, University of Pennsylvania, “Weaving a Path from Beijing to Venice in the Footsteps of Marco Polo: Chinese Textiles and the Italian Renaissance”
Roslyn Lee Hammers, University of Hong Kong, “Asian and Italian Perspectives in Qing Court Painting: Making Space for Agrarian Labor Imagery”
Maria Teresa Gonzalez Linaje, University of Veracruz, “From Art to Literature: Italian Contributions to Knowledge of China in Colonial Mexico”
18:00-19:30
Screening of the film Leonardo by Paolo De Falco (2008) and Q/A with De Falco
April 9
9:30-11:00
The Cultural Revolution According to Italian Intellectuals
Elisa Attanasio, University of Bologna, “Goffredo Parise and the Orient: A Continuous Fascination for Alterity”
Elisabetta Carraro, University of Toronto, “Goffredo Parise and Alberto Moravia Traveling in Mao’s China”
Alessandra Lavagnino, University of Milan, “Italian Without Italy: Experiences of an
Italian Teacher in the China of the Cultural Revolution”
11:15-12:45
Chinese Models for Italian Translation
Stefano Benedetti, East China University of Political Science and Law, “Prospero Intorcetta (1625-1696), First Translator and Editor of Confucius in the West”
Shiamin Kwa, Bryn Mawr College, “A Masked Ball: From Zhaoshi gu’er to L’Eroe Cinese”
Gabriele Tola, Sapienza University of Rome, “Primavera cinese: Carducci and the Unwitting Translation of a Chinese Poem”
Andrea Tullio Canobbio, University of Monastir, “Fra Li Po e Po Chu-i: Govoni e i poeti cinesi”
14:00-15:30
(parallel sessions)
1. Translating Italian Classics for Chinese
Gang Zhou, Louisiana State University, “Marco Polo in China”
Zhou Ting, University of Language and Culture of Beijing and University of Modena and Reggio Emilia, “Chinese Translation of Italo Calvino’s Works in the 1950s”
Sheng-mei Ma, Michigan State University, “Turandot: The Chinese Box by Puccini, Zeffirelli, Zhang, and Chen”
1. Italian-Chinese Education
Giulia Falato, Sapienza University of Rome, “Introducing the Italian Education System of the Renaissance into late Ming China: A Comparative Analysis of Alfonso
Vagnone S.J.’s Xixue (Western Learning, c. 1615) and Giulio Aleni S.J.’s Xixue Fan
(Summary of Western Learning, 1623)”
Donatella Guida, University of Napoli “L’Orientale”, “The Teaching of Chinese in Naples in the Nineteenth Century: The Three Character Classic Annotated and Translated by Guo Dongchen (1846-1923), alias Giuseppe Maria Kuo”
Sabrina Ardizzoni, University of Bologna, “The Integration of Students of Chinese Cultural Background in the Town and Province of Bologna”
15:45-17:15
(parallel sessions)
1. Italian-Chinese International Relations and Journalism during the Cold War
Enrico Fardella, Peking University, “The Relations between Italy and the PRC during the Cold War”
Lorenzo M. Capisani, Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore, “Telling the New from the Old: Commercial and Political Discourses for a Renewed Relationship between Italy and China during the Cold War”
Alberto Gelmi, City University of New York, “Crickets, Rugs, and Coffins: Tiziano Terzani’s China”
1. Italian-Chinese Music and Sounds
Wong Tsz, University of Göttingen, “Matteo Ricci in East West Music Exchange”
Sun Simin and Elisa Segnini, University of British Columbia, “From Italy to China and Backwards: Audiovisual Translation as Renegotiation”
Musical Recital:
Fabio G. Galeffi and Gabriele Tarsetti, The Teodorico Pedrini Study Center,
“Teodorico Pedrini at the Kangxi Court: A Milestone in the Development of the Cultural Relations between Italy and China”