The Bridge over the Strait of Messina: “Security,” Integration, and the High Stakes of Seismicity in Schengen-Era Sicily

Sep
23
12:30 pm to 1:30 pm
Event Status
As Scheduled
Presenter
Lina Insana, Department of French and Italian
European Studies Center Brown Bag Lunch and Learn Series In 2022, the Meloni government renewed plans to connect Sicily and the Italian mainland— plans that had lain dormant for more than a decade—and build the largest single-span suspension bridge in the world. What does this most recent chapter of the bridge’s story tell us about Sicily’s place in the Italian nation, in Europe, and in frameworks of integration and security? And how do the politics of this moment resonate with earlier plans to bind this notoriously “seismic” island to more “stable” ground? Bio: Dr. Lina Insana Associate Prof of Italian Director of Italian Graduate Studies Italian Program Coordinator Lina Insana’s research and teaching focuses on modern and contemporary Italian cultural production. Most of her work on Italian writer and Holocaust survivor Primo Levi is concerned with textual mediation, translation, and adaptation; newer research—on Sicilian cultural belonging and manifestations of italianità in the American interwar period (1919-1939)—seeks to interrogate formations of transnational identity at the margins of conventionally accepted definitions of Italianness.
In-Person event
Location
4217 Posvar Hall
Event Type
Lecture Series / Brown Bag
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