Thinking in fragments: Romanticism and beyond
- University of Birmingham (UK), 16-17 December 2010
An international conference organized by the Leopardi Centre at Birmingham, sponsored by the AHRC as part of the Zibaldone Project, and supported by the Society for Italian Studies. Conference co-ordinator: Michael Caesar.
The theme
The first complete English edition of Giacomo Leopardi’s 4,526-page notebook (hisZibaldone di pensieri) will be published in 2012/13. The final stages of this project provide an opportunity to examine the poet-thinker’s fragmentary writing in a wider conceptual context than is usual and to address issues concerning fragmentariness as a distinctive form of the modern, the fragment in space and time, the relation between fragmentary thinking and philosophical materialism, the fragmentation of language, fragmentation and the lyric voice, (re-)assembly. The conference will bring Leopardi scholars together with specialists in eighteenth-century thought, English and German Romanticism, and competing concepts of the modern, in order to explore fragmentariness in modern culture from the Enlightenment to Baudelaire, Benjamin and beyond.
Thursday 16 December 2010
Session 1 - Welcome and Introduction
- Marian Hobson (Queen Mary University of London): Fragments, satire and philosophy without end: Diderot’s Neveu de Rameau
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- David Hill (Birmingham): The fragment in the Sturm und Drang: Goethe, Coleridge and Herder
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Session 2
- Paola Cori (Birmingham): Leopardi, Borges, Deleuze and the rhizome
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- James Vigus (Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, Munich): The Romantic fragment and the legitimation of philosophy: Platonic poems of reason
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- Paul Hamilton (Queen Mary University of London): The logic of the fragment and Romantic sobriety
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Reading
Jonathan Galassi (Farrar Straus and Giroux, NYC) reads from his new translation of Leopardi’s Canti.
Followed by a visit to the Cadbury Research Library to view a special display of rare and unusual books connected with writers featured in the conference organised by librarian Martin Killeen
Friday 17 December 2010
Session 3
- Diego Bertelli (Yale): Of fragments and footnotes: absence and invention of the text in Roberto Bazlen
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- Abigail Williams (Oxford): Extracts, snippets and fragments: the use of the textual excerpt in eighteenth century poetic miscellanies.
- Gabrielle Sims (NYU): Speaking about infinity without recourse to fragments: Leopardi’s L’infinito as a challenge to the sublime ellipsis
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Session 4
- Alexander Regier (Rice): J.W. Ritter and Walter Benjamin
- Fabio Camilletti (Warwick)
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- Florian Mussgnug (University College London): Speaking in fragments: death, prosopopeia and the language of inauthenticity
Session 5
- Jennifer Burns (Warwick): A blueprint in bits: fragments of thinking in Cletto Arrighi’s political commentary
- Cosetta Veronese (Birmingham): Fleetingness and flânerie: Leopardi, Baudelaire and the experience of transience
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- Giuseppe Stellardi (Oxford): Fragments of space and time: Gadda, Baudelaire and Benjamin
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Session 6
- Charlotte Ross (Birmingham): The ‘body’ in fragments: anxieties, fascination and the ideal of 'wholeness'
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- Pierpaolo Antonello (Cambridge): No fragment is an island: Carlo Ginzburg’s evidential paradigm and the ethical turn
- Conclusions