Derived from
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21810623 HISTORY OF CONTEMPORARY EUROPE in International Relations LM-52 A - Z CECI GIOVANNI MARIO
(syllabus)
The course is divided into two parts. The first part deals with the most important events and issues concerning the history of Europe since 1945 up to the present. The second part is devoted to a specialized theme: the main Italian attitudes, reactions and points of view with regard to the end of the Cold War and the effects of the collapse of the bipolar order on Italian domestic politics and Italy’s foreign policy.
FIRST HALF OF THE COURSE (3 CFU) History of Europe since 1945 Contents: 1. From War to Cold War 2. Democracy Embattled: France, Italy, and West Germany 3. Stalinism beyond the Iron Curtain 4. The Economic Boom and the Welfare State 5. Political Transformations in Western Europe in the Fifities and the Sixties 6. The Years of Chruščëv 7. The End of the European Empires 8. Gaullism in France and the Center-Left in Italy 9. Europe in Crisis: the Old Continent during the Seventies 10. Eastern Europe after 1968 11. The Transition to Democracy in Spain, Portugal, and Greece 12. The Thatcher Era 13. The Fall of the Wall and the End of the Cold War 14. The Yugoslavian crisis 15. The new Europe between integration and immigration
SECOND HALF OF THE COURSE (3 CFU) Italy and the End of Cold War Contents: 1) Italian politics during the Eighties; 2) Italians facing the collapse of the Berlin Wall; 3) Political parties in search of new identities; 4) The end of the Cold War and the end of the so-called “first Republic”; 5) The birth of a new political system; 6) Italian foreign policy in the new international order; 7) Italy and Europe; 8) Perspectives on present-day Italy
The first part of the course will consist of lectures, during which also photographs and footage will be employed. The second part of the course will be structured as a specialized seminar. After a series of lectures during which the instructor will introduce the main topics of the seminar, attending students will be required to do one presentation in class about a book, which will be chosen from a selection provided by the instructor at the beginning of the course. Class discussion will follow each presentation. At the end of the course, attending students will be required to write a 4000 word paper, analyzing the book chosen in the light of the analyses and discussions from the seminar.
Only for students attending the course, the assessment related to the first part of the course may take the form of a mid-term exam, to be taken during the course (esonero). With regard to the seminar, the grade for this part of the course (which will average with the grade obtained for the first part) will be attributed on the basis of the student’s performance in the following activities: PRESENTATION: 30%; FINAL PAPER: 70%.
(reference books)
Books for students attending the course: - Federico Romero, Storia della guerra fredda. L’ultimo conflitto per l’Europa, Torino, Einaudi, 2009 - Readings assigned by instructor
Books for students not attending the course: 1. William I. Hitchcock, Il continente diviso. Storia dell’Europa del 1945 a oggi, Roma, Carocci, 2003 2. Federico Romero, Storia della guerra fredda. L’ultimo conflitto per l’Europa, Torino, Einaudi, 2009
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