Living with the Volcano │The Culture and History of Naples reflected in Natural Disasters
Max Planck Lecture
- Event online
- Date: Nov 10, 2021
- Time: 06:00 PM - 07:00 PM (Local Time Germany)
- Speaker: Elisabetta Scirocco
- Host: Max Planck Society
A consistent part of Neapolitan culture as we know it was shaped by the city’s peculiar relationship with natural disasters, which have affected the lives of Neapolitans for millennia. The volcanic cone of Vesuvius looms over Naples - as both a landmark and a fateful reminder for the southern Italian metropolis. For centuries, its eruptions have left their mark here. Like most of the Italian territory, Naples and its surroundings are additionally prone to earthquakes. Elisabetta Scirocco examines how these phenomena have shaped the city’s art and architecture from the Middle Ages until very recent times, especially from the point of view of resilience after catastrophic events.
Elisabetta
Scirocco is a
researcher at the Bibliotheca Hertziana – Max Planck Insitute for Art History
in Rome, where she is Scientific Assistant to the Director Prof. Dr. Tanja
Michalsky. After studying Italian Philology and Art History at the University
of Naples “Federico II”, she joined the Kunsthistorisches Institut in Florenz –
Max-Planck-Institut (2010-2015). There she developed, together with the
Director Prof. Dr. Gerhard Wolf and Dr. Carmen Belmonte, the transdisciplinary
research project Storia dell'arte e catastrofi. L'Italia sismica (2014–present). At the Bibliotheca Hertziana,
she is among the co-responsibles of the project Mapping Sacred Spaces.
Forms, Functions, and Aesthetics in Medieval Southern Italy and member of
the research initiative Palimpsest Naples.
Moderator: Eliza Apperly, journalist
This is an online event, click here for the livestream.