Call | Summer School "The Future of Text"

Call | Summer School "The Future of Text"

The University of Padua, in collaboration with Tokyo College of the University of Tokyo, invites applications for a Summer School on the topic “The Future of Text”. Participants will engage with handwritten, printed, and digital texts from early modernity to the present day, with a particular focus on the impact of recent technologies on the future of text.

While providing a broad overview of the historical development of textual practices and technologies—from the invention of printing to generative artificial intelligence—the activities will allow students to develop a critical awareness of the challenges and opportunities presented by digital technologies such as digitization, social media, and artificial intelligence. Students will also have the opportunity to explore specific software for textual analysis, visualization, and extrapolation, and to visit key institutions during their stay in Italy, including archives and libraries in Padua and Venice.

Topics Covered:

  • Textual practices in the pre-modern world
  • Documenting practices
  • Artificial Intelligence and information today
  • Imagining textual futures
  • Site visits to archives in Venice and libraries in Padua
  • Hands-on workshop on Voyant Tools for the creation and analysis of textual corpora

Organizers and Main Instructors:

  • Federico Mazzini and Prof. Paola Molino (University of Padua)
  • Michael Facius and Prof. Naoko Shimazu (University of Tokyo)
  • Invited instructors

Target Audience:

We welcome applications from MA and PhD students from the Universities of Padua and Tokyo. A maximum of ten students will be selected.

Location and Date:

University of Padua, Italy
June 16–20, 2025 (arrival by June 15)

Language of Instruction:

English

Fees:

For students from the University of Padua and Tokyo, participation in the Summer School—including site visits, joint lunches, and coffee breaks—is free of charge.

Students from the University of Tokyo will receive a lump sum of 1000 EUR for travel expenses and accommodation in Padua, thanks to the support of the Centre for Mobility and Humanities of the University of Padua and the Department of Historical, Geographical Sciences and the Ancient World of the University of Padua.

Application:

Please send a motivation letter (1 page), CV (max 2 pages), and a letter of transcript or other academic record of your MA/PhD program at the University of Padua or the University of Tokyo.

Deadline:

Participants will be selected on a rolling basis until all slots are filled; latest possible submission: April 30, 2025, 23:59 JST.

Submit Applications To:


SAIL - Sicilians dreAmIng Louisiana: Agents of Migration and Labour Recruiters on the Palermo-New Orleans Route (1865-1901)

SAIL - Sicilians dreAmIng Louisiana: Agents of Migration and Labour Recruiters on the Palermo-New Orleans Route (1865-1901)

MSCA project (Sept 2024 –Augt 2026) supervised by Stefano Luconi
Coordinator: Università degli Studi di Padova, Department of Historical and Geographic
Sciences and the Ancient World (DiSSGeA), supported by the MoHu Centre and MobiLab
(Call ID: HORIZON-MSCA-2023-PF-01 - Grant Agreement n. 101149130)

SAIL analyses early migration from Sicily to Louisiana between 1865 and 1901. It sheds light on agents of migration who enrolled peasants in Sicily and on their transnational connections with labour recruiters based in Louisiana, who were looking for a labour force after the abolition of slavery at the end of the US Civil War in 1865. On the other side of the Atlantic, the Italian government considered emigration as an issue to be managed or opposed: the 1901 law restricted the activity of agents of migration, who were regarded as people smugglers and used as a scapegoat to justify migration, rather than being studied as one of the interrelated factors triggering it. This simplistic view permeated the public debate in Italy, has not been challenged by scholarship on Sicilian migration, and resonates with current populist and xenophobic narratives.

SAIL offers the first comprehensive study of early Sicilian migration to Louisiana by adopting an interdisciplinary approach combining social, economic, and cultural history with literature. Thanks to a thorough investigation and cross-referencing of untapped Italian and US archival sources and literary works, SAIL maps the presence of agents of migration in Sicily, analysing their identity, background, methods, organisation, and the transnational connections with labour recruiters in Louisiana, gauging their effectiveness in disseminating a dreaming image of the USA among Sicilian peasants and examining the extent to which their activity impacted the migration flow alongside other factors (economic depression, political turmoil, chain migration, remittances).

SAIL will fill a scholarly gap, develop tools for researching migrations, and reflect on Sicily’s past and its present as one of the main gateways into Europe. Through activities involving academic and non-academic audiences, SAIL will stimulate a debate and raise awareness around one of Europe’s most pressing concerns: safeguarding the right to safe migration.

Know more:

https://cordis.europa.eu/project/id/101149130

MSCA Fellow:

Alice Gussoni

American Stereoscopic Company, Publisher. Palermo harbor and magnificent mont Pellegrino, Sicily. Italy, 1907. Photograph. https://www.loc.gov/item/2020684054/.
Library of Congress, Prints & Photographs Division, LC-DIG-stereo-1s29513 (digital file from original)