Space, Place and Mobility Student Video Contest 2024
Space, Place and Mobility Student Video Contest 2024
The 2023 edition of the videolab focussed on participatory video-making, asking our students from the MA in Mobility Studies and MA in Local Development to work in groups to provide narrative specifically focussing mobility justice. It was so amazing to watch their creative, sensitive, and empowering engagements with multiple notions of mobilities (including transport, gendered, migratory, food mobilities and many others).
This year, the Space, Place, and Mobility Student Video Contest awarded student-produced short films in two categories. THE RIDE received the ‘mobility focus’ award, while LOST IN COMMUNICATION and THREE STORIES ABOUT (NOT) MOVING AROUND received the ‘filmic quality’ award each.
This year’s ten short films and a few from prior years have been shown at the Donne.Teatro.Diritti Festival, which took place at Pacta Teatre in Milan from March 1 to April 1, 2024.


You may also check the 2023 short films out here
2024 Visiting Scholars GRANTS - CALL FOR APPLICATION (by April, 15)
2024 Visiting Scholars GRANTS - CALL FOR APPLICATION (by April, 15)
In the framework of the “Mobilities: A transdisciplinary framework for research, international teaching and public engagement in the Humanities” Department Development Project (PSD 2023-2027), the DiSSGeA (Department of Historical and Geographic Sciences and the Ancient World) has launched a 2024 Visiting Scholars GRANTS Call for Applications.
The present call is addressed to professors, researchers, and early career scholars (postdoctoral researchers, lectures, etc.) affiliated to European and non-European universities and research centres. Applicants must spend a period of approximately one (1) month at the Department and its “Mobility & Humanities” Centre for Advanced Studies from September 1st, 2024 through July 31st, 2025.
For the stay the Department will provide a total net amount of € 2.500.
The deadline for submission is April 15th, 2024 at 1:00 pm (CET).

GRANTS AWARDED
We are pleased to announce the winners of the Visiting Scholars Grants 2024, as part of the “Mobilities: A transdisciplinary framework for research, international teaching and public engagement in the Humanities” project (PSD 2023-2027).
After a thorough evaluation of the numerous applications received, the Selection Committee has identified the following scholars as recipients of the grants:
– Jensen Ole B. (Aalborg University)
– Patricia Hertel (FU Berlin / Centre Marc Bloch / University of Basel)
– Jean Sebastian “Baz” Lecocq (Humboldt University of Berlin, Institute for Asian and African Studies)
– Erik Aschenbrand (Eberswalde University for Sustainable Development)
We wish to express our sincere appreciation to all candidates for the quality and excellence of the proposals submitted. The selection was highly competitive, given the high standard of applications.
We thank everyone for their interest in our project and look forward to future opportunities for collaboration.
Notturni Contemporanei | geoliteray walk through Venice nightscapes – 2 Feb 2024
Notturni Contemporanei | geoliteray walk through Venice nightscapes – 2 Feb 2024
Notturni Contemporanei. Un’esplorazione geoletteraria dei nightscapes veneziani is part of the geoliterary walks series CONTESTI organised by the Museum of Geography of the University of Padua. Notturni Contemporanei, as part of the NaMUC seminar series, also contributed to the public engagement activities promoted by the MoHu-based Unit of the PRIN PNRR research project WALC – Walking Landscapes of Urban Cultures.
Fostering the process of attunement to the atmospheres of the local urban night, the open-air seminar, organised by Giada Peterle and Giuseppe Tomasella, engaged participants in a night walk through the winter city, drawing on a selection of works by contemporary authors living in, walking through and writing about Venice. Their literary representations revealed experiences, practices and realities co-producing the nightscapes of those people considering the city as their birthplace, home or safe harbour.
Strolling along the calli, the texts invited non-academic participants (25 attendees of different ages and backgrounds) to steer away from the stereotypes and clichés of Venice’s iconography. The geoliterary exploration of local nightscapes, in fact, offered renewed understandings of the entwined relations connecting the excesses of the tourism phenomenon with the decline of residential communities. The night walk was a chance to disclose the ‘glocal’ features of the rising fears related to the consequences of the climate crisis looming over Venice.
Walking Landscapes of Urban Culture (WALC) PRIN 2022 PNRR project
Walking Landscapes of Urban Culture (WALC) PRIN 2022 PNRR project(2023-)
Research Unit based at the University of Padua
The main objective of the WALC project is the analysis from an interdisciplinary perspective (critical-literary, geographical, sociological) of walking in urban spaces as an intangible cultural heritage of contemporary urban mobility in European cities. The social and humanistic perspective proposed by this project suggests the importance of walking as a cultural practice. The post-pandemic time, the current social changes and climatic crisis ask to rethink cities and urban mobilities, especially the transport means and ways by which we move in space, and suggest re-evaluating the role of urban walking practices.
In European cities, walking in urban space is an often neglected but widely accessible everyday activity: allowing one to reflect on the conformation of the city, perceive and embody the map of the city, and identify new routes for experiencing and exploring everyday environments. Far from being a mere self-reflecting, individual practice, walking represents a common tool for empowering citizens, allowing them to understand the value of urban narratives traced by walking paths as intangible heritage that could be enhanced by new types of open-air, mobile, and public museum activities; to re-imagine interactions between places and stakeholders; to promote dialogues between transgenerational non specialistic-audiences and academic, cultural, and institutional actors (i.e. universities, museums, local administrations and institutions).
The project features two other units, one coordinated by Filippo Milani at the University of Bologna and one coordinated by Luca Daconto the University of Milano Bicocca.
The Research Unit based at the University of Padua, coordinated by Giada Peterle, promotes an art-geography collaboration to explore walking as a mobile and creative method, and to reflect on the ways in which urban cultures can be shaped and resignified through creative and narrative practices. In particular, this Unit contributes to current research in literary geographies; literary urban studies; mobility studies; and geohumanities, and, from a methodological perspective, it works with a geocritical approach to urban mobilities and walking narratives; art-based and creative methods; mobile and auto-ethno-graphic methods.
This Research Unit is sustained by the Centre for Advanced Studies in Mobility and Humanities (MoHu) and the Museum of Geography of the University of Padua.
The WALC project collaborates also with the Espace, Déplacement, Mobilité Network of the Centre de Recherches Pluridisciplinaires Multilingues – CRPM, Université Paris Nanterre
The WALC PRIN project runs the NaMUC (Narrative Mobilities of Urban Cultures) seminar series, which includes seminars hosted at the MoHu Centre, the Museum of Geography, and also on the move across multiple urban spaces
Principal Investigator:
Giada Peterle

Member:
Tania Rossetto

Giuseppe Tomasella

SILKRAA - The Silk Road across the Alps
SILKRAA - The Silk Road across the Alps. Craftsmen Migrations, Commercial Exchanges & Social Relations Between France & Italy in the Early Modern Period
Marie Skłodowska Curie Postdoctoral Global Individual Fellowship
(Sept 2023-Feb 2027)
The SILKRAA project aims to reconstruct the dynamics of silk weavers’ migration between Italy and France during the early modern age. To achieve this, an interdisciplinary approach will be employed, combining socioeconomic history, migration studies, labor and gender studies, as well as the history of techniques and material culture.
Through the integration of macro-historical, micro-historical, and biographical reconstruction, SILKRAA aims to contribute to the revitalization of studies on migratory phenomena in the Early Modern period. Leveraging digital humanities, a comprehensive database will be created, gathering demographic data, biographical information, and visual/material evidence from Italian and French archives and museums.
Essential to the realization of the SILKRAA project is the training in Italian and international historical research methods at the Department of Historical, Geographical, and Ancient World Sciences (DiSSGeA) under the expert guidance of Prof. Andrea Caracausi. This training is complemented by collaborative efforts with Yale University (Prof. Paola Bertucci), the University Lumière Lyon2 (Prof. Manuela Martini), and the Como Silk Museum. Working closely with historians and experts, this collaboration is crucial for achieving the project’s objectives. The obtained results will not only significantly impact academic outcomes but also contribute to a more profound societal understanding.
Follow the project activities here:
Instagram @silkraa_msca
Twitter @silkraa
Postdoctoral researcher:
Mario Grassi














