Academic literature on the topic 'Italian unification'

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Journal articles on the topic "Italian unification"

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Pobjoy, Mark. "Rome Scholarships in Italian Studies: The unification of Italia." Papers of the British School at Rome 65 (November 1997): 352–53. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0068246200010709.

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Kravchenko-Novoselova, A. A. "The Problem of the Unification of Italy in Dante Alighieri’s Works." Solov’evskie issledovaniya, no. 1 (March 30, 2022): 103–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.17588/2076-9210.2022.1.103-115.

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The year 2021 is a remarkable date for the Italian history: 160 years ago the unified Italian state was created. As a matter of fact, before then, the necessity to unify the country had been discussed for more than five centuries. One of the first who expressed these ideas was the great poet and politician Dante Alighieri, whose anniversary is also celebrated this year. In Russian Dante studies, the poet’s ideas on the Italian unification have been usually considered within the context of his own political views. It is the case of A.K. Dzhivelegov’s and I.N. Golenishchev-Kutuzov’s studies, which considered the biography and political activity of the famous Italian poet, whereas E.P. Naumov paid special attention to Dante’s view on the contemporary political situation in Europe. Our article is entirely dedicated to the development of the issue concerning the Italian unification in Dante Alighieri’s work. Basing on a systematic analysis of the entire body of Dante’s work, this article highlights the fact that the idea of unification is not only found in Dante’s political writings but is, in fact, a keynote of all his literary work. Although Dante considered the unification of Italy in the context of the utopian universal monarchy, he also saw the roots of this unification much deeper than that, i.e. in the organic unity of the Italian people. Our work emphasizes a given evolution of Dante’s philosophical and political views, in connection with the unfolding events of his time. In conclusion, this article provides a comprehensive description of Dante’s views on the unification of Italy, highlighting the necessity of this unification, the unwillingness of the country to it, as well as the reasons of this unwillingness coming from the contemporary municipalism.
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Sidoti, Francesco. "The Italian Political Class." Government and Opposition 28, no. 3 (July 1, 1993): 339–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1477-7053.1993.tb01320.x.

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IN MODERN ITALIAN, ‘POLITICAL CLASS’ IS A CONCEPT quite distinct from that of a ruling class. The notion of political class applies to a million people who are in full-time politics. The cream of these professional politicians is part of the ruling class: a term which applies to the people who effectively run the country working in business, finance, administration, politics, and so on.In Italy the history of the changing importance of the political class has always been connected with the weakness of the ruling class, which was evident from the beginning of unification. Italy became a nation-state in 1861, largely thanks to the action of a tiny group of patriots consisting of ambitious aristocrats and romantic intellectuals. While in the same period the Prussian monarchy gave strong leadership to the process of unification in Germany, the Piedmont monarchy led the Italian process of national unification under the discreet partnership, open protection, or direct involvement of other major European states. From 1861 to the present time in Italian history many observers have pointed to the weakness of the ruling class and the interference of foreign powers.
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Lee, Son Phil. "German Re-unification and Italian Foreign Policy." Journal of international area studies 14, no. 3 (October 31, 2010): 357. http://dx.doi.org/10.18327/jias.2010.10.14.3.357.

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Vella, Francesca. "Bridging Divides: Verdi's Requiem in Post-Unification Italy." Journal of the Royal Musical Association 140, no. 2 (2015): 313–42. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/02690403.2015.1075809.

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ABSTRACTThis article addresses the early Italian reception of Verdi's Messa da Requiem (1874), premièred in Milan on the first anniversary of the death of the novelist Alessandro Manzoni. Previous literature has focused on issues of musical genre and the work's political implications (particularly its connections with Manzoni and with late nineteenth-century Italian revivals of ‘old’ sacred music). The article examines, instead, the curiously pluralistic concerns of contemporary critics, as well as certain aspects of Verdi's vocal writing, with the aim of destabilizing traditional dichotomies such as old/new, sacred/operatic, vocal/instrumental and progress/crisis. It argues for more broad-ranging political resonances of Verdi's work, suggesting that the negotiation of a variety of boundaries both in Verdi's music and in its contemporary discussion made the Requiem dovetail with wider cultural attempts to define Italian identity.
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de Oliveira, Guilherme, and Carmine Guerriero. "Extractive states: The case of the Italian unification." International Review of Law and Economics 56 (December 2018): 142–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.irle.2018.10.001.

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Godfrey, Aaron W. "Book Review: The Italians of Dalmatia: From Italian Unification to World War I." Forum Italicum: A Journal of Italian Studies 45, no. 1 (March 2011): 274–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/001458581104500129.

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Bertolotti, Maurizio. "Fare gli italiani. 150 anni in mostra." PASSATO E PRESENTE, no. 86 (July 2012): 95–105. http://dx.doi.org/10.3280/pass2012-086007.

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«Making Italians». 150 Years in Exhibition in Turin. In the context of a positive review, the author criticizes the exhibition at Turin of 150 years of Italian unity because it provides a representation of the process of unification of Italians in which conflicts are softened or removed: a tendency that the author attributes to the curators' explicit intention to give particular prominence to the elements that strengthen the sense of belonging to our national community. The author remarks that the curators have privileged the multimedia diversification of the sources rather than their in-depth analysis.
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Fortier, Anne-Marie. "The Politics of “Italians Abroad”: Nation, Diaspora, and New Geographies of Identity." Diaspora: A Journal of Transnational Studies 7, no. 2 (September 1998): 197–224. http://dx.doi.org/10.3138/diaspora.7.2.197.

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Italian people's relationship to national identity is complicated by a history of mass emigration that reached important proportions in the years following Italian Unification. There are approximately 4.5 million Italian emigrants living outside Italy, and an estimated 25 million emigrated between 1876 and 1965 (Vasta). When descendants of emigrants are included in the surveys, estimates reach up to 65 million people of “Italian origin” living around the world.
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Seymour, Mark. "Introduction: perspectives on Garibaldi and Italian unity." Modern Italy 15, no. 4 (November 2010): 395–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13532944.2010.506290.

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One hundred and fifty years ago, in October 1860, the legendary dawn meeting at Teano between Giuseppe Garibaldi and Victor Emmanuel of Piedmont marked a momentary confluence of competing visions of Italian unification. Although the moment represented an ideological about-face for Garibaldi, his status as the most luminous hero of Italian unification continued to rise like a serene spirit, seemingly untainted by the contested realities of the nation he had helped to create. Of course, that generalisation ignores a thousand exceptions, and already from the 1950s and 1960s, authors such as Denis Mack Smith and Christopher Hibbert had underlined that Garibaldi's life and historic role were not without conflict or enmity (Mack Smith 1957; Hibbert 1965). But it remains true that, all told, Garibaldi's legacy and personal reputation have been characterised, until very recently, by an almost uncanny pact of agreement not to disagree – at least in public.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Italian unification"

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Zeraschi, Maria. "Elizabeth Barrett Browning and Italian unification." Thesis, University of Wales Trinity Saint David, 2005. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.683326.

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Menegus, Virginia <1992&gt. "SOVEREIGN DEBT: THE UNIFICATION OF ITALIAN SOVEREIGN DEBT." Master's Degree Thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/8785.

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Volino, Massimo Salvatore. "Word grammar, unification, and the syntax of Italian clitics." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 1990. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/20854.

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Modern linguistics is currently replete with competing theories, all with differing goals and intentions. This is not an altogether desirable situation. The aim of this thesis is to develop one of these theories, namely Word Grammar (Hudson 1984a), with this in mind. After an exposition of the theory, which should leave the reader with a clearer idea of the workings of the theory of Word Grammar, I will be concerned to put the intuitions behind the theory on as formal a footing as possible. This will involve the development of yet another formalism. However, this formalisation will involve the use of standard techniques. Extensions to the grammar, where necessary, shall be made with devices now current in the field such as Unification. In such a way, I hope to bring Word Grammar more into line with other formalisms, thus aiding a convergence rather than a divergence of theories. As part of the test for this new formalism it will then be applied to the problem of clitic placement in Italian.
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Ertz, Matilda Ann Butkas 1979. "Nineteenth-century Italian ballet music before national unification: Sources, style, and context." Thesis, University of Oregon, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1794/11296.

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xxiv, 603 p. : ill. (some col.) A print copy of this thesis is available through the UO Libraries. Search the library catalog for the location and call number.
Though not widely acknowledged, ballet and its music were important to the nineteenth-century Italian theatre-goer. While much scholarship exists for Italian opera, less study is made of its counterpart even though the ballet was an important feature of Italian theatre and culture. This dissertation is the first in-depth survey of the music for Italian ballets from 1800-1870, drawing from the hundreds of ballet scores in two important collections: The John and Ruth Ward Italian Ballet Collection, part of the Harvard Theatre Collection, and the New York Public Library for the Performing Arts Research Collections. After discussion of primary and secondary sources (Chapters II and III), I provide an overview of the context in which ballets were performed during the period (Chapter IV). In Chapter V I discuss musical styles for mime and for dance, and dance sub-categories such as the pas de deux, ballabile, and national dances. I also explore specific commonly occurring choreo-musical sub-topics such as anger, love, storms, hell, witches, devils, and sylphs. Finally, I examine two complete ballets in detail. Chapter VI on Salvatore Viganò's La Vestale includes a discussion of the hitherto neglected manuscript full score and of the published piano reduction. Chapter VII on Giuseppe Rota's Bianchi e Negri explores the musical and dramatic adaptation of Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin . While examining the traits of Italian ballet music as a genre and exploring relationships between music, dance, and libretto, this dissertation initiates a wider discussion of the social-political context of ballet music in nineteenth-century Italian theatrical life during the turbulent decades spanning the 'Risorgimento' period.
Committee in charge: Marian Smith, Chairperson, Music; Anne McLucas, Member, Music; Marc Vanscheeuwijck, Member, Music; Jenifer Craig, Outside Member, Dance
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Guillaume, Nicolas. "“Firenze Capitale d’Italia”, le « Plan Poggi », 1864-1871 : évolution des conceptions diplomatiques, politiques, urbanistiques, militaires et culturelles à travers le transfert de la capitale du Royaume d'Italie à Florence." Thesis, Université de Lorraine, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LORR0282/document.

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Cette étude porte sur les influences réciproques du « Plan Poggi » (projet d’agrandissement de Florence) et des relations diplomatiques, politiques, militaires et économiques entre l’Italie et les Puissances européennes, en particulier la France et le Saint-Siège, depuis la « Convention de Septembre » 1864 jusqu’à la « Porta Pia » en 1870, puis le transfert de la capitale à Rome en 1871. Viendra ensuite une analyse de l’état d’esprit de la population face aux bouleversements économiques et sociaux entraînés par l'arrivée du gouvernement, à travers les témoignages des acteurs politiques, des habitants, de l’architecture, de l’art, de la littérature, de la Presse. Enfin, sera analysée l'influence de ces modifications urbaines, sociales, sur les mentalités, sur la perception du patrimoine culturel et historique. En conclusion, sera menée une analyse des conséquences de la perte du statut de capitale sur les mentalités et les projets d'urbanisme, avec en particulier la « Question Florentine », concernant le subventionnement par l'Etat d'une partie des travaux liés aux institutions gouvernementales, encore non achevés au départ de la capitale, qui vont grever les finances de la municipalité, jusqu'à la mener à la faillite dans les années 1880.Il a été mené une accentuation de la recherche sur les questions militaires, qui sont d'une grande importance à l'époque ; en effet, le transfert de la capitale de Turin à Florence conduit à repenser totalement le système stratégique de l'Etat-Major militaire italien, ainsi que le système de défense de la ville promue au rang de capitale (ainsi qu'à réduire sensiblement celui de Turin, qui peut cependant rester une importante base d'attaque contre l'ennemi Autrichien) : les manœuvres de 1869 en sont l'exemple concret. L' accentuation des revendications en, et sur la Vénétie (qui conduiront à la guerre en 1866) provoquent un basculement stratégique : le bas-Pô gagne en importance par rapport au Mincio. L'armée est ainsi une des clés de la concrétisation des projets urbanistiques du Risanamento Florentin, imposant sa marque dans le paysage, par la construction de casernes (parfois aux dépends d'équipement de salubrité publique), et la planification d'importantes zones d'exercices militaires, le Campo di Marte dont la localisation fera l'objet de nombreuses polémiques et discussions. La réorganisation de Florence en ville vitrine du nouveau royaume, de la nouvelle Italie unitaire et de la nouvelle bourgeoisie libérale doit également (comme à Paris) être une ville permettant des manœuvres militaires efficaces et faciles.Il s'agira également d'étudier dans quelle mesure les opérations et la stratégie militaires ont conditionné la construction des infrastructures ferroviaires, autre point important de l'urbanisme de Florence capitale, avec les débats sur la construction et la localisation d'une nouvelle gare en remplacement de l'ancienne, et désaffectée, Stazione Leopolda : la localisation des voies conditionne l'urbanisme, mais subit des contraintes stratégiques, Florence devenant rapidement (même si la ville avait déjà joué un rôle similaire, quoiqu'à une bien moindre mesure en 1859 contre l'Autriche, avec l'arrivée massive de volontaires venus s'enrôler en ville) un carrefour ferroviaire (et routier) permettant de faire remonter vers le Nord le gros de l'armée italienne, employée au début des années 1860 dans le Sud pour réprimer le Brigantismo
This study concerns the mutual influences of the "Plan Poggi" (project of Florence's enlargement) and diplomatic, political, military and economic relations between Italy and the European Powers, particularly France and Holy See, since the 1864 " September Convention " until the breach of " Porta Pia " in 1870, and the transfer of the capital city in Rome in 1871. An analysis of the population's state of mind in front of economic and social upheavals pulled by the arrival of the government, through political actors, inhabitants, architecture, art, literature and Press testimonies will come then. Finally, the influence of these urban, social modifications on the mentalities, on the perception of the cultural and historic heritage will be analyzed. In conclusion, will come an analysis of the consequences of the loss of the status of capital city on the mentalities and on the urban planning projects, with in particular the "Florentine Question ", e.g the subsidization by the State of a part of the works bound to the governmental institutions, still not finished when the capital city leaves Florence, which are going to burden the finances of the municipality, and lead it to bankruptcy in the 1880s. An accentuation of the research on the military questions, which are of a big importance for the period, seems important; actually, the transfer of the capital city from Turin to Florence leads to totally rethink the strategic system of the Italian military General commandment, as well as the defensive system of the city promoted to the rank of capital (as well as to drastically reduce Turin's own, which however remain an important base for attacks against the Austrian enemy): the 1869 military exercise are the concrete example. The accentuation of the claiming for Venetia (which will drive to the war in 1866) provokes a strategic shift: the Lower Po Valley grows importance compared to the Mincio. The army is one of the keys of the realization of the urbanisation projects of Florentine Risanamento, posing its marks in the landscape, by the construction of barracks (sometimes at the expense of public health equipment), and the planning of important zones of military exercises, e.g the "Campo di Marte" whose localization will be object of numerous debates and discussions. Florence's reorganization in model town of the new kingdom, the new unitarian Italy and the new liberal bourgeoisie also owes (as in Paris) to be a city allowing effective and easy military operations.It will also be a question of studying to what extent the military operations and the strategy conditioned the construction of the railroad infrastructures, other important point of the town planning of Florence, with the debates on the construction and the location of a new station as a replacement of the former, and closed down, Stazione Leopolda: the location of circulation ways determines the town planning, but has to face strategic constraints, as Florence quickly becoming (even if the city had already played a similar role, although in a much lesser measure in 1859 against Austria, with the volunteers' massive arrival coming to enlist in the army) a railway and road junction allowing to make the main part of the Italian army go back to the north, used since the beginning of 1860s on the south to repress the Brigantismo
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Scaramuzza, Emilio. "«L’ordine nella libertà» : contrôle du territoire, police et politiques de gouvernement dans la Sicile garibaldienne (1860)." Thesis, Aix-Marseille, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017AIXM0361/document.

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L’objectif de cette recherche est d’étudier les forces de l’ordre siciliennes pendant la dictature garibaldienne de 1860, pour montrer comment l’île a été concrètement administrée par les chemises rouges dès la libération de Palerme. Il s’agit donc de saisir les traces de continuité ou de discontinuité en matière de contrôle territorial, d’ordre public et de police dans la région, au moment de la construction du nouvel État italien. L’effondrement du régime bourbonien dans l’île, causé par la nouvelle « révolution » sicilienne, laissa le pays dans une profonde crise politique et sociale. Il ne s’agissait pas seulement d’assurer le contrôle de l’espace et de l’ordre public, mais aussi d’établir et de légitimer un nouvel équilibre social et politique afin de s’assurer le soutien des élites siciliennes, tout en les inscrivant dans une perspective nationale : un défi majeur, qui obligea l’exécutif garibaldien à dépasser la simple dimension militaire pour envisager des pratiques de gouvernement inédites. Dans cette thèse, il s’agit donc de relire l’histoire de la dictature garibaldienne à partir de ses institutions policières, prisme multiforme pour saisir la complexité de la réalité sicilienne. Le résultat de ce travail de recherche propose de nouveaux éléments utiles pour comprendre, d’un point de vue différent par rapport aux études antérieures, le moment clé de l’Unification italienne
This research focuses on the Sicilian police during the Garibaldian dictatorship of 1860 and analyses how the “red shirts” ruled the island. The goal of this work is to retrace continuities and discontinuities of local control, public order and police service during the construction of the modern Italian state. The new Sicilian revolution brought about the collapse of the Bourbon regime in Sicily and the beginning of a deep social and political crisis all over the country. Therefore, the main goal of the local administration was to guarantee public order and respect for the law. In order to gain the support of local elites, the administration had to achieve a new social and political balance based on a national outlook. New practical instruments to rule the country were developed alongside existing military ones. This thesis provides a different interpretation of the history of the Garibaldian dictatorship through the “police prism”, in an effort to understand the complexity of the Sicilian context. In the end, this work underpins new elements that are useful to grasp the key moment of the Italian Unification and suggests a different interpretation of this phenomenon compared to the traditional analysis of the subject
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Cecchinato, Elisa <1985&gt. "Escape from Italy. The Italian immigration experience in Canada from the Unification of Italy to the present day." Master's Degree Thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/1686.

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Questa tesi di laurea tratta il tema dell'immigrazione italiana in Canada, a partire dall'Unità d'Italia fino ai giorni nostri. Nella prima parte sono illustrate le varie fasi relative all'emigrazione e successiva immigrazione degli Italiani in Canada, mentre nella seconda parte sono spiegate le caratteristiche dei primi insediamenti italiani. Nel terzo capitolo, invece, vi è un approfondimento su una delle regioni del Canada, la British Columbia, con particolare attenzione alla città di Vancouver. Per concludere, una panoramica generale sulle relazioni tra i due Paesi, Canada e Italia, sugli aspetti culturali e sociali che li legano e sulle prospettive di cooperazione.
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Quinn, Samantha. "Commemorating one hundred years of Italian unification : the 1961 centennial celebrations as they were held in Turin and Philadelphia." Thesis, University of Reading, 2011. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.567596.

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This thesis analyses the meaning of unity and unification in post-war Italian life through a transnational study of the two great events staged for the celebration of one hundred years of Italian unification: Italia '61 and the Festival of Italy. Held in Turin, Italia '61 was the Italian national celebration and the overall purpose was to put on display the 'progress made in Italy in 100 years of national life' and to make a statement about Italy's place in the Cold War world order. To do so it comprised three major components: a Historical Exhibition, which traced a history of unification focused on the Risorgimento and the Resistance; a Regional Exhibition; and the International Labour Exhibition, which contained displays on work practices and conditions from twenty-one nations and international organisations. Across the Atlantic in Philadelphia, the Festival of Italy was the largest Italian centennial commemoration held outside Italy and it had been planned in conjunction with the Italia '61 organisers and collaboratively with the Italian American community in Philadelphia. The Festival's theme was 'lOO years of Progress' and the corresponding exhibitions and events emphasised the cultural richness of Italy, the high culture of Italy, the contribution of Italy and Italian culture and people to contemporary civilisation and in particular to the U.5., and the modernity of contemporary Italy. This thesis presents the argument that 1961 represents a change or turning point in the way identity was celebrated and so conceived in both Italy and among Italian American communities. The effects of the reconfiguration are identified through analysis of the national, international, intergovernmental, ethnic and transnational relationships in operation at Italia '61 and the Festival of Italy.
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Satto, Christian. "Bettino Ricasoli politico nell’Italia unita (1861-1880)." Doctoral thesis, Scuola Normale Superiore, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11384/86055.

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Smittenaar, Richard. "Keeping Europe in order : conservative international political thought in Victorian Britain, 1854-1880." Thesis, Queen Mary, University of London, 2014. http://qmro.qmul.ac.uk/xmlui/handle/123456789/35983.

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Conservative international thought in Victorian Britain is a prominent landmark in the landscape of international thought which has up to now gone unmapped. In illuminating this body of thought, the thesis addresses weaknesses present in three different historiographies. As the first detailed study of conservative international thought in Victorian Britain, the thesis rectifies a marked bias in Victorian intellectual history towards the study of liberal and radical thought. Furthermore, by analysing the political thought of major representatives of the conservative educated classes, this thesis provides context for the history of conservative high politics, thereby leading us to view these in a different light. Finally, this study, by providing a historically nuanced account of the evolution of major themes of international relations theory in mid-Victorian Britain, functions as a corrective to the self-history of the academic field of International Relations. The thesis makes its argument by analysing conservative contributions in periodicals, pamphlets, and newspapers to British public debates on international affairs, from the Crimean War (1854-56) until the Eastern Question crisis of 1876-80. The general claim of this thesis is that there existed a distinctly conservative perspective on the international sphere. The core elements of this conservative perspective were the primacy of statesmen in setting foreign policy; of interests, military force, and stature in determining the course of international politics; and of order and equilibrium as its normative content. Conservative authors used this constellation of ideas in the major debates of the mid-Victorian era on international affairs, both as a means to make sense of events, and as a counterpoint to liberal narratives - with which Victorian international thought is all too often identified. In recovering the international political thought of Victorian conservatives, this thesis illuminates an important but neglected aspect of how international relations were understood and conceptualised in mid-Victorian Britain.
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Books on the topic "Italian unification"

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Hibbert, Christopher. Garibaldi: Hero of Italian unification. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2008.

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Yousefzadeh, Mahnaz. City and Nation in the Italian Unification. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230118720.

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Paglia, Cecilia La. Italian in HPSG: A unification-based formalism. Manchester: UMIST, 1993.

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The Italians of Dalmatia: From Italian unification to World War I. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009.

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Monzali, Luciano. The Italians of Dalmatia: From Italian unification to World War I. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 2009.

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The Italian Risorgimento: State, society, and national unification. London: Routledge, 1994.

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Italian unification: A study in ancient and modern historiography. London: Institute of Classical Studies, School of Advanced Study, University of London, 1998.

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Fenoaltea, Stefano. The reinterpretation of Italian economic history: From unification to the great war. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

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The reinterpretation of Italian economic history: From unification to the great war. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2010.

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City and the Nation in the Italian Unification: The National Festivals of Dante Allighieri. New York: Palgrave Macmillan, 2011.

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Book chapters on the topic "Italian unification"

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Riall, Lucy. "Italian Unification." In Risorgimento, 147–60. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-137-05797-6_7.

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Maffi, Luciano. "The Parodis After Italian Unification." In Palgrave Studies in Economic History, 171–221. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-63361-5_6.

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Signori, Elisa. "University Students After Italian Unification." In Student Revolt, City, and Society in Europe, 152–69. New York : Routledge, 2017. | Series: Routledge studies in cultural history ; 52: Routledge, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781315170145-13.

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Del Duca, Louis, and Patrick Del Duca. "Emergence of the Italian Unitary Constitutional System, Modified by Supranational Norms and Italian Regionalism." In Federalism and Legal Unification, 267–94. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-7398-1_11.

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Amatangelo, Susan. "Verga’s “L’amante di Gramigna”: Outlaws and Disorder in Militarized Post-Unification Italy." In Italian and Italian American Studies, 117–32. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57161-0_5.

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Federico, Giovanni. "The economics of the Italian unification." In An Economic History of the First German Unification, 318–35. London: Routledge, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003283430-22.

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Corradi, Morena. "The Army and Military Policies of Post-Unification Italy in the Milanese Radical Press." In Italian and Italian American Studies, 97–113. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-57161-0_4.

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Celli, Carlo, and Marga Cottino-Jones. "Italy from Unification to World War I." In A New Guide to Italian Cinema, 1–17. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230601826_1.

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Yousefzadeh, Mahnaz. "Introduction." In City and Nation in the Italian Unification, 1–17. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230118720_1.

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Yousefzadeh, Mahnaz. "The Dante Centenary and the Centenary’s Dante." In City and Nation in the Italian Unification, 19–38. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230118720_2.

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Conference papers on the topic "Italian unification"

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Isgrò, Sara. "Le fortificazioni costiere austroungariche sulla frontiera italiana nell’Istria e Dalmazia dagli studi dello Scacchiere orientale." In FORTMED2020 - Defensive Architecture of the Mediterranean. Valencia: Universitat Politàcnica de València, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/fortmed2020.2020.11601.

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Austro-Hungarian coastal fortifications on the Italian border at Istria and Dalmatia from the studies on the eastern areaRight after the Unification of Italy, land’s topography, with landscape acquisition and restitution through explorations across borders, and in particular regarding Austro-Hungarian fortification on the Italian land and sea border, were immediately observed by Major State’s officials. In early 1900 the long and jagged stretch of Dalmatian coast between Pola and Cattaro, full of natural ports and coastal canals formed by many islands sometimes arranged in multiple orders along the coast, and in the past defended by many works which are now mostly radiated or abandoned (except for S. Nicolò fort, near Sebenico), can count on some works realized in Lussinpiccolo (Monte Asino): Ragusa wall has been entirely unarmed and defensive organization of Cattaro’s cannons is only maritime, in fact, for the part towards the land the Austrians provided to organize the defensive arming against neighboring Montenegro; Pola maritime square instead includes a sea front and a land front, so it can obtain protection by gulf, city’s arsenal and Fasana Canal. Archive’s material consulted in Kriegsarchiv of Vienna, historical cartography of Austro-Hungarian fortification system detected by Italian officers during Major State journeys on a side, together with many Memories on Austrian maritime fortifications between Cattaro and Pola, published by Major State Command, operations Division, allow to investigate and deepen Austro-Hungarian forts system along Italian coast, in Istria and Dalmatia.
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Salamone, Giancarlo. "Towards the contemporary city. Reading method of post-unification restructuring of Trastevere in Rome." In 24th ISUF 2017 - City and Territory in the Globalization Age. Valencia: Universitat Politècnica València, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.4995/isuf2017.2017.6046.

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Towards the contemporary city. Reading method of post-unification restructuring of Trastevere in Rome Giancarlo Salamone Dipartimento di Architettura e Progetto. Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”. Roma. via Flaminia, 359. 00196 Roma. Dottorato di Ricerca in Architettura e Costruzione. Università degli Studi di Roma “La Sapienza”. Roma. via Antonio Gramsci, 53. 00197 Roma. E-mail: giancarlo.salamone@uniroma1.it Keywords (3-5): Restructuring, Rome, Trastevere, process, reading method, tools, analysis in urban morphology Conference topics and scale: Tools of analysis in urban morphology Trastevere, the only area of the historic center of Rome (together with the Vatican / Borgo complex) located on the right side of the Tiber river, shows a morphological structure that depends on the pre-existing substrate, both road that typological, which was modified during the post-unity period by the establishment of the Tiber fronts and, above all, by the opening of Viale Trastevere. In the way of thinking about urban morphology as a scalar product of the factors that influence each other, in particular building typology, local structure, overall structure and territory, and that contribute together to generate an organism, it is therefore possible to read this part of the historical center as the last product, but not definitive, of a "process". The reading method on the consolidated structure, later renovated in a post-unification era, is based on the analysis of the most abundant building typology and on the permanence and derivations of local typological processes that led to the formulation of the “line house” in nineteenth-century line, the predominant building type of roman expansion in nineteenth-twentieth century. The reading of the restructuring, understood as synchronic action on the historical center, has been implemented instead by the analysis of synchronic variations at “line house” through the research of all projects registered for the edification of each block. Thus we can see how the blocks resulting from the transformation, in the logic of a restructuring "contromaglia" like the one for the opening of Viale Trastevere, will be the result of the disconnection of the existing blocks in which the building type adopted has had to adapt to a lower return situations: a reading of a synchronic action on a diachronic process that gives us the modern morphological apparatus. References Muratori, S., Bollati, R., Bollati, S. and Marinucci, G. (1963) Studi per una operante storia urbana di Roma (Consiglio Nazionale delle ricerche, Roma). Maffei, G. L. and Caniggia, G. (1979) Lettura dell’edilizia di base (Marsilio, Venezia). Maffei, G. L. and Caniggia, G. (1984) Progetto nell’edilizia di base (Marsilio, Venezia). Vaccaro, P. and Ameri, M. (1984) Progetto e realtà nell’edilizia romana dal XVI al XIX secolo (Edizioni Calosci, Cortona). Corsini, M. G. (2001) Il tessuto e l’edilizia progettati in Italia dal 1870 al 1930. Permanenza e derivazioni dei processi tipologici locali (Edizioni Kappa, Roma). Archivio Storico Capitolino, archival sources on restructuring area of Trastevere and permanence and derivations of local typological processes.
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