Giuseppe Gazzola

BA, Università di Genova
MA, University of Notre Dame
Ph.D, Yale University
Associate Professor
Former Fellow, Humanities Institute at Stony Brook (2015)
Office: 2123 Humanities Building
Email: giuseppe.gazzola@stonybrook.edu
Academia: https://sbsuny.academia.edu/GiuseppeGazzola
Giuseppe Gazzola is an Associate Professor of Italian in the Department of Languages and Cultural
Studies at Stony Brook University. He holds a PhD. from Yale University (2008) and
received his Masters from the University of Notre Dame (1999). His research focuses
on European literature and cultural history of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries,
he has published articles on Gozzano, Foscolo, Marinetti.
- Research Interest
Research Interest
European Romanticism
Theories of Canon Formation
Modernist and Postmodernist Theories
My research focuses on European literature and cultural history of the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries; the list of my recent publications includes “Un entomologo in India: l’orientalismo consapevole di Guido Gozzano,” ISSA 24.2 (2011); Italy from Without (edited, SAGE, 2013); “Betting Against Themselves: Conflicting Conceptions of Love in Così fan tutte, o: la scola degli amanti” MLN 130.1 (2015); “European Man and Writer: Romanticism, the Classics, and Political Action in the
Exemplary Life of Ugo Foscolo,” (The Oxford Handbook of European Romanticism, 2015);
and Versi e Prose: Marinetti traduce Mallarmé (Società Editrice Fiorentina, forthcoming). Montale, the Modernist, which discusses the belonging of the Nobel-prize-winning Italian poet Eugenio Montale
in the Anglo-American category of modernism, will be published by Olschki in 2016; the edition of G.A. Borgese's unpublished
drama, "La fuga in Egitto," is under examination at Einaudi. A complete list of my
publications, conferences, awards, and courses can be found in my CV.
| - Projects
- Publications
- Courses
CoursesSBU 102.144 (GLS 102) This course contains graphic language: Semiotics and comics.Do we read comics, or do we watch them? How does the grammar of comics function? What
is semiotics and what does it have to do with comics? How does this mode of simultaneous
seeing and reading complicate conventional approaches to a text? We will be talking
about narratives and the visual arts, using the form of comics as a pretext, and a
text, to speak about the semiotic function. As a SBU 102 course, this class will focus
on learning how to read a text.
1 credit, Letter Grading
HUI 231: Italian Cinema
The cinematic representation of gender, class, and sexual politics in post-World War
II Italian films and the relationship of these themes to Italian history, society,
and culture are discussed. Films by directors such as Bertolucci, Fellini, and Wertmuller
are studied. Readings include selected works of film history, criticism, and theory.
3 credits
HUI 331: Lessons on Love from the Italian Lyric Tradition
3 credits
ITL 313: History of Italian Food
3 credits
ITL 441/552: The Roaring Twenties
3 credits
| - Books
- Gallery
Gallery

Chancellor's Award
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