Roberto Dainotto, Professor of Romance Studies and Italian

Roberto Dainotto

Office Location:  205 Lang
Office Phone:  (919) 660-3121
Email Address:   send me a message
Web Page: http://www.duke.edu/~dainotto

It is said in his legend that Professor Dainotto's PhD from New York University was in Comparative Literature, and only when he was struck by an illumination under the statue of Washington Duke, possessed by the spirit of JB our Founder, he started pronouncing burning words in Italian and was appointed Assistant Professor in that Field. The image of Garibaldi spake unto him and said: "Roberto, go and spread Italian words, that manyfold students can hear." And he went and taught, as thou can see, on Eighteenth- and Nineteent-Century Italian literature and culture, and fascism and Reconstruction, and Mediterranean Studies and European Unions; and he wrote in European History Quarterly, SubStance, Nepantla, Critical Inquiry, Segno, NAE, Journal of Modern Italian Studies, Annali d'italianistica, Italian-Americana, and in collections in Italy and abroad. On a time, he wrote about excrements, which scholars naturally abhor, but it reminded him of sublime ecstasies, and anon he wrote that for Postmodern Culture; wherefore he went to publish Il racconto americano (Einaudi Scuola) and Place in Literature (Cornell UP, 2000), to which Europe (in Theory) will follow.

Professor Eric Zakim, Assistant at Maryland, coediteth a volume on Mediterranean Studies with him (Mercy and Truth have met together!), in whose stable of doctrine thou shalt find, among other things, the rack of scripture, the ass of simpleness, the ox of discretion, and Miriam illuminating. Zakim and Dainotto both weep bitterly for each word.

Then let us devoutly pray this teacher, Professor Dainotto, to be our instructor and soccur and aid us in our adversities and curricula, and help, that we may after this short life at Duke come into everlasting life in the other world called real.

Education:

  • PhD, New York University, 1995
  • MA, New York University, 1990
  • Laurea, cum laude, University of Catania, Italy, 1986

Teaching (Fall 2009):

  • ITALIAN 132.01, ITALIAN CINEMA Synopsis
    Gray 228, MW 01:15 PM-02:30 PM
  • ROMST 200S.01, SEM ROMANCE STUDIES(TOP) Synopsis
    Friedl Bdg 126, M 04:25 PM-06:55 PM
  • LIT 255S.05, SPECIAL TOPICS IN LITERATURE Synopsis
    Friedl Bdg 126, M 04:25 PM-06:55 PM

Research Interests:

Literature and Place, Nationalism and Regionalism, Aesthetic Theory, Italian Idealism, Translation Theory, Autobiography, Ideas of Europe, European Visions of the New World, The Cultural Formation of the Italian Nation.

Representative Publications   (More Publications)

  1. Europe (in Theory) (2007), Duke University Press .
  2. Asimmetrie mediterranee. Etica e mare nostrum, NAE, vol. 3 (2003), pp. 3-18 .
  3. The Gubbio Papers: Historic Centers in the Age of the 'Economic Miracle', Journal of Modern Italian Studies, vol. 8 no. 1 (2003), pp. 67-83 .
  4. Place in Literature: Regions, Cultures, Communities (2000), Ithaca: Cornell University Press .
  5. R. Dainotto, Historical Materialism as New Humanism: Antonio Labriola’s ‘In Memoria del Manifesto dei Comunisti’ (1895), Annali d'Italianistica, vol. 25 (2008), pp. 265-282 .
  6. The Canonization of Heinrich Heine and the Construction of Jewish-Italian Literature, in The Most Ancient of Minorities: History and Culture of the Jews of Italy, edited by Stanislao Pugliese (2002), pp. 131-138, Westport, Conn.: Greenwood Press .
  7. R. Dainotto, Of the Arab Origin of Modern Europe: Giammaria Barbieri, Juan Andrés, and the Origin of Rhyme, Comparative Literature, vol. 58 no. 4 (Fall, 2007), pp. 271-292 .
  8. The Importance of Being Sicilian: Italian Cultural Studies, sicilitudine and je ne sais quoi, edited by Graziella Parati and Ben Lawton, Italian Cultural Studies (2001), pp. 201-219, Boca Raton: Bordighera Press .
  9. Goethe's Backpack, SubStance, vol. 105 no. 33 (2005), pp. 6-22 [html] .
  10. Tramonto and Risorgimento: Gentile's Dialectics and the Prophecy of Nation, in Making and Unmaking Italy: The Cultivation of National Identity around the Risorgimento, edited by Alberto Ascoli and Krystyna von Henneberg (2001), pp. 241-256, Oxford: Berg. .
  11. La città e il represso. Moderno, postmoderno, e l' immaginario del(la) capitale, in Golem. Il futuro che passa, edited by Fausto Carmelo Nigrelli (2001), pp. 49-72, Roma: ManifestoLibri. .
  12. Die Rhetorik des Regionalismus. Architektonischer Ort und der Geist des Gemeinplatzes, in Die Architektur, die Tradition und der Ort: Regionalismen in der europaäischen Stadt, edited by Vittorio Magnano Lampugnani (2000), pp. 15-30, Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt .
  13. R. Dainotto, The Discreet Charm of the Arabist Theory, European History Quarterly, vol. 36 no. 1 (2006), pp. 7-29 .
  14. The `Other' Europe of Michele Amari: Orientalism from the South, Nineteent-Century Contexts, vol. 26 no. 4 (2005), pp. 18-27 .
  15. Vico's Beginnings and Ends: Variations on the Theme of Origins of Language, Annali d'Italianistica, vol. 18 (2000), pp. 13-28 .
Curriculum Vitae