[Antiquitas] Napoli 1700-luvun Euroopassa

mlhannin at mappi.helsinki.fi mlhannin at mappi.helsinki.fi
To Elo 27 10:12:04 EEST 2015


Tämä syyskuun alussa Helsingissä järjestettävä konferenssi  
kiinnostanee myös antiikintutkijoita!

Naples in Eighteenth-Century Europe
The Finnish Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies
4—5 September 2015
The House of Sciences and Letters (Kirkkokatu 6, Helsinki, Room 505)
Registration by August 20, 2015: info-1700 at helsinki.fi

Friday, 4 September
10.15 a.m. Opening Words
10.20 a.m. Introduction: Henrik Knif (Åbo Akademi University),  
Approaching Naples
in the Eighteenth Century

11.00 a.m. Session I: Eighteenth-Century Perspectives on Ancient Campania
Margot Hleunig Heilmann (University of Bern)
Antero Tammisto (University of Helsinki), Pompeii in Eighteenth-Century
Finland
Janne Tunturi (University of Turku), Ancients, Moderns, Savages:

Campania in Late Eighteenth-Century Historical Thought

1.00 p.m. Lunch Break

2.15 p.m. Session II: Cultural Politics and Musical Diplomacy
Mélanie Traversier (University of Lille 3/Institut Universitaire de France),
Fatal Attraction: How the Bourbons Worked for the Musical Supremacy
of Naples in the Eighteenth Century
Charlotta Wolff (University of Helsinki), Naples in Stockholm: The
Influence of Neapolitan Music and Theatre on the Northern European
Scene

4.00 p.m. Drinks & Snacks

6.00 p.m. Concert: Follia d’Ammore – Singing and Playing from Naples in the
Baroque Period

Saturday, 5 September
10.15 a.m. Keynote: John Robertson (University of Cambridge), What and  
When Was the Neapolitan Enlightenment?

11.15 a.m. Coffee Break

11.45 a.m. Session III: Neapolitan Philosophy and Political Thought
Adriana Luna-Fabritius (University of Helsinki), Visions of  
Sociability in Early Neapolitan Enlightenment.
Koen Stapelbroek (University of Helsinki), The Liberty of Commerce:  
Neapolitan Trade Institutions and Eighteenth-Century Political Economy

1.15 p.m. Lunch Break

2.30 p.m. Keynote: Anna Maria Rao (University of Naples Federico II),  
Eighteenth-Century Naples: A European Capital of Culture?

3.15 p.m. Panel Discussion

4.00 p.m. Closing