Centro Primo Levi Thanks:

The Viterbi Family Foundation,
 and the Cahnman Foundation,
Travel for the speakers is provided by Alitalia USA.
The Italian Jewish World
Explore Italian Jewish studies and culture in Italy, Israel, and the Americas. The weekly and monthly features of CPL include: Printed Matter by Alessandro Cassin, The Centaur by Franco Baldasso, Books, and Academia
To know more about Primo Levi and his work visit Centro Internazionale di Studi Primo Levi in Turin.
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November 3 | Museum of Jewish Heritage
Free admission. Reservations: 646.437.4202
Presented in collaboration with the Italian Cultural Institute

6:00 pm | Safra Hall

Beyond the Racial Laws: Fascist Anti-Semitism Revisited.


Michele Sarfatti (CDEC, Milan), Annalisa Capristo (Center for American Studies, Rome), Guri Schwarz (University of Pisa) and Ilaria Pavan (University of Pisa).

Moderated by Alessandro Cassin (Centro Primo Levi)


Post-war Italian and international historiography had a tendency to downplay the racist components of Fascism. Starting in the 1980's some historians began to challenge this view. They undertook an examination of the intellectual and political landscape that shaped this prevalent opinion, while engaging in a new and thorough assessment of historical documents and data.


The scope and ideological foundation of the Fascist anti-Semitic legislation has recently emerged in its true dimensions through the findings of the "Italian Government Commission for reconstruction of the events characterizing the acquisition of Jewish assets by public and private bodies", active between 1999 and 2000.


Overturning the claim that the Racial Laws were a byproduct of diplomatic relations with Germany and were left largely unenforced, new studies demonstrate that racial prejudice and policies -not only toward the Jews - were an integral part of the Fascist mindset.


For instance, an in depth analysis of Razza e Civilt� - the official review of Demorazza  (the department of the Ministry of Interior dedicated to racial policies) provides new insight into Fascist racism, both as a cultural and political phenomenon and its role in shaping Fascist society.


As a result, a new picture of the Fascist era emerges, not only in terms of domestic policies, but also within the larger contexts of Italy's role in European colonialism and the cold-war era.

 


November 4 | Center for Jewish History
Admision: www.smarttix.com or (212) 868-4444

Presented by the Center for Jewish History, CPL, PEN World Voices Festival and Dalkey Archive Press in collaboration with the Consulate General of Slovenia

6:30 pm | Leo and Julia Forchheimer Auditorium

Boris Pahor's Necropolis: A Slovenian Story of Culture, Conflict, and Persecution on the Northeastern Border of Italy

Joze Pirjevec (University of Primorska, Slovenia), Maura Hametz (Old Dominion University), Uri Cohen (Columbia University). Moderated by Michael Biggins (University of Washington Libraries).


The aftermath of World War One brought about a new geopolitical configuration, perceived as detrimental by most of the ethnic  minorities that had made up the former Austro Hungarian Empire.  In the cosmopolitan port city of Trieste, the ethnic Slovenes became the target of discrimination. With the advent of Fascism, those who resisted Italian efforts at assimilation were imprisoned, shot, sent to concentration camps. 


In 1941 Boris Pahor, who later became one of the most prominent Slovene authors, was drafted in Mussolini's army. He returned to Trieste in 1943, after the armistice, a city occupied by the Nazis. Pahor joined the Yugoslav resistance forces, was arrested in 1944 and sent to Dachau, Struthof, Harzungen and Bergen-Belsen. His memoir of his camp experiences, Necropolis, recently published in English by Dalkey Archive Press, will be the centerpiece of this event.