- Docente: Paolo Tinti
- Credits: 6
- SSD: M-STO/08
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Bologna
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Corso:
Second cycle degree programme (LM) in
Italian Studies and European Literary Cultures (cod. 6051)
Also valid for Second cycle degree programme (LM) in History and Oriental Studies (cod. 8845)
Second cycle degree programme (LM) in Italian Studies, European Literary Cultures, Linguistics (cod. 9220)
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from Feb 12, 2025 to Mar 21, 2025
Learning outcomes
The course provides in-depth knowledge of the history of European libraries from the modern age to the present. It offers students the reflection on the classification, catalogues, services gradually implemented within the library collections both private and public. One of the objectives is also to grasp the cultural patterns underlying the establishment, the organization, the growing and dispersion of libraries, including the examination of architectural spaces and bibliographic structures as the first expressions of the intellectual inclination of each library.
Course contents
- The origins of libraries in the Eastern and Greco-Roman antiquity
- Catholic and monastic libraries (VI-XVth century)
- Petrarch, the bibliography of humanism and the books ad publicam utilitatem.
- Libraries in the Age of Reformation and Baroque: from reading control to state libraries in the age of absolutism
- Enlightenment and new public: towards national libraries
- The birth of the public library (1850) model
- Libraries in contemporary Italy from political unification to today
Readings/Bibliography
1. F. BARBIER, Storia delle biblioteche. Dall'antichità a oggi, Milano, Editrice Bibliografica, 2016.
2. P. TRANIELLO, Storia delle biblioteche in Italia, 2. ed., Bologna, il Mulino, 2014
3. P. TINTI, Fra cultura e letture benedettine. La librarìa di San Pietro in Modena capitale (secc. XVI-XVIII) in Su questa pietra. Nuovi studi e ricerche sull’abbazia benedettina di San Pietro in Modena, a cura di Sonia Cavicchioli e Vincenzo Vandelli, Modena, Panini, 2014, pp. 47-72.
Only NOT attending students will also read one of these titles:
1. Tracce armene nella Biblioteca Universitaria di Bologna e in altre biblioteche d'Italia, Bologna, Bononia University Press, 2020, vol. 1, pp. 34-69; 212-261.
2. A. CAPACCIONI, Le origini della biblioteca contemporanea, Milano, Editrice Bibliografica, 2017;
3. P. TRANIELLO, La biblioteca pubblica. Storia di un istituto nell'Europa contemporanea, Bologna, il Mulino, 2002;
4. G. BARONE - A. PETRUCCI, Primo: non leggere. Biblioteche e pubblica lettura in Italia dal 1861 ai nostri giorni, Milano, Mazzotta, 1976.
Teaching methods
The course will use the following methods: 1) Frontal lesson; 2) Individual or group written paper (focused on the history of an Italian library); 3) Guided visit to historical and contemporary libraries.
Assessment methods
Students who attend at least 75% of the lessons are considered to be attending.
The final exam consists of a three phases oral examination:
1) discussion about the brief history of the library edited by the student (as an individual or a group member) with the teacher
2) two questions concerning the required exam texts
3) only for not attending: one question related to the text chosen between the supplementary readings.
The oral examination aims to verify the knowledge of the texts and lessons’ insights. The highest score is thirty. The mastery of the contents and their critical reworking, the correct use of language, with specific attention to the technical terms of bibliographic disciplines, combine to define the assigned score.
For office hours and further informations, please consult the teacher’s website.
Final exams are scheduled at least 7 times an academic year, usually following that date:
‐ 2 in September-November
‐ 2 in January-March
‐ 3 in May-July
Teaching tools
All students, whether attending or not the lessons, will also deepen the study of an Italian library’s history, possibly a minor or even a private one, and write a short essay (max. 5.000 characters, spaces included), provided with a brief bibliographical note. Students can also choose to prepare the written essay as a group.
Written paper on the history of the Italian library should NOT be sent to the professor by email. Instead, it should be printed on paper and presented on the exam day when it will be discussed with the professor. Doubts should be presented and resolved by contacting the professor at least 10 days before the final exam.
During the course specific visits will be organized, in order to know the history, heritage and cultural peculiarities of the largest libraries of Bologna and Italy.
Students who have never before taken the study of the history of libraries will be able to read profitably in order to build or otherwise strengthen the basis of the preliminary knowledge of the course itself, one or more of the following titles:
1. Le biblioteche nel mondo antico e medievale, a cura di G. Cavallo, Roma-Bari, Laterza, 1988 (e successive ristampe): Introduzione di G. Cavallo, pp. V-XXXI e saggi di L. Gargan e A. Petrucci (pp. 163-202);
2. P. TRANIELLO, Storia delle biblioteche in Italia. Dall'Unità a oggi, Bologna, il Mulino, 2002 (editio minor, 230 p.).
Students who require specific services and adaptations to teaching activities due to a disability or specific learning disorders (SLD), must first contact the appropriate office: https://site.unibo.it/studenti-con-disabilita-e-dsa/en/for-students.
Office hours
See the website of Paolo Tinti