- Docente: Maura De Bernart
- Credits: 10
- SSD: SPS/07
- Language: Italian
- Teaching Mode: Traditional lectures
- Campus: Forli
- Corso: First cycle degree programme (L) in Sociology and Criminological Sciences for Safety (cod. 0984)
Learning outcomes
Studying Jewish life and history and Shoah, from the point of view of sociological thought and socio-cultural change, and comparing with other cases of minorities and diasporas during wars and genocides, students should reach better capacities of historical-critical reading of society and collective violences, and improve paying attention to paths of non violent resistance and prevention.
Course contents
The Course's goal is to evaluate how sociological thought faced the “civilizational break” of the XX century, namely the two World Wars, Shoah (the destruction of European Jews), Nazi genocide and other genocides. Central will be the study of Shoah,. Porrajmos (the genocide of Roma and Sinti) and other genocides, and of their memory in Europe and in the world. After a number of lessons on some authorships (Durkheim, Weber, functionalism and intentionalism, etc.), the objective is to learn to "read" situations of persecution and forced migration and of minorities and diasporas during war and genocide. In a prudently comparative perspective, case-studies will be oriented towards non violent forms and practices of prevention, paying attention to the problems represented by the actions of decision-makers and executers before, and to the needs for justice and pacification afterwards.
This year the following topics will be dealt with:
1.Civilizational and epistemological breaks.
2.Modern sociology: knowledge, meanings, discontinuities and
disjunctions.
3.Durkheim and Weber and "the problem" of World War I.
4.The social and cultural crisis in the interwar period and the
“Jewsih problem”.
5.Functionalism and neo-functionalism before, during and after
World War II.
6.Critical sociology and other approaches to the history of XX
Century.
7. Studying Shoah and
Nazi genocide, in diasporas and in Israel.
8. Shoah and its memory
in Europe, in Israel and the world.
9.The memory of Shoah,
cultural sociology and “global” civil society.
10. Case studies on the relation between genocide and
migrations.
11. Sociologies of genocide.
12. Imprescriptibility of genocide and the needs for justice and
pacification.
Readings/Bibliography
See the above list
Teaching methods
Listening to proposed introductions, dialogues, films, research (also via research groups), bibliographical research online, possible "learning visits".
Assessment methods
For attending students:
during the course there will be two intermediate written exams, and
each student (personally or "in group") will be required to write a
report on topics to be decided with the teacher. For the final
exam, there will be an oral discussion on the report and on texts,
i.e. one among the "testi a scelta" and one more among the "testi
di approfondimento".
(Attending students are all those who attended at least the two
thirds of lessons).
For non attending students:
final exam will contain a written test and an oral discussion on
the texts - i.e. the general reference text; one of the "testi a
scelta"; and two of the "testi di approfondimento", to be both
chosen from within one of the suggested itineraries - to be
assessed with the teacher.
Teaching tools
In the first part, the teacher will propose a dialogic approach to relevant contexts and facts, especially of XX century, by means of direct lessons, didactic dialogues, films etc.; in the second part, the students themselves - organized in working groups - will debate their researches and interpretations.
Office hours
See the website of Maura De Bernart