Projects

Modern Etruscans

Modern Etruscans is a subproject in the research programme Literary Knowledge (1890-1950): Modernisms and the Sciences in Europe. The project explores the ways in which an increasingly specialized knowledge of Etruscan culture affected not only Italian but also other Western European literatures in the modernist period. Especially after the political unification of Italy, in 1861, a new interest in Ancient Rome and other local italic cultures spread on the Italian peninsula, leading, among others, to new systematic archeological excavations in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. The discovery of several Tuscan necropolises brought back to light a considerable number of Etruscan ruins and art works. This not only encouraged the development of the newly professionalised archeological branch of etruscology; the mysterious Etruscans, and the limited knowledge about them, also sparked the imagination of European writers of the widest variety working in various genres and registers. Modern Etruscans investigates how Western European literatures selected, mediated, remodelled and propagated archeological knowledge to yield new or alternative understandings, imaginations and literary experiences of Etruscan culture.

Source of description: Information from the provider

Fields of research

Literature and cultural studies, Literature of the 19th century, Literature of the 20th century
Etrusker

Links

Contact

Institutions

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven (KU Leuven) / University of Leuven
MDRN

Relations

Projects and research

Literary Knowledge (1890-1950): Modernisms and the Sciences in Europe

Institutions

MDRN
Date of publication: 06.09.2019
Last edited: 06.09.2019