Group for Early Modern Studies, Sarton Centre for History of Science and UGent Doctoral School are organising a seminar by Prof. Dr. Paola Ugolini (University at Buffalo, USA).
The seminar will take place on the 3rd of September at 11am in room Camelot, Campus Boekentoren.
Prof. Dr. Paola Ugolini will present her paper ‘“A Woman Dressed in Gold (…) Holding Out Her Heart.” Sincerity in Early Modern Italy.’, followed by a 10-minutes response given by Prof. Dr. Katinis (director of GEMS). The last 40 minutes will be reserved for open debate with the participants.
Early modern culture is known for devoting a unique amount of attention to accessing and revealing one’s interiority. Poets dreamed of a “crystal heart” that would show the authenticity of their feelings. Authors of physiognomic manuals explained how physical features could help understand a person’s moral character. In medical texts, dissected bodies were portrayed as lifting their skin, disclosing the secrets of human anatomy. Studies such as Lionel Trilling’s Sincerity and Authenticity and John J. Martin’s “Inventing Sincerity, Refashioning Prudence” have formulated the assumption that the notion of sincerity as a moral value is a creation of the Renaissance, while in earlier societies the term “sincere” was used exclusively to refer to a substance or an object that was pure or unadulterated. Prof. Dr. Paola Ugolini intends to put this assumption to the test, while also trying to identify the reasons that could have prompted such a change. Furthermore, she plans to investigate the contrast between the urge for sincerity and the need for simulation and dissimulation that characterized early modern society. In her research, she also explores the claims of sincerity expressed by the authors of early modern scientific texts, and how this intersects with the idea of accessing the secrets of Nature
Prof. Ugolini holds a doctorate from New York University. Since 2020 she has been an associate professor at the University at Buffalo, where she teaches Italian and Global Gender and Sexuality Studies. She has also been a visiting professor at the University of Bologna in 2021, and has been invited to give lectures at universities across North America and Europe. She has published on a wide array of Renaissance Italian writers, including Pietro Aretino (on which she also co-edited a volume; (2021)), Ludovico Ariosto (2017; 2022; 2024), Veronica Franco (2024), Veronica Gambara (whose poems she edited and translated; (2014)), and Gaspara Stampa (2024). She is currently co-editing a volume titled Women Warriors in the Early Modern World (under contract with Amsterdam University Press) and working on a book project on the history of sincerity in early modern Italy.