Academic Year | 2022-2023 |
---|---|
Subject area | Humanistic Studies |
Cycle | 38 |
Coordinator | Prof. Marco Antonio Bazzocchi |
Language | Italian |
Duration | 3 years |
Application deadline: Aug 02, 2022 at 11:59 PM (Expired)
NRRP Call for Applications
Enrolment: From Sep 21, 2022 to Sep 29, 2022 - On www.studenti.unibo.it download NRRP forms only
Doctoral programme start date: Nov 01, 2022

Application deadline: Jun 09, 2022 at 11:59 PM (Expired)
Call for Applications
Positions: More information in the PhD Programme Table
Enrolment: From Jul 14, 2022 to Jul 25, 2022
Doctoral programme start date: Nov 01, 2022
- Main Department
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Department of Classical Philology and Italian Studies - FICLIT
- Curricula
- Sciences of antiquity and Sciences of books and documents
- Italian Studies and Romance Philology
- Research topics
Curriculum 1: Sciences of antiquity and Sciences of books and documents
Aegean Civilizations
Greek language and literature
Latin language and literature
Classical and late antique philology
Linguistics
Digital Humanities
Bibliography and Library Science
Paleography
Classical heritage
Curriculum 2: Italian Studies and Romance Philology
- Italian literature
- Contemporary Italian literature
- Italian linguistics and philology
- Literary criticism
- Romance Philology
- Linguistics
- Linguistics of Italian language
- Digital Humanities
- Job opportunities and potential areas of employment
- - Academic research and teaching
- Teaching in secondary school
- Traditional and digital publishing
- Career in the journalism
- Career in the Public Administration
- Digital Management of Cultural Resources
- Design, production and valorisation of Web resources
- Admission Board
-
NRPP Call Admission Board
Appointed by RD 1103/2022 Prot. n. 0162873 of 17/07/2022Surname Name University / Institution Role Email Gasperina Geroni Riccardo Università di Bologna Member riccardo.gasperina@unibo.it Milani Filippo Università di Bologna Member filippo.milani@unibo.it Tamburini Fabio Università di Bologna Member fabio.tamburini@unibo.it Baroncini Daniela Università di Bologna Substitute daniela.baroncini3@unibo.it Gagliardi Gloria Università di Bologna Substitute gloria.gagliardi2@unibo.it Gallerani Guido Mattia Università di Bologna Substitute guido.gallerani@unibo.it Call for Application Admission Board
Appointed by RD 830/2022 Prot. n. 0127511 of 30/05/2022Surname Name University / Institution Role email Curriculum Brunetti Giuseppina Università di Bologna Member giuseppina.brunetti@unibo.it Italian Studies and Romance Philology Chines Loredana Università di Bologna Member loredana.chines@unibo.it Italian Studies and Romance Philology Ercoles Marco Università di Bologna Member marco.ercoles@unibo.it Sciences of antiquity and Sciences of books and documents Pirovano Luigi Università di Bologna Member luigi.pirovano2@unibo.it Sciences of antiquity and Sciences of books and documents Viale Matteo Università di Bologna Member matteo.viale@unibo.it Italian Studies and Romance Philology Caraffi Patrizia Università di Bologna Substitute patrizia.caraffi@unibo.it Italian Studies and Romance Philology Garulli Valentina Università di Bologna Substitute valentina.garulli@unibo.it Sciences of antiquity and Sciences of books and documents Grandi Nicola Università di Bologna Substitute nicola.grandi@unibo.it Italian Studies and Romance Philology Pasetti Lucia Università di Bologna Substitute lucia.pasetti@unibo.it Sciences of antiquity and Sciences of books and documents Sberlati Francesco Università di Bologna Substitute francesco.sberlati@unibo.it Italian Studies and Romance Philology
- Learning outcomes
Achievement of a fine strategy for scientific research on literary texts. This methodology entails a wide-ranging to approach the texts, involving critical editions, analyses on literary reception, inquiries on formal, linguistic, stylistic levels.
As far as Linguistics is concerned, students will learn to describe linguistic phenomena from a syncronistic and historical point of view.
As far as Digital Humanities and Semantic Technologies are concerned, students will learn how to hybridize humanistic and computational methods in a variety of use cases.
Such a complex methodology provides skills for a variety of different educational paths and for many professional fields: in particular, for university research and teaching, for teaching in secondary school, for careers in publishing companies, journalism and cultural consultancy in public administration and in the areas of interface between new technologies and human sciences.- Activities to be carried out by Doctoral candidates
Bibliographic inquiries and text readings. Original research focusing on a wide range of advanced issues (including reading of manuscripts and ancient editions, consultation of archives, processing of digital archives and online data, analyses based on philological and linguistic perspectives) for the achievement of a fine methodology for scientific research on literary texts such as critical editions and the study of literary reception and history of ideas. As far as Linguistics is concerned, research activities will focus on a wide range of linguistic systems and linguistic descriptions. As regards Digital Humanities and Semantic Technologies, research activities will include: application-oriented projects (use case satisfaction); implementation of reusable software or middleware components; design of ontologies or conceptual models; empirical studies on data, digital content and users; interdisciplinary experiments or theoretical studies, e.g. jointly with cognitive scientists or philosophers.
- Research training activities compliant with the Doctoral programme's learning outcomes
n the first and second year of the PhD Course, teaching involves at least 100 hours per year organized as follows:
- 30 hours of common activities (also dedicated to soft skills such as European project planning, public speaking, academic English, etc.);
- 50 hours of curricular activities
- 20 hours of free activities (for participation in conferences, seminars, etc.); free teaching activities are authorized and approved by the supervisor
The common and curricular activities run from October to June and are organized in three quarters. The schedule of all activities is published on the PhD website, in the agenda section (https://phd.unibo.it/culture-letterarie-e-filologiche/it/agenda).
The teaching activities of the Digital Humanities and Linguistics courses, which replace the curricular activities, are published, respectively, on the website of the DHARC - Digital Humanities Advanced Research Center (https://centri.unibo.it/dharc/en) and of the CLUB - Language Circle of the University of Bologna (http://corpora.ficlit.unibo.it/CLUB/).
The activities of the Digital Humanities and Linguistics courses are in any case also accessible to PhD students of the two main curricula.
The teaching activities also include the attendance of master's degree courses, with the preliminary approval of the supervisor; in this case one hour of PhD teaching is equivalent to two hours of master's teaching. This type of teaching can replace curricular or free teaching, not the common one.
PhD students, always with the preliminary approval of the supervisor, may ask to replace part of curricular and free teaching activities with teaching or tutoring assignments that require an adequate and documented preliminary preparation phase.
In the third year the hours of compulsory teaching are 60 (30 of common teaching and 30 of curricular or free teaching), to give space to the writing of the thesis.
Lectures and seminars are held also by external, both Italian and foreign, teachers.- Internationalization features
Foreign Students enrolled in the PhD course: Yang Deng (borsa China Scholarship Council), Shixue Jia (borsa China Scholarship Council), Yisu Wang (borsa China Scholarship Council), Qian Wu (borsa China Scholarship Council), Chen Tang (borsa China Scholarship Council), Yedi Yu (borsa China Scholarship Council), Abdelmagid Sakr (borsa riservata a strudenti stranieri finanziata dal Progetto di eccellenza L. 232 del 01/12/2016).
Incoming students in joint doctoral programme: N. Brarda, G. Lobosque (Université de Paris-Sorbonne); M. Brunzin Ponte, R. Lapia, M. Ottaviano (Paris Ouest - Nanterre La Défense); M. Serena (Freie Universitaet Berlin); S. Trabucco (Université de Limoges), V. Zimarino (Université de Fribourg).
Outgoing students in joint doctoral programme: T. Grandi (Université de Paris-Sorbonne), N. Gensini (University of Zurich), C. Solidoro (École Pratique des Hautes Études EPHE), L. Torti (Université de Paris-Sorbonne, outgoing) I. Burattini (Université de Liege, outgoing), A. Vuozzo (Université Paris 3 - Sorbonne Nouvelle, outgoing).
Joint doctoral programmes under examination: A. Dos Santos (Universidade de Sao Paulo, incoming), A. Vuozzo (Université Paris 3 - Sorbonne Nouvelle, outgoing), M. Altea (Université Savoie-Mont Blanc, incoming).
All PhD students must spend a period of at least six months in a foreign university.
The Ph Course has signed a framework agreement with the Universidade de Sao Paulo and a framework agreement is being activated with the Université Paris Nanterre.
Starting from the XXXV cycle, the teaching staff is made up of 1/3 of teachers from foreign universities.
Teaching activities are carried out also by foreign visiting professors, hosted in the department FICLIT within the activities of the project of excellence (Law 232 of December 1st, 2016)- Expected research results and products
Throughout the three-years course at least one presentation in a national or international Conference is expected, and the publication of an article in a scientific journal level. A special acknowledgement for publishing the PhD dissertation.
Notices
NRRP Call - Admission Exams Schedule
Qualifications Evaluation Results: from Aug. 26th, 2022; Oral Examination: from Sept. 2th, 2022 - 9.30am; Oral Examination Results: from Sept. 5th, 2022. For further information, check the detail of your application on Studenti Online.