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L.I.A.N.A.S. - Looking at Italian Africa Nature, Animals and Safari

Project description

Italy’s colonial legacy in nature

The story of colonialism focuses on people and politics, but what about nature? Italy’s imperial ventures in Africa were deeply tied to domination through landscapes, especially via big-game hunting and safari culture. Animals became trophies, propaganda tools, and economic assets. Yet the ecological legacy of these acts remains largely unexamined. Supported by the Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions programme, the L.I.A.N.A.S. project sheds new light on how colonial ideologies shaped (and still shape) European perceptions of African wildlife. Drawing from books, films, and museum collections, the project not only revisits the past but engages today’s public in the process of decolonising nature. It will span institutions from Florence to Houston and Addis Ababa, bridging continents and rewriting history.

Objective

The overarching objective of the L.I.A.N.A.S. project is to provide the first in-depth analysis of the colonial and post-colonial relationship between Italy and the African landscape, namely the practice of big-game hunting and safaris as means of subjugating, and manipulating the colonial territory and nature. The exploitation of nature for propagandistic and economic purposes was a central aspect of the imperial rhetoric of European colonial powers. Nonetheless, a comprehensive examination of the ecological impact of Italian colonialism is still missing. The analysis will focus not only on the period of formal occupation of Italy's African colonies (1882-1941) but also on the subsequent phase, extending until the early 1970s, highlighting the long-term legacies in the ways of relating to African nature. Focusing on a repertoire of cultural products such as books, documentary films, and natural history collections dedicated to big game hunting trophies from Italy's Horn of Africa colonies (Eritrea, Somalia, and Ethiopia), the project aims to 1) reconstruct the tropes and discourses surrounding African animals created during the Fascist period, 2) highlight the long-term legacies of this way of viewing African nature in cultural products and museum displays, and 3) deconstruct these practices and engage the public as an integral part of the decolonization initiative. The three-year project will bring Dr. Falcucci to the University of Houston, the University of Florence, and, during a secondment, to the Natural History Museum of Addis Ababa. Falcucci, who has international experience in Italy, France, Belgium, the UK, and Spain, is confident that the Action will profoundly impact her career. She will acquire knowledge in the field of Environmental Studies from a global perspective and new Public History skills, disseminating results among specialists and a wider audience, enabling her to become a leading scholar in the field of Cultural History and Colonial History.

Fields of science (EuroSciVoc)

CORDIS classifies projects with EuroSciVoc, a multilingual taxonomy of fields of science, through a semi-automatic process based on NLP techniques. See: https://op.europa.eu/en/web/eu-vocabularies/euroscivoc.

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Coordinator

UNIVERSITA DEGLI STUDI DI FIRENZE
Net EU contribution
€ 396 991,08
Address
Piazza San Marco 4
50121 Florence
Italy

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Region
Centro (IT) Toscana Firenze
Activity type
Higher or Secondary Education Establishments
Links
Total cost
No data

Partners (2)

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