SPACES, which was hosted by the University of Verona (Italy), started on Sept. 1, 2018 and included a two-year period of research and training at the University of Maryland (US). I collected most of the archival material before the start of the project. At the University of Maryland, I carried out bibliographic research on religious skepticism, doubt and atheism, the history of the Mediterranean, gender history, and the history of sexuality. I profited from the immense library resources of the Washington, DC area, discussed with colleagues from all over the world the methodology and contents of my research, and attended seminars and workshops organized in the area and beyond. I have also undertaken several training activities in digital humanities and in communication and teaching and contributed to several workshops and conferences. At the University of Verona, I joined the activities of the PoliTeSse research center and organized a series of online events, which included a seminar at the annual conference of the Renaissance Society of America.
SPACES has resulted in a number of academic publications. An edited volume - Mediterranean Crossings (2020) – which contains contributions by international scholars from all over the world came out in 2020. I wrote a chapter on sexuality, religion, and emotions in The Routledge History of Emotions in Europe (2019). I contributed to the critical edition of Daniello Bartoli’s Asia, a 16th-century history of the Company of Jesus in Asia that is crucial to the history of the cross-cultural interactions between Christians, Muslims, Hindus, and Buddhists in the early modern world.
An article that outlines the main outcomes of SPACES, titled “The Fall from Grace”, has already been accepted by the Journal of Early Modern History. Moreover, the interactions between religion, dissent, and sexual transgressions have been further explored in a book that was published in 2021 titled Bathhouses and Riverbanks: Sodomy in a Renaissance Republic.
I devoted the last year of the research project to drafting a monograph titled Celestial Pleasures, which will be SPACES’s most relevant research outcome. I plan to propose the manuscript to an anglophone university press. The book consists of three parts. The first part is devoted to the relationships between sexual nonconformity and the spread of skeptical ideas in the early modern Mediterranean world. The second part explores the sexual contents of the belief that Adam and Eve committed sodomy in the Garden of Eden, analyzing its relationship to the theory of the “imposture of religions”. The third part reads these phenomena through the lenses of emotions and gender history.