Showing posts with label Sociology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Sociology. Show all posts

31 December 2024

Francesco Alberoni – sociologist

Academic explained the mystery of falling in love

Francesco Alberoni wrote more than 25 books, some published in 20 languages
Francesco Alberoni wrote more than 25 books,
some published in 20 languages
Francesco Alberoni, who became a well-known sociologist because of his regular columns in Il Corriere della Sera, was born on this day in 1929 in Borgonovo Val Tidone in the province of Piacenza in Emilia-Romagna.

Alberoni was successful with the short books he wrote on the themes of love, good and evil, and ethics, and his work explored the dynamics of social relations. In 1979 he produced a bestseller, Innamoramento e amore (Falling in Love).

He was the descendant of a famous Cardinal from Piacenza, Giulio Alberoni, who was active in European diplomatic circles in the 17th century.

But his own upbringing was during the Fascist era in Italy and while he studied at the Liceo Scientifico in Piacenza, he claims he was subjected to military-style discipline.


Alberoni moved to Pavia to study medicine, where he met the Capuchin friar, Agostino Gemelli, who encouraged him to pursue his interest in the study of social behaviour.

His first book, L’Elite senza potere - Elite without Power - was published in 1963. Alberoni then published a further three books before he completed the work that was to set out the foundations for his own sociological ideas, Movimento e istituzione - Movement and Institution - which was published in 1977.

This was one of the first books on the sociological analysis of movements and it explored how leadership, ideas and communication all come together to fuel the birth of different movements.

Innamoramento e amore became a bestseller in Italy
Innamoramento e amore became
a bestseller in Italy

His most famous book, Falling in Love, maintains that the experience of falling in love is in essence the nascent state, or "ignition state", of a collective movement which is made up exclusively of two people.

In exploring the subject, Alberoni used the language of love stories rather than psychological or sociological jargon, which may explain the book’s popularity. Falling in Love has since been translated into 20 languages and, after ten editions, is still in print in Italy.

The sociologist was one of just a few regular front page writers for Corriere della Sera, who published his columns from 1973 to 2011.

Meanwhile, Alberoni had a distinguished academic career, holding professorships at a number of universities in Italy and Europe.

He wrote more than 25 books about sociology and has also had collections of his essays published, despite not having enjoyed his own early education during the Fascist era. He has also said he did not have much access to books when he was young and therefore started to enjoy the pleasure of reading himself, only when he was a teenager.

Alberoni was at one time a board member of  RAI, the Italian state television network, and a president of the Centro Sperimentale Cinematografia, the Italian national film school based in Rome.

He had three children with his first wife, Vincenza Pugliese. He later had a fourth child with his partner, Laura Bonin. He named this child Giulio after his famous ancestor. In 1988, he was married for the second time, to another sociologist, Rosa Giannetta.

Alberoni died of kidney disease in Milan in 2023, aged 93.

Borgonovo Val Tidone's 's town hall is house  in a repurposed Sforza castle
Borgonovo Val Tidone's 's town hall is house 
in a repurposed Sforza castle 
Travel tip:

Borgonovo Val Tidone, where Alberoni was born, is a town of just under 8,000 residents in Emilia-Romagna, located about 160km (99 miles) northwest of Bologna and about 20km (12 miles) west of Piacenza. Nestling at the feet of the Apennines, the town is situated not far from the river Tidone, which supposedly owes its name to the Carthagian leader, Hannibal. Legend says that the Carthaginian leader, as a gesture of gratitude for crossing the river, threw a ring in the water with the words ti dono - I give you. Once controlled by the Sforza family of Milan, Borgonovo Val Tidone is the home of Chisöla, a type of focaccia bread made with pork rind, which is the highlight of the town’s annual gastronomic fair each September. 

Piacenza's Piazza Cavalli is notable for its two equestrian statues by Francesco Mochi
Piacenza's Piazza Cavalli is notable for its two
equestrian statues by Francesco Mochi
Travel tip

Piacenza is the first major city along the route of the Via Emilia, the Roman road that connected Piacenza with the Adriatic resort of Rimini. Parma, some 66km (41 miles) along the route, is the next, followed by Reggio Emilia, Modena and Bologna. The main square in Piacenza is named Piazza Cavalli because of its two bronze equestrian monuments featuring Alexander Farnese, Duke of Parma and his son Ranuccio I Farnese, Duke of Parma, who succeeded him. The statues are masterpieces by the sculptor Francesco Mochi.  The city is situated between the River Po and the Apennines, with Milan just over 72km (45 miles) to the northwest. Piacenza Cathedral, built in 1122, is a good example of northern Italian Romanesque architecture.  Among many notable people, Piacenza is the birthplace of Giorgio Armani, founder of the eponymous fashion house.

Also on this day:

1493: The birth of Eleonora Gonzaga, Duchess of Urbino

1842: The birth of painter Giovanni Boldini

1855: The birth of poet Giovanni Pascoli

1990: The death of architect Giovanni Michelucci

New Year’s Eve - Festa di San Silvestro


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21 July 2018

Guglielmo Ferrero - journalist and historian

Nobel prize nominee who opposed Fascism


Guglielmo Ferrero is best known for his five-volume history of power and collapse of the Roman Empire
Guglielmo Ferrero is best known for his five-volume
history of power and collapse of the Roman Empire
The historian, journalist and novelist Guglielmo Ferrero, who was most famous for his five-volume opus The Greatness and Decline of Rome, was born on this day in 1871.

The son of a railway engineer, he was born just outside Naples at Portici but his family were from Piedmont and while not travelling he lived much of his adult life in Turin and Florence.

A liberal politically, he was vehemently opposed to any form of dictatorship and his opposition to Mussolini’s Fascists naturally landed him in trouble. He was a signatory to the writer Benedetto Croce's Anti-Fascist Manifesto and when all liberal intellectuals were told to leave Italy in 1925, he refused. Consequently he was placed under house arrest.

It was only after four years, following appeals by officials from the League of Nations and the personal intervention of the King of Belgium, that he was allowed to leave Italy to take up a professorship at the Graduate Institute of International Studies in Geneva.

Ferrero’s earliest works were in the field of sociology and criminology, inspired by his friendship with Cesare Lombroso, sometimes called the ‘father of modern criminology’, who he met during his studies. Ferrero attended the universities of Pisa, Bologna and Turin. They collaborated on a book called The Female Offender about crime among women.

Cesare Lombroso, the criminologist who inspired Ferrero's early work
Cesare Lombroso, the criminologist who
inspired Ferrero's early work
In the course of his work with Lombroso, Ferrero was introduced to Gina Lombroso, Cesare’s daughter, and they subsequently married.

From 1891 to 1894 Ferrero traveled extensively in Europe, working in the libraries of London, Berlin, and Paris on a planned history of justice. As a result of his travels he produced a sociological study entitled Young Europe, in which he noted the differences in societal structure developing in the industrial north compared with the agricultural south of the continent.

It was after musing on how ascendant civilisations could become decadent that he turned his attention to Rome.

His defining work, The Greatness and Decline of Rome was translated into all the major European languages and was a popular success, even though it was scorned by classicists, who took exception to his use of contemporary comparisons and on his attempts at sociological analysis of Roman politics. They did not care either for his assessment of Julius Caesar, usually portrayed as a leader who brought order from chaos, as a major catalyst in the collapse of the Roman Republic.

For the next few years, Ferrero wrote political essays and a number of novels, before turning his attention to the French Revolution, which he analysed as an attempt to establish a new liberal order that unintentionally led to the first modern dictatorship.

Once invited by Theodore Roosevelt, the United States president, to visit him at the White House and to give a number of lectures, Ferraro was nominated for the Nobel Prize in Literature no fewer than 20 times in six years.

He spent a good deal of his time in his declining years at his villa in Strada in Chianti, in the Tuscan countryside, but was in Mont Pèlerin-sur-Vevey in Switzerland when he died in 1942.

The Royal Palace at Portici, near Naples
The Royal Palace at Portici, near Naples
Travel tip:

Portici, which lies at the foot of Mount Vesuvius on the Bay of Naples, about 8 km (5 miles) southeast of Naples, is a metropolitan suburb these days but essentially evolved as a port, rebuilt after it was destroyed in the eruption of Vesuvius in 1631. Its neighbour is Ercolano, where excavations revealed the city of Herculaneum, which had disappeared at the same time as Pompeii, following the eruption of 79AD.  Portici is famous for its Baroque royal palace, built as a grand residence by Charles III of Spain, King of Naples, between 1738 and 1742.

The church of San Cristoforo in Strada in Chianti
The church of San Cristoforo in Strada in Chianti
Travel tip:

Situated almost 300m (984ft) above sea level, Strada in Chianti is a small town that is increasingly favoured as a place to stay when visiting Florence, which is only 20km (12 miles) away to the north, barely half an hour by car and bus. Many Florentines escape to such places in the countryside during the summer, because the heat there is a little less oppressive. The town stages its annual fair in late September. The five parishes once competed in a horse race similar to the Palio di Siena, but they now vie for superiority in a series of games, including football and volleyball, over the course of a week.

More reading:

How Edward Gibbon's Decline and Fall became the world's most famous history book

Cesare Lombroso, the first to encourage study of the criminal mind

Ernesto Teodoro Moneta, the historian who was both a soldier and a pacifist

Also on this day:

1914: The birth of Suso Cecchi D'Amico, the scriptwriter behind some of Italy's greatest movies

1948: The birth of Beppe Grillo, the comedian and founder of Italy's new political force, the Five Star Movement

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