Mathieu Grenet
Currently working as a Senior lecturer (maître de conférences) at the Institut National Universitaire Jean-François Champollion in Albi, France, I hold a PhD (2010) from the European University Institute in Florence, Italy, on the Greek diaspora communities in Venice, Livorno/Leghorn and Marseille from the 1770S to the 1830s. I am a former postdoctoral fellow of Columbia University's Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America (2010-2011), as well as of the Interdisciplinary Project in the Humanities at Washington University in St Louis (2011-2012), and a former member of the ERC research project "Mediterranean reconfigurations : Intercultural trade, commercial litigation, and legal pluralism" (European Research Council, Advanced Grant n° 295868).
I have published my PhD (2016) as well as several articles on cross-cultural contacts, the history of migrations and indentitties in the early modern Mediterranean.
Phone: 07-82-66-89-04
Address: 76 avenue Dembourg
81000 Albi
I have published my PhD (2016) as well as several articles on cross-cultural contacts, the history of migrations and indentitties in the early modern Mediterranean.
Phone: 07-82-66-89-04
Address: 76 avenue Dembourg
81000 Albi
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Dans le sillage d’une histoire attentive aux trajectoires individuelles et aux corps, mais aussi aux imbrications des échelles, ce livre a pris forme autour de quatorze portraits d’hommes et de femmes qui ont été enserrés dans le tissu complexe d’un empire. Chacune de ces personnes a appris à manœuvrer au sein d’un enchâssement de réseaux de sociabilité et de pouvoir.
Une correspondance, un testament, un rapport administratif, les pièces d’un procès ont été autant de fenêtres ouvertes sur les manières d’évoluer dans ces systèmes hiérarchisés, aux rouages plus fragiles qu’il n’y paraît.
Serviteurs ou entrepreneurs, ces hommes et ces femmes révèlent par leurs trajectoires toujours singulières les dynamiques comme les tensions qui traversent ces ensembles hétérogènes que sont les empires.
Dans le sillage d’une histoire attentive aux trajectoires individuelles et aux corps, mais aussi aux imbrications des échelles, ce livre a pris forme autour de quatorze portraits d’hommes et de femmes qui ont été enserrés dans le tissu complexe d’un empire. Chacune de ces personnes a appris à manœuvrer au sein d’un enchâssement de réseaux de sociabilité et de pouvoir.
Une correspondance, un testament, un rapport administratif, les pièces d’un procès ont été autant de fenêtres ouvertes sur les manières d’évoluer dans ces systèmes hiérarchisés, aux rouages plus fragiles qu’il n’y paraît.
Serviteurs ou entrepreneurs, ces hommes et ces femmes révèlent par leurs trajectoires toujours singulières les dynamiques comme les tensions qui traversent ces ensembles hétérogènes que sont les empires.
Cet entretien s’attache à interroger à la fois la pertinence de la notion de « cosmopolitisme » dans l’étude des diasporas en contexte urbain, et l’apport comme l’originalité de la perspective historienne dans un champ d’étude que les historiens n’ont investi que depuis deux à trois décennies. Il revient sur des enjeux clés tels que l’historiographie du cosmopolitisme, la méthodologie historique, les phénomènes de coexistence ou de convivance, ou encore la place des réseaux dans l’articulation spatiale du phénomènes diasporique à plusieurs échelles.
English
This interview addresses the significance of the concept of « cosmopolitanism » for the study of diasporas in urban context, as well as the historians’ take on scholarly discussions across the humanities and the social sciences over the last decades. A number of key issues are dealt with, such as the historiography of cosmopolitanism, questions of historical methodology, the forms and modes of coexistence, and the role of networks in articulating diaspora spaces on different scales.
Abstract : This paper deals with the historiography of the relationships between consuls and foreign « nation » in the early modern period. Such a study has long been limited to the interdependence between trade and politics ; however, recent works have sought to explore the ways in which consuls operated on the ground, while negotiating with both local powerholders and their nationals. The paper explores three main directions: 1) the different forms of power relations within which consuls operated, which in turn challenges the classic opposition between consuls and foreign « nations » ; 2) the social and political heterogeneity of foreign communities, which in turn questions forms of collective action ; 3) the recent research perspectives on the issue, ranging from the role of the State in the formation of consular networks, to the usefulness of the consular institution in protecting trade, and to the ways in which relations between consuls and foreign « nations » partake in a broader « making of the national » at the dawn of the age of nationalism.
20 mai 2016 – 10h / 17h
Poitiers, faculté des Sciences humaines et arts, salle 112
8 rue René Descartes – Bât. E16
Journée d’études organisée dans le cadre de la Fédération de recherche Territoires et du master 2 Civilisation Histoire Patrimoine Sources, séminaires Histoire globale, histoire connectée et Environnements, sociétés et circulations maritimes, sous la direction de François Brizay.
Paper proposals (max 500 words) should be sent to the organizers (dipratu_radu@yahoo.com, mathieu.grenet@univ-jfc.fr and viorel.panaite@g.unibuc.ro) no later than January 15, 2024. Applicants will be notified of the outcome of the selection process by February 15th, 2024.
Paper proposals are accepted in French and English. To foster discussions and exchanges during the workshop, it is expected that applicants have a basic working knowledge of both languages.
Participants will be expected to send advanced drafts of their papers by June 15, 2024, so as to be circulated amongst participants in advance.
Oral presentations should last 40 min + 20 min discussion per paper.
Participants will be accommodated by the organizers in Albi, France. Participants and/or their research organizations will be responsible for their own travel costs to France.
Paolo Militello, Università di Catania, Una Sicilia "terra d'immigrazione" (XV-XVII secolo).
Francesco Scalora, Università di Padova, Ἀγαπῶ τοὺς Ῥωμαίους, ὡς ὁμόπιστους· τοὺς δὲ Γραικούς, ὡς ὁμογλώσσους | Iniziative culturali e questioni identitarie negli ambienti colti delle colonie greco-albanesi di Sicilia (XVIII sec.).
Gennaro Varriale, Università di Napoli Federico II, Greco-albanesi. Stranieri naturali a Napoli nel XVI secolo.
In dialogo con Olga Katsiardi-Hering, National & Kapodistrian University of Athens
Massimo Aresu, University of Leeds, Capitani cingari in età moderna: il caso siciliano
in dialogo con Elisa Novi Chavarria, Università del Molise
"Da migranti a coloni" è la rassegna seminariale che affronta i temi legati alla mobilità, alle diaspore, alle colonizzazioni e alle politiche di insediamento nell'area mediterranea in età moderna.
L'iniziativa è organizzata dal Dipartimento di Lettere, Lingue e Beni culturali della Universita di Cagliari, con il patrocinio dell’Istitute Universitaire de France e dell’Associazione Italiana di Storia Urbana.
Sei incontri animati da storiche e storici di università italiane, francesi, greche e americane.
Sei incontri, che rientrano nel programma di celebrazioni dei 400 anni di UniCa, che chiudono il progetto biennale "Migrazioni e colonizzazione interna nel Mediterraneo d’età moderna" finanziato su fondi della Legge Regionale 7 agosto 2007, n.7- 2015 della Regione Sardegna, col coordinamento scientifico di Giampaolo Salice.
Tutti i dettagli su
nel XVII secolo.
James Novoa, University of Ottawa, La nazione dei cristiani nuovi portoghesi a Pisa e Livorno 1549-1670.
In dialogo con Stefano Villani, University of Maryland
"Da migranti a coloni" è la rassegna seminariale affronta i temi legati alla mobilità, alle diaspore, alle colonizzazioni e alle politiche di insediamento nell'area mediterranea in età moderna.
L'iniziativa è curata da Giampaolo Salice e Mathieu Grenet col sostegno del Dipartimento di Lettere, Lingue e Beni culturali della Universita di Cagliari, con il patrocinio dell’Istitute Universitaire de France e dell’Associazione Italiana di Storia Urbana.
Sei incontri animati da storiche e storici di università italiane, francesi, greche e americane.
Sei incontri, che rientrano nel programma di celebrazioni dei 400 anni di UniCa, che chiudono il progetto biennale "Migrazioni e colonizzazione interna nel Mediterraneo d’età moderna" finanziato su fondi della Legge Regionale 7 agosto 2007, n.7- 2015 della Regione Sardegna.
Gli incontri si potranno seguire in diretta streaming attraverso la pagina Facebook Colonizzazioni interne e Migrazioni.
Andrea Zappia, Università di Genova , La nazione ebrea a Genova tra XVII e XVIII secolo: strategie, interessi, criticità:;
Viviana Tagliaferri, ISEM-CNR, Forestieri e non Riflessioni sulla presenza straniera nell'area portuale di Valletta e delle Tre Città (fine '600-inizio '700);
in dialogo con Heleni Porfyriou, Consiglio Nazionale delle Ricerche (CNR-DSU).
Giampaolo Salice e Mathieu Grenet in dialogo con Maurice Aymard