Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
University of Salerno
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Featured researches published by Maria Rosaria Pelizzari.
Archive | 2017
Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
The first € price and the £ and
La camera blu. Rivista di studi di genere | 2014
Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
price are net prices, subject to local VAT. Prices indicated with * include VAT for books; the €(D) includes 7% for Germany, the €(A) includes 10% for Austria. Prices indicated with ** include VAT for electronic products; 19% for Germany, 20% for Austria. All prices exclusive of carriage charges. Prices and other details are subject to change without notice. All errors and omissions excepted. A. Farazmand (Ed.) Global Encyclopedia of Public Administration, Public Policy, and Governance
Storia delle Donne | 2009
Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
The aim of this paper is to analyze by means of historical case studies, the reaction of the common people in urbanized Southern Italy at the beginning of the 1900s on discovering criminal behavior which for convenience sake, I define as ‘sexual abuse’. In this sense I have outlined the proceedings relative to trials for “libidinous acts”, “rape”, “indecent behavior” concerning children, in act at the Tribunal of Naples. Our case studies seem to renege the idea, widely diffused, of a female world, belonging above all to the working class, incapable of reacting publicly to sexual violence. The cases selected involve victims and the accused who live in the same building, in the same street or nearby in the same neighborhood. Issues in our paper concern how children were protected in the event of effective or attempted violence. How in the neighborhood ‘gossip’ was spread relative to the abuse, what effectively triggered police intervention and finally, how the neighborhood reacted as concerns the victim or the accused and the prejudice emerging from the documents reporting the Court proceedings. By means of the documents relative to the trial proceedings, a preliminary analysis can be put in place in order ascertain the way in which the narration of sexual crime is constructed according to the evidence of the various witnesses, summoned to court by the Authorities. Such evidence ranges from and includes the version of the accused and that of the victim to that of the witnesses, from red tape jargon expressed in the language of the Court Minutes to the scientific lexicon of medical-legal reports which all concur in tracing the outlines of an event that reflects facets of life experience and consequently, of socio-cultural history. As concerns the reactions following the discovery of the abuse, it is possible to delineate models of behavior which are more or less constant. Above all during the period immediately following the discovery of the episode, word of mouth seems to involve mainly the women of the neighborhood. In the reconstruction of the narration of the sexual abuse, women emerge as the protagonists at crucial moments: they provide first aid, they carry out perfunctory ‘check ups’ on the victim, help the mothers to find a doctor to verify and attest the circumstance in the event of a formal complaint and the type of abuse and harm suffered.
Welfare, economia sociale e sviluppo | 2016
Mita Marra; Maria Rosaria Garofalo; Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
Eleonora de Fonseca Pimentel, poetess, scholar of jurisprudence, natural and mathematical sciences, at first, was an enthusiastic supporter of Ferdinand IV of Burbon’s enlightened politics reforms. After the French Revolution and the radical change of Neapolitan government policy, much more illiberal and repressive, she was an active protagonist of 1799’ Revolution and founded the “Neapolitan Republic”. Editor of «Monitore napoletano», she was a free, courageous, journalist, committed in changing of “Neapolitan plebs” into “Civil people”. At fall of Republic, she showed herself fearless in meeting the death on the scaffold. Up to the Eighties of XX th century, her final sacrifice has been represented by Virile woman ’ image, as a praise for meaning an extraordinary, and intellectually like a man, woman. Today writers represent Eleanor like a “Modern heroin”, far by nineteenth-century Virile woman ’s characters. Intellectual virtues do not seem to be sexed any longer: they belong to men and to women at the same time.
Archive | 2016
Maria Rosaria Garofalo; Mita Marra; Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
Archive | 2016
Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
Archive | 2015
Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
Archive | 2015
Maria Rosaria Garofalo; Mita Marra; Maria Rosaria Pelizzari; Giovanna Truda
Archive | 2013
Maria Rosaria Pelizzari
Archive | 2013
Maria Rosaria Pelizzari