Federico Castigliano

Federico Castigliano is a Professor of French and Italian Studies. He has taught in France for eight years and has worked at University of Toulon, University of Clermont-Ferrand and University of Nantes. Castigliano is a member of the research department of the University of Paris IV and participated in the research group project of the Sorbonne University in Paris. He currently teaches at Beijing International Studies University in China.[1]

Education

He received his Ph.D. in Comparative Literature from the University of Turin in Italy in 2008.

Research work

Castigliano's researches center on the relationship between art, literature and city spaces. His approach is to integrate narrative with performing arts, describing the “Flâneur” as the key figure of a new aesthetic practice.

Castigliano has authored several works and has held numerous lectures at universities across Europe and China. His book Flâneur. The Art of Wandering the Streets of Paris (2017), where he describes the city wandering as a form of art, has been translated into four languages.[2][3]

gollark: That has basically never worked because, weirdly enough, people don't seem to be good at dealing with complex long-term consequences when doing sex things.
gollark: Which I disagree with, yes.
gollark: If it became possible to grow babies externally or conveniently move them, that might be an acceptable solution too.
gollark: To rethingy: I think that, regardless of whose body or creation or whatever it is, the person who is actually carrying it and bears the associated issues of having it glued to their circulatory system and such should get to decide whether to keep doing that.
gollark: A fetus contains some of your genes but ~all of its materials come from what the mother eats/processes, so that isn't relevant either.

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.