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Antonio Rutigliano

Part-time Faculty
ar31@nyu.edu
431 - 1 Wash Pl

Office Hours
Tuesday 2:00 TO 3:30 & 5:00 TO 6:00
Wednesday 2:00 TO 3:30

B.A., Spanish, Davis & Elkins College, 1974
M.A.T., Social Sciences, Fordham University, 1976
M.A., Modern European History, New York University, 1981
Ph.D., Renaissance, Early Modern European History, New York University, 1989

Antonio Rutigliano's teaching and research interests include Greek, Roman and medieval literature;  romance languages; Renaissance Studies; Dante, Virgil, Boethius and Machiavelli; French, Spanish and Italian cinema; medieval, Renaissance and Baroque art;  philosophy and the transformation of the noumenon into phenomenon. His Gallatin courses have included “Fate and Free Will in the Epic Tradition;” “The Spirit of the Comic, the Spirit of the Times;” “Classic Texts and Contemporary Life;” “Dante and the Bible;” “Dante’s World” and the “Medieval Mind.” Since 1982, Rutigliano has directed and taught seminars abroad for SCPS on Greek and Roman civilization in Sicily; Etruscan civilization in Latium and Tuscany;  “From the Medieval Commune to the Renaissance City-state in Tuscany;” “Al Andalus: the Muslim legacy of Medieval Spain” in Andalucia. He has received  Gallatin’s  Student Choice Award as well as the  SCPS Award For Outstanding Service. He is an honorary Member of Casa Dante in Florence, and he has received Italy’s Gold Medal for Civic Merit  from the Comune di Bitetto.  He is professor in residence of the Westchester Italian Cultural Center. His publications include Lorenzetti's Golden Mean (Peter Lang Publishing, Inc.  1992); “Art and Liminality” in Greg Wyatt, Transatlantic Bridges Through  Sculpture (Newington-Cropsey Foundation, 2006); “Icarus” in Empedocles (Museo Regionale di Agrigento,  2008). He is currently working on a collection of medieval women’s trials: The Song of the Cicadas.  

Awards & Honors

2020

Gallatin Adviser of Distinction

Since 1982, Antonio Rutigliano has directed and taught seminars abroad for SCPS on Greek and Roman civilization. He has received Gallatin’s Student Choice Award and Gallatin’s Advisor of Distinction Award as well as the SPS Award for Outstanding Service. He is an honorary member of Casa Dante in Florence, and he has received Italy’s Gold Medal for Civic Merit from the Comune di Bitetto. His publications include Lorenzetti’s Golden Mean (Peter Lang Publishing, 1992); “Art and Liminality’’ in Greg Wyatt, Transatlantic Bridges Through Sculpture (Newington-Cropsey Foundation, 2006); “Icarus” in Empedocles (Museo Regionale di Agrigento, 2008); Un’Anima alla Ricerca della Santità: Chiara del Sacramento (Vistosi Maggi, 2014); Il Tenet di Metatron (Vistosi Maggi, 2015). He is currently working on a collection of medieval women’s trials, The Song of the Cicadas.

Teaching and Research Interests

Greek  Roman and medieval literature; semiotics; romance languages; transformation of desire; luminality: Dante  Virgil  and Boethius; French and Italian cinema; medieval and Renaissance art  philosophy  and history 

Antonio Rutigliano