Italian Migrations - HONOR313_FA18Main MenuIntroduction to the courseItalian Migrations in Literature, Film and Popular CultureWho we are - Book authorsThe True Legend of Peppe VoltarelliThe Order of Things screening at MoPA with director Andrea SegreLittle Italy Field TripJim Bregante and growing up in Little ItalyMeet my Parents: An Immigration Story - Veronica MontemayorAn interview with my parents regarding their migration process from the Philippines to the United StatesHON 313 Final Project - Dillyn McHenryFour Short Stories About ImmigrationCHImmigration: My Family's Migration Stories - Jasmine ChiThe retelling of my grandfather's and father's experiences migrating from North to South Korea as well as from Korea to the United States with connections tying back to a novel we read in class.A Day in Little Italy - Malia and Sierra Final ProjectSierra and Malia Final ProjectHey Little Italy - TJ Griggs and Olivia KirkeSong of Little ItalyFrom Colombia to MiamiA Book in the Dust: An Ask the Dust Sequel by Dana Tsuri-EtzioniThe Experience of an Italian Sephardic Jew in Los Angeles, 1940. By Kaeli Leoni.Mangiamo: An Italian Mukbang - Keely and CharliAl and Adela - Different Families, Same Purpose| Mariel GeronimoThe Toth Family's Migration - Sydney WagnerPeppe Goes to America by Analise Ilsley, Jason Valentini, and Lorenzo SantorRemix to Migration - Peter MitriCovers of Popular Songs: Italian Migration StyleItalian Art and Migration - Dipali ShahIn this project I am exploring various art forms , and how migration has affected/spread them throughout the world.Final Project: Stories of Immigration Throughout the World - Madison and AlexaFinal Project Ximena Campos and Jessica AnthonyInterviews of immigration from different perspectivesMy Grandfather's Immigration Journey - Naomi MarroquinHonors 313 Final Project [Italy and the World] - Jake HurwitzFinal ProjectClarissa Clòdb886ad53bc7213a988f9e7e4415f782ea7c35a2
1media/IMG_9102.JPGmedia/IMG_9104.JPG2018-12-20T22:44:01-08:00Jim Bregante and growing up in Little Italy6image_header8258112018-12-20T23:06:30-08:00We were very fortunate to have Mr. Jim Bregante visit our class on October 31, 2018 to share his experience of growing up in Little Italy in the 1950s, when the Italian neighborhood was not yet branded as a corporate entity. Mr. Bregante told us about his family life and the customs of Italian community. The cottage where his family used to leave is still there and it is one of the few remaining from that era. His grandfather Girolamo Bregante is featured in a banner in front of it. They were fishermen but they also cultivated their backyards to make sure to have fresh fruit and vegetable. Jim told us of wine being made during the fall harvest, of baseball games in a nearby park and of Sundays' strolls along the waterfront with his parents. There were no Italian restaurants at the time, only a Mexican one. People ate at home. Everybody had a nickname and so did Jim, but it took us about 5 tries before we figured it out. Jim still meets once a month with his friends from the neighborhood and they reminisce fondly of their days at Washington Elementary. He also gave us a few insights about the novel we were reading at the time: Lorenzo Madalena's Confetti for Gino.
Here is a video recording of the lecture he gave to the Honors 313 course in 2015