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Mapping Creativity in Captivity during WWII

A global journey into the creativity of Italian WWII detainees

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Mapping Creativity in Captivity during WWII explores the little鈥慿nown artistic and cultural work produced by Italian detainees between 1940 and 1947.听By examining their creative activities in Australia and around the world, the project offers a fresh, transnational perspective on what life in captivity was like and how detainees interacted with the communities around them during the Second World War.

The project鈥檚 findings will deepen our understanding of migration, wartime experiences, and the positive role that creative expression can play in supporting people鈥檚 wellbeing. These insights remain highly relevant today, as societies continue to face lockdowns, displacement, and the challenges of conflict.

The project:

  • Determines the ongoing impact of Prisoners of War (POW) cultural heritage in the everyday reality and identity of the post-war rural and regional communities in Australia and in other countries.
  • Provides a comparative study of the听experiences and cultural production of Italian detainees across diverse countries
  • Redefines these creative acts in confinement as vectors of affective relationships between prisoners, captors, civilians, and prisoners鈥 relatives in multilingual and multicultural contexts.

Our collection consists of objects, artworks, artefacts and written texts held in diverse repositories around the world.

Through international collaborations and the development of digital resources, the project aims to share its results widely鈥攏ot only within academic circles, but also with the public and policymakers who can apply these lessons in contemporary contexts.

This project is funded by an Australian Research Council Discovery Project grant.

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Visit the collection

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Learn more about our project and our Digital Atlas of Creative Captivity (DARCI)

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Explore our project members and collaborators

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Get
in touch

For more information

Associate Professor Giorgia Al霉
School of Languages and Cultures, A18 Brennan MacCallum Building, The University of Sydney
giorgia.alu@sydney.edu.au