Umberto Eco: The Prague Cemetery
http://chicagohumanities.org - See more Chicago Humanities Festival events. Umberto Eco is a literary master. The bestselling author of The Name of the Rose spins prose at once compelling and complex, full of facts, twists, and details born of scholarship in philosophy, medievalism, and semiotics. His latest novel, The Prague Cemetery, summons a world of assassination and intrigue and serves up a conspiracy theory rooted in 19th-century history, inspired by an era Eco calls "full of monstrous and mysterious events." All of the characters, except its main one, really existed. It poses the question, what if every conspiracy, in a world full of conspiracies, were connected by a single, evil genius, who turned modern history into a massive diatribe that still governs how we think? Eco reads from his new book and discusses his work with Chicago Tribune cultural critic Julia Keller. This program is generously underwritten by Lois and Harrison Steans and is presented in partnership with the Chicago Tribune. Help us caption & translate this video! http://amara.org/v/C9Fy/

Umberto Eco, Part 1 | Nov. 16, 2011 | Appel Salon

Paul Freedman, "European Slavery and Serfdom in the Middle Ages"

On the History of Ugliness - Lecture by Umberto Eco

Writer Umberto Eco: I Was Always Narrating | Louisiana Channel

Baudolino: Lying About the Future Produces History

Nietzsche's Warnings for Modern Man | UChicago's Robert Pippin

Numele trandafirului (2005) - Umberto Eco #teatruaudio #teatruradiofonic #teatruonline #teatru

Love and Friendship in Hamlet: David Bevington Harper Lecture

Umberto Eco: Signs and Secrets | Introduction to The Name of the Rose's writer

On the Ashes of Post-Modernism: A New Realism. A Conference with Umberto Eco

Thomas Pavel, "The History of the Novel"

BAUDOLINO by Umberto Eco HONEST BOOK REVIEW

UnCommon Core | Imperial by Design, John Mearsheimer

Richard Strier on Milton's Paradise Lost

A Dialogue on Facts Fiction History: Umberto Eco - Orhan Pamuk (Full Version)

Umberto Eco in conversation with Paul Holdengräber

Umberto Eco - "On the advantages of fiction for life and death" (7 Oct. 2008)

Umberto Eco interview on "Misreadings" (1993)

Harold Bloom Lecture on Shakespeare

