Princeton in Pisa: Taking a Summer Class in Italy
Source: https://admission.princeton.edu/blogs/princeton-pisa-taking-summer-class-italy Parent: https://admission.princeton.edu/academics/intern-study-abroad
- Add
Princeton in Pisa: Taking a Summer Class in Italy
February 7, 2023
By
Ian Fridman '25
Ian Fridman '25
Hey, hey hello! Hola! I'm Ian, a member of the Class of 2025. I'm from Buenos Aires studying psychology and architecture. I am interested in the design of experiences, from playgrounds to museum exhibits, from an architectural and cognitive perspective. Personality-wise, I'm quite outgoing and musical, but I love a good hike or relaxing walk in nature. On campus, I'm the VP of J-Lats (the Jewish Latino group), I'm a campus tour guide, an ... Read more
Close
Blog
Reunions Alongside Princeton's Oldest Living Alumni
Blog
My Identities and My Idol: Cheering for Messi and World-Champion Argentina With Princeton’s Jewish-Latino Community
Home to me is Buenos Aires, capital of (world-champion in football) Argentina. So studying abroad is, technically, nothing new to me— I’ve been “studying abroad” since the first day of Princeton’s international orientation. Yet, the summer school I did through Princeton in Italy was one of the best experiences of my life.
During the school year, my Italian class professor, Anna Cellinese, a woman who speaks with her hands and conceives wine as religion, along side our co-instructor Luca Zipoli, began promoting the idea of taking a summer course in Italy’s Tuscany. It didn’t take long to convenience me, and soon enough I was on an airplane on my way to Pisa.
Known for its tilting tower and vibrant youth life, Pisa’s beauty captivated my eyes immediately. The city felt lively and awake, but breathed the same slow-burnt pace of life of most Italian towns. Our home was the Scuola Normale Superiore, one of Italy’s most renowned universities, famous for its academic rigor and residential life. Our dorms were great and had stunning views to Pisa’s Piazza dei Cavalieri. My roommate, Sara, and I would wake up to a sun-kissed room of fresh air, and we’d begin our days singing, dancing and jumping from bed to bed while listening to the Mamma Mia album.
First day! We went out with everyone in the program for some gelato!
Residential life aside, the class was also fun and incredibly engaging. We had literary lessons about old books like Dante’s Inferno and more modern texts like Tondelli’s Altri Libertini. There were also classes about contemporary issues in Italy, where we learned about the immigration crisis, the concept of beauty and the idea of arts as an urban lung.
Anna, our professor, was an intelligent, sharp, and kind instructor and travel guide. We had a ton of fun. She's the best!
But what was the best thing about the program? The out-of-the-classroom learning experience. The course stepped beyond the university campus and onto the city's historical, cultural and gastronomical landmarks. We had a class sitting on a public park once, we went to a gallery that had a comic-centered exhibition about immigration, we interviewed figures like the city’s governor, and we even had a cooking class and a wine-tasting evening! Learning was happening through our five senses as we explored the 360-dregrees of Italy.
A classmate and I got to interview Pisa's vice mayor for a course project. Amazing opportunity!
On a personal note, a meaningful takeaway from the trip were the moments I had with my bike. I got it second-hand during the first week, and I’d use it to get to the beach every day after class. It was a countryside bike path that traversed sunflower fields, the parallel-running Arno river, old castles and distant mountains. I’d sit on the rocky Mediterranean beaches for hours, with ink and notebook to my side. I ended up finding my love for journaling, writing and poetry!
After writing so much, I now have an add-ink-tion!
My experience traveling abroad with the University through Princeton in Pisa couldn’t have been any more impactful. It left a trace in my hobbies, my identity, my notions about beauty, time, culture and love.