doc. Alessandro Testa, Ph.D.
doc. Alessandro Testa, Ph.D.

Posts:
- Department of Sociology
E-mail: alessandro.testa@fsv.cuni.cz , alessandro.testa@fsv.cuni.cz
Telephone: +420 267 224 238
Rooms: No. B223, Jinonice, building B
ORCID ID: 0000-0003-4060-651X
Alessandro Testa is Associate Professor at the Faculty of Social Sciences, Charles University, Prague. He is interested in a variety of themes in religious studies and in the historical and cultural anthropology of European societies, themes about which he has published and lectured extensively.
Prior to his appointment in Prague, Dr. Testa was Lise Meitner Postdoctoral Fellow and Adjunct at the University of Vienna (2015-2019).
Trained in history, ethnology, and religious studies at the Universities of Florence, Rome, Paris, and Messina, he received his PhD in social anthropology in 2013. Later he obtained academic habilitations for professorship in social anthropology (2017), history of religions (2022), and European ethnology (2022).
Alessandro Testa has conducted long-term, intensive ethnographic fieldworks in Italy (2010-2012), Czech Republic (2013-2014; 2020-2022), and Catalonia (Spain) (2016-2021). In the past decade he has been affiliated for long terms with the Universities of Tallinn, Pardubice, Vienna, and Prague, and has also been a visiting scholar in Germany, Slovenia, Slovakia, Iceland, and the U.S.
His main research fields are Social and Historical Anthropology and Religious Studies, with a focus on the Ethnology and Cultural History of Europe, Ritual Studies, Comparative Religion, and Cultural Heritage Studies. His research interests encompass topics ranging from public rituality to secularisation and de-secularisation, from longue-durée cultural continuities to current social transformations, from popular cultures to vernacular forms of religiosity, from ancient mythologies and paganism to esotericism and new forms of spirituality, from cultural heritage-making to collective memories, identity formation, and nationalism in Europe, and from theories and methods in social and historical sciences to epistemology. These topics have been approached in a multi-disciplinary fashion and explored theoretically and empirically, either comparatively (at the pan-European or global level) or with a special attention to Central-Eastern and Mediterranean Europe.
Alessandro Testa's research outputs include five authored books, five edited volumes, some 70 peer-reviewed articles in journals and chapters in volumes, and several dozen other pieces of writing (reviews, reports, non-peer-reviewed articles, etc.). His works have been published in nine different languages, and his research has also been presented orally in more than 200 key-note talks, invited lectures, and conference presentations in 30 countries. The Max Planck Institute in Halle/Saale, Sorbonne in Paris, Humboldt University in Berlin, Boston University and Harvard University in Cambridge are among the institutions where he has given lectures.
For years he has been teaching courses in Historical Anthropology, Anthropology of Religion, Anthropology of Cultural Heritage, and Ethnographic Methods. Numerous theses and projects were or are being supervised by him.
After having successfully completed several individual projects for prestigious research schemes (Lise Meitner Postdoctoral Fellowship, Marie Curie / OPVVV), he was (2020-2022) Principal Investigator for the ERC CZ project “ReEnchEu – The Re-Enchantment of Central-Eastern Europe”, for which he led and managed a team of five scholars from four different countries.
He is also a member of the most important international scientific societies in his fields (among which are EASR, EASA, SIEF, SISR, and SIAC) and chairs or sits on several scholarly and editorial boards, as well as in a number of doctoral and academic committees.
His long and profound international experience has led him to become a polyglot – he can write and speak seven languages and has a good understanding or a passive knowledge of another half a dozen.
Apart from his (multi)disciplinary expertise in Social and Historical Sciences, he has a strong interest in philosophy, linguistics, cognitive sciences, and biology, but his true loves remain literature, music, cinema, and fine arts.
Email: alessandro.testa@fsv.cuni.cz
Web-page: https://cuni.academia.edu/AlessandroTesta
Rok vydání
Monographs
- Testa A. (2021). Rituality and Social (Dis)Order: The Historical Anthropology of Popular Carnival in Europe. Routledge.
- Testa A. (2024). Ritualising Cultural Heritage and Re-Enchanting Rituals in Europe. Carolina Academic Press.
Chapters in monographs
- Testa A. (2020). Events that want to become heritage: Vernacularisation of ICH and the politics of culture and identity in European public rituals. Heritage and festivals in Europe : performing identities (pp. 79-94).
- Testa A., & Köllner T. (2021). Introduction: Religion, Politics, and their Entanglements. Politics of Religion : Authority, Creativity, Conflicts (pp. 1-25).
- Testa A., & Vaczi M. (2023). Introduction: Popular Culture, Identity, and Politics in Contemporary Catalonia. Popular Culture, Identity, and Politics in Contemporary Catalonia (pp. 1-18).
- Testa A. (2023). The Ritual Making of Central Catalonia 2: Comparses and the Dynamics of Inclusive Nationalism. Popular Culture, Identity, and Politics in Contemporary Catalonia (pp. 55-76).
- Testa A. (2023). The Ritual Making of Central Catalonia 1: National Identity and the Hanging of the Donkey. Popular Culture, Identity, and Politics in Contemporary Catalonia (pp. 35-54).
- Testa A. (2025). Derivative and Associative Popular Frazerism: A Cultural Complex at Work in Late Modern Europe. Century of James Frazer’s The Golden Bough: Shaking the Tree, Breaking the Bough (pp. 291-306).
- Testa A. (2024). Can a Person have Pagan Beliefs without being Pagan?. Pagan Religions in Five Minutes (pp. 103-105).
- Testa A. (2024). "Is Carnival a Pagan Festival?". Pagan Religions in Five Minutes (pp. 148-150).
- Testa A. (2024). Is Christmas a Pagan Festival?”. Pagan Religions in Five Minutes (pp. 145-147).
Articles
- Testa A. (2019). Mumming in Europe, Frazer(ism) in Italy, and ʻSurvivalsʼ in Historical Anthropology: a response to Julian Whybra. The Morris Dancer [online], 5(6), 134-142.
- Testa A. (2019). Doing Research on Festivals: Cui Bono?. Journal of Festive Studies [online], 1(1), 5-10.
- Testa A. (2020). Where have the gatherings gone? Reweaving the social fabric in the time of pandemic and interpersonal distancing. Social Anthropology, 28(2), 366-367. UT-WOS link
- Testa A. (2021). The Anthropology of Cultural Heritage in Europe: A Brief Genealogy from the Desk (1970-2020) and Empirical Observations from the Field (2010-2020). Traditiones, Slovenian Journal of Ethnography and Folklore, 50(1), 15-28.
- Testa A. (2020). Problematising Boundaries and 'Hierarchies of Knowledge' within European Anthropologies. Anthropological Journal of European Cultures, 29(2), 114-122. UT-WOS link
- Testa A. (2021). Zvířecí rituály v Evropě : masky a převleky za zvířata v evropských rituálech napříč stoletími. Dingir, 24(2), 49-52.
- Testa A. (2023). Re-thinking the concept of re-enchantment in Central-Eastern Europe. Religio, 31(1), 103-131.
- Testa A. (2024). A Review Essay on Four Recent Reference Books on Magic. Religio, 32(2), 383-387.
- Testa A. (2024). Report on The International Interdisciplinary Workshop “Prague and its Myths”. Religio, 32(2), 349-352.
- Testa A. (2021). Introduction: Recent Studies in the Anthropology of Eastern Christianities. Anthropological Journal of European Cultures, 30(2), 141-143. UT-WOS link
- Isnart C., & Testa A. (2020). Reconfiguring traditions(s) in Europe: An introduction to the special issue. Ethnologia Europaea, 50(1), 5-19.
- Isnart C., & Testa A. (2020). Ethnology's hot notion? A discussion forum on how to return to "Tradition" today. Ethnologia Europaea, 50(1), 89-108.
- Ladykowska A., Teisenhoffer V., & Testa A. (2024). 'Re-enchantment' and religious change in former socialist Europe. Religion, 54(1), 1-20. UT-WOS link
- Kiliánová G., Muktupavela R., McDermott P., Demossier M., Testa A., McIntosh A., & Wilson T. (2019). A note of appreciation for Ullrich Kockel. Anthropological Journal of European Cultures, 28(1), 8-14. UT-WOS link
Contributions in the conference proceedings
- Testa A. (2024). Tra arte e mitopoiesi: fare ricerca storico-antropologica in/sull’Alta Valle del Volturno imbattendosi nella figura di Moulin. Il solitario di Monte Marrone: Atti del I Convegno di Studi su Charles Moulin – 9-10 settembre 2013 (pp. 86-89).
Anthropology of Cultural Heritage
Anthropology of Religion
Historical Anthropology
Theories of Magic (in Social Anthropology and History of Religions)
Theories of Popular Cultural and Popular Religion
Anthropology of East-Central Europe
Understanding Identity and Social Belonging
Qualitative Research Methods
Religion in the Public Sphere
Cultural Heritage: Ideas, Objects, and Practices
The Anthropology of Museums and Musealisation
Religion in New Media
Research Areas: Social and Cultural Anthropology, History, Religious Studies, Ethnology of Europe, History and Anthropology of Religion, Historical Anthropology and Cultural History, Cultural Heritage Studies
Regional Areas: Europe (comparatively); Mediterranean, central, and post-socialist Europe, notably Italy, Austria, France, Catalonia (Spain), Czech Republic