Cesare PAVESE
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Creatureliness
Thinking Italian Animals Human and Posthuman in Modern Italian Literature and Film Edited by Deborah Amberson and Elena Past Contents Acknowledgments xi Foreword: Mimesis: The Heterospecific as Ontopoietic Epiphany xiii Roberto Marchesini Introduction: Thinking Italian Animals 1 Deborah Amberson and Elena Past Part 1 Ontologies and Thresholds 1 Confronting the Specter of Animality: Tozzi and the Uncanny Animal of Modernism 21 Deborah Amberson 2 Cesare Pavese, Posthumanism, and the Maternal Symbolic 39 Elizabeth Leake 3 Montale’s Animals: Rhetorical Props or Metaphysical Kin? 57 Gregory Pell 4 The Word Made Animal Flesh: Tommaso Landolfi’s Bestiary 75 Simone Castaldi 5 Animal Metaphors, Biopolitics, and the Animal Question: Mario Luzi, Giorgio Agamben, and the Human– Animal Divide 93 Matteo Gilebbi Part 2 Biopolitics and Historical Crisis 6 Creatureliness and Posthumanism in Liliana Cavani’s The Night Porter and Pier Paolo Pasolini’s Salò 111 Alexandra Hills 7 Elsa Morante at the Biopolitical Turn: Becoming- Woman, Becoming- Animal, Becoming- Imperceptible 129 Giuseppina Mecchia x CONTENTS 8 Foreshadowing the Posthuman: Hybridization, Apocalypse, and Renewal in Paolo Volponi 145 Daniele Fioretti 9 The Postapocalyptic Cookbook: Animality, Posthumanism, and Meat in Laura Pugno and Wu Ming 159 Valentina Fulginiti Part 3 Ecologies and Hybridizations 10 The Monstrous Meal: Flesh Consumption and Resistance in the European Gothic 179 David Del Principe 11 Contemporaneità and Ecological Thinking in Carlo Levi’s Writing 197 Giovanna Faleschini -
32-Dicembre-2020-Poeti-E-Scrittori-Dimenticati
RIVISTA DI POESIA E CRITICA LETTERARIA “EUTERPE” APERIODICO TEMATICO DI LETTERATURA ONLINE NATO NEL 2011 ISSN: 2280-8108 N°32 * DICEMBRE 2020 * – WWW.ASSOCIAZIONEEUTERPE.COM RIVISTA DI POESIA E CRITICA LETTERARIA “EUTERPE” APERIODICO TEMATICO DI LETTERATURA ONLINE NATO NEL 2011 ISSN: 2280-8108 - N° 32 / DICEMBRE 2020 POETI E SCRITTORI NASCOSTI E DIMENTICATI 1 RIVISTA DI POESIA E CRITICA LETTERARIA “EUTERPE” APERIODICO TEMATICO DI LETTERATURA ONLINE NATO NEL 2011 ISSN: 2280-8108 N°32 * DICEMBRE 2020 * – WWW.ASSOCIAZIONEEUTERPE.COM RIVISTA DI POESIA E CRITICA LETTERARIA “EUTERPE” Aperiodico tematico di letteratura online nato nel 2011 ISSN: 2280-8108 N°32 / Dicembre 2020 Associazione Euterpe - c/o Dott. Lorenzo Spurio – Via Toscana 3 - 60035 Jesi (AN) – Italia Sito internet: https://associazioneeuterpe.com/rivista-di-letteratura-euterpe/ Mail: [email protected] Pec: [email protected] Tel: (+39) 327-5914963 [anche Sms e WhattsApp] Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/rivistaeuterpe/ Instagram: ass.euterpe Redazione: LORENZO SPURIO, MICHELA ZANARELLA, EMANUELE MARCUCCIO, CRISTINA LANIA, LUIGI PIO CARMINA, FRANCESCO MARTILLOTTO, FRANCESCA LUZZIO, LUCIA BONANNI, VALTERO CURZI, LAURA VARGIU. Tema del numero: Poeti e scrittori nascosti e dimenticati Immagine di copertina: Prima fila da sx: Giuliana Brescia, Margherita Guidacci. Seconda fila da sx: Gino Scartaghiande, Sergio Corazzini (china) e, sotto, Silvio Pellico (ritratto). Il collage è a cura di Emanuele Marcuccio. Numero dedicato a GINO SCARTAGHIANDE Le foto che accompagnano l’intervista a Scartaghiande appartengono all’autore, che ne ha concessa la pubblicazione senza nulla richiedere all’atto della pubblicazione né in futuro. La foto più recente che ritrae Scartaghiande è uno scatto del fotografo Dino Ignani che ha autorizzato alla pubblicazione sulle pagine della rivista. -
La Narrativa Del Novecento Tra Spagna E Italia 1939-1989
La narrativa del Novecento tra Spagna e Italia 1939-1989 Alessandro Ghignoli ([email protected]) UNIVERSIDAD DE MÁLAGA Resumen Palabras clave En nuestro trabajo queremos mostrar Literatura española e italiana como en el período comprendido entre Literatura comparada 1939 y 1989, la narrativa española y la Narrativa italiana han tenido confluencias y Siglo XX momentos de contacto bastante evidentes. Haremos hincapié sobre todo en los procesos históricos y sociales de ambos países para la construcción de sus literaturas. Abstract Key words In this piece of work we want to show Spanish and Italian Literature that there are evident similarities Comparative Literature between the Spanish and Italian Narrative writings produced between the years 20th Century 1939 and 1989, and specifically in the historical and social processes of both countries during the creation of their AnMal Electrónica 39 (2015) literatures. ISSN 1697-4239 1. La Spagna all’inizio del XX secolo soffriva un ritardo sociale e politico, rispetto agli altri paesi europei, di notevole portata, situazione ereditata anche da epoche precedenti. La guerra civile del 1936-39, sarà la finalizzazione di questo periodo in un paese in cui l’unica parvenza di stabilità poteva avvenire sotto una forma di dittatura. Possiamo tranquillamente affermare che quello che successe nell’estate del 1936 fu una conseguenza di lotte secolari interne alla penisola iberica, nel febbraio sempre di quell’anno vi erano in Spagna due blocchi che si scontrarono durante le elezioni politiche, portando alla vittoria il fronte progressista, anche se in maniera abbastanza debole. Tra il 17 e il 18 luglio scoppiò la sollevazione autoritaria dei nazionalisti spagnoli con a capo un uomo che determinerà il futuro 74 Narrativa del Novecento AnMal Electrónica 39 (2015) A. -
Other Worlds: Travel Literature in Italy
Spring 2019 - Other Worlds. Travel Literature in Italy ITAL-UA 9283 Wednesdays, 10:30-1:15 pm Classroom Location TBA Class Description: This course, taught in English, will focus on the representation of travel experience in Modern Italian Literature and its related media, especially 20th Century Cinema, Modernist and Futurist Art, underground comics, and the way they intersect with each other. Its aim is to offer the student a new pattern in the succession of tendencies, movements and mass cultures, with a broader perspective, spanning from the 19th Century Post-Unification Italian culture and literature (Manzoni) to the 1980s “cult” writers and cartoonists and literary groups from the 1990s and 2000s (Tondelli, Ammanniti, Pazienza). With this pattern the student will be introduced to the dynamics of journey in the Italian culture and literature: not only a spatial journey abroad (in America with Calvino, The Orient with Tabucchi, Africa with Pasolini and Celati) or inland (especially the South of Carlo Levi), but also intellectually, politically and spiritually speaking: a path between the Wars (with Malaparte and Levi), the economic Boom, the Generation of ’68 and ’77, a psychedelic trip in New Age trends, and the so called Pulp Generation or Young Cannibals. To foster the student’s feedback one Site-visit will be proposed (at the Fondazione Casamonti in Florence) and a special Field Trip will be scheduled in Milan, to visit the new “Book Pride” Book Fair and interview a contemporary Italian writer and/or translator and/or editor at Verso Bookshop. With these topics and authors, the student will be engaged in a different history of Italian literature and culture, using also her or his knowledge in the Florentine context. -
Renato Poggioli. Between History and Literature
Pagine di storia della slavistica Studi Slavistici x (2013): 301-310 Roberto Ludovico Renato Poggioli. Between History and Literature Until the year 2007 only two critical articles had been written on Renato Poggioli: one by his colleague at Harvard University Dante Della Terza in 1971 (Della Terza 1971), and two much more recent ones: by Giuseppe Ghini (2005), and by the Belgian scholar Laurent Béghin (2005). In addition to these two articles, Ghini had circulated a short but informative bio-bibliographical document dated 2005 on the internet. These three scholars, with over a dozen others, including historians, slavicists, italianists, and comparativists, ani- mated a three-day symposium dedicated to Renato Poggioli’s centennial by three American Universities in 2007: the University of Massachusetts Amherst, Brown University and Har- vard University. The intent of the symposium was to reignite interest in Poggioli and to re- evaluate the role he had in the twentieth century’s international literary debate. Since then a number of new publications (see for instance Pavese, Poggioli 2010), newspaper articles (Pirani 2008; Canali 2008), conferences1, reprints of Poggioli’s work (Poggioli 2012), and even television broadcasts2 have contributed to rediscovering Renato Poggioli and his legacy as a scholar and as an intellectual. The collection of essaysRenato Poggioli. An Intellectual Biography, edited by the three organizers of the 2007 symposium – Lino Pertile, Massimo Riva and myself – is the first book-length publication entirely dedicated to Poggioli. Far from wanting to provide an annotated bibliography of critical literature on Pog- gioli, these few introductory notes are meant to suggest that the scarce presence of his name in literary criticism after his death in 1963 is strictly connected with his cultural profile and the unusual trajectory of the biographical events that led him to leave Florence and Italy to pursue a career as Professor of Slavic Studies and Comparative Literature at Harvard Uni- versity. -
Premio Cesare Pavese 2013
Torino, 23 luglio 2013 Comunicato stampa Premio Cesare Pavese 2013 Gli scrittori Claudio Magris e Sebastiano Vassalli, il giornalista Beppe Severgnini e il poeta Guido Zavanone sono i vincitori della 30a edizione Sabato 31 agosto e domenica 1 settembre Santo Stefano Belbo (Cn) Ancora aperto il bando per partecipare alla sezione Premio Scultura (scadenza: 15 settembre) www.centropavesiano-cepam.it Il Premio Cesare Pavese festeggia trent’anni di storia con quattro grandi autori della letteratura e del giornalismo italiano. Gli scrittori Claudio Magris con Itaca e oltre (Garzanti, 2012) e Sebastiano Vassalli per la sua intere opera narrativa, il giornalista Beppe Severgnini con Italiani di domani (Rizzoli, 2012) e il poeta Guido Zavanone con Tempo nuovo (De Ferrari, 2013) sono i vincitori della trent’esima edizione del Premio (sezione opere edite). Il riconoscimento, nato a Santo Stefano Belbo per rendere omaggio all’autore del romanzo La luna e i falò, viene assegnato ogni anno a scrittori e intellettuali che meglio abbiano saputo trasmettere il legame con il territorio, il valore dell’impegno civile o fornire punti di vista stimolanti su tematiche attuali o storiche. Gli autori ricevono il premio domenica 1 settembre alle ore 10 a Santo Stefano Belbo (Cn) presso la Casa Natale dello scrittore, dove ha sede il Cepam-Centro Pavesiano Museo Casa Natale che organizza il Premio. Sarà un’occasione per conoscere da vicino gli autori, le loro opere vincitrici e il loro rapporto con Pavese, in un incontro coordinato dal professore Luigi Gatti, -
4 Cesare Pavese14
4 Cesare Pavese14 Diaries written by suicides are rare. However, occasionally a diary written by a famous person who has died by suicide is published, and the present study explored the final year of a diary written by the Italian novelist Cesare Pavese. Pavese’s diary has been published in an English translation, thereby introducing two confounding elements, the translation itself and the fact that we cannot be sure that the editor of the diary did not omit some of the content. The Italian version is Il mestiere de vivere (Pavese, 1952), and an edited translation has appeared (Pavese, 1961). Cesare Pavese was born in Italy in 1908, and he killed himself at the age of 42 on August 27, 1950, in Turin, Italy. During that time, he became a leading intellectual, editor, translator, poet and nov- elist. The biographical details of Pavese’s life are taken from his biographer, Lajolo (1983). 4.1 Pavese’s Life Pavese was born on a farm in Santo Stefano Belbo in the Piedmont province of North Western Italy (which borders on Switzerland and France) on September 9, 1908. He often returned to his hometown in later years. Pinolo Saglione, a carpenter there, remained a friend and confidante. Pavese’s father Eugenio worked in Turin at the Court of Justice. Pavese’s mother, Consolina, was the daughter of wealthy merchants. Consolina had lost three children before Maria and Pavese, the first dying of diphthe- ria at the age of six. Pavese had a sister, Maria, six years his elder. Pavese’s childhood was spent in Turin during the Winter and Spring, and at the farm in Summer and Autumn. -
Laurea Honoris Causa, Il Dottor Muti Al San Carlo: D
Elio Matteo Palumbo BIBLIOAUDIOVIDEOEFFEMERIDOTECA PRIVATA Altri 11 volumi tematici introduttivi e di primo approfondimento più un supplemento di giornale sull’Alimentazione, dopo i 137 pubblicati fino al 20 maggio 2015. (v. pdf in “La mia biblioaudiovideoeffemeridoteca” e “Cultura e Società”) 25 giugno 2016 --------------------- https://eliomatteopalumbo.files.wordpress.com/2015/05/elio-matteo-palumbo- biblioaudiovideoeffemeridoteca-tutti-i-volumi-tematici-allestiti-20-maggio-2015.pdf https://eliomatteopalumbo.wordpress.com/la-mia-biblioaudiovideoeffemeridoteca/ https://eliomatteopalumbo.wordpress.com/areetematiche/cultura-e-societa/ https://eliomatteopalumbo.wordpress.com/ ALCUNE CASE EDITRICI Fondatori, Storia { doc. AA.VV. PERSONAGGI dell’ EDITORIA e del GIORNALISMO ◆1°◆ ADELPHI: Roberto (detto Bobi) Bazlen, Luciano Foà, Roberto Olivetti, Roberto Calasso * - Franco ANGELI { Ada Gigli Marchetti - Nino ARAGNO { Paolo Mauri, Bruno Quaranta - Armando ARMANDO - BALDINI&CASTOLDI: Ettore Baldini e Antenore Castoldi; soci Alceste Borella e Gian Pietro Lucini - BOLLATI BORINGHIERI: Giulio Bollati e Paolo Boringhieri { Marco Dotti, Luciana Sica - BOMPIANI: Valentino Bompiani { Natalia Aspesi, Enrico Bonerandi, Carlo Carena, Maria Corti *, Paolo Cremonese, Cesare De Michelis, Umberto Eco *, Laura Lilli, Daniela Pasti, Enrico Regazzoni, Stefano Salis - BULZONI: Mario Bulzoni ➔ v. Riviste Ariel, Biblioteca teatrale, Quaderni Ist. Studi Pirandelliani - CAPPELLI: Licinio Cappelli { Paolo Cremonese, Elena Venturi Nenzioni - Armando CURCIO { Emanuela -
Impegno Nero: Italian Intellectuals and the African-American Struggle
Impegno nero: Italian intellectuals and the African-American struggle Article Published Version Creative Commons: Attribution-Noncommercial 4.0 Open Access Leavitt, C. L. (2013) Impegno nero: Italian intellectuals and the African-American struggle. California Italian Studies, 4 (2). ISSN 2155-7926 Available at http://centaur.reading.ac.uk/36375/ It is advisable to refer to the publisher’s version if you intend to cite from the work. See Guidance on citing . Published version at: http://escholarship.org/uc/ismrg_cisj?volume=4;issue=2 Publisher: University of California All outputs in CentAUR are protected by Intellectual Property Rights law, including copyright law. Copyright and IPR is retained by the creators or other copyright holders. Terms and conditions for use of this material are defined in the End User Agreement . www.reading.ac.uk/centaur CentAUR Central Archive at the University of Reading Reading’s research outputs online Peer Reviewed Title: Impegno nero: Italian Intellectuals and the African-American Struggle Journal Issue: California Italian Studies, 4(2) Author: Leavitt IV, Charles L., University of Reading Department of Modern Languages School of Literatures and Languages Publication Date: 2013 Publication Info: California Italian Studies Permalink: http://escholarship.org/uc/item/6qn2w1cm Acknowledgements: This essay is part of a book in progress, one that examines representations of African Americans in Italy from the Risorgimento to the present day. Some of the project’s early research findings have been presented and discussed at the 2011 conference of the South Atlantic Modern Language Association and the Colby College Symposium on the Myth of America in Italian Culture, as well as the 2012 conferences of the Modern Language Association, the American Association of Italian Studies, the “Echi oltremare...” conference sponsored by N.E.V.I.S., and a 2013 colloquium at the University of Reading. -
Archivio Di Ardengo Soffici Inventario Sommario
1 ARCHIVIO DI ARDENGO SOFFICI INVENTARIO SOMMARIO a cura di Silvia Baggio e Alessandro Marucelli 2 Firenze, febbraio 2005 SOMMARIO Serie I – Corrispondenza ……….……………………………………………...p. 1 Serie II – Documenti …………..………………………………………………p. 48 Serie III – Taccuini e diari ………..…………………………………………..p. 60 Serie IV – Manoscritti e bozze a stampa ………..………………………..…..p. 64 Serie V – Materiale a stampa ……………………………………………….…p.75 Ritagli di giornale contenenti articoli di A. Soffici Numeri di giornali e periodici italiani e stranieri Raccolta di periodici legati Opere a stampa di A. Soffici Opere a stampa su A. Soffici Rassegna stampa su A. Soffici Cataloghi di mostre Serie VI – Fotografie……………………………………………………………p.89 Serie VII – Strumenti di corredo…………………………………………….…p.92 Indice alfabetico………………………………………………………………….p.93 3 SERIE I – CORRISPONDENZA La corrispondenza inviata ad Ardengo Soffici era già in gran parte ordinata alfabeticamente per mittente. Ad essa si sono riunite le lettere trovate confuse nella documentazione, dopo aver identificato vari corrispondenti non precedentemente individuati. Non si è proceduto all’inventariazione analitica, ma si è dato conto del numero complessivo delle lettere e degli estremi cronologici per ogni mittente. 1 Corrispondenza lettera A Scatola contenente 20 buste. 1/1 Pierre Marcel Adèma Venticinque lettere 1948-1956 1/2 Fernando Agnoletti Trentotto lettere, tre cartoline postali, una cartolina illustrata e un biglietto postale 1912-1927 1/3 Sibilla Aleramo Quattro lettere e tre cartoline 1913-1915 1/4 Rino Alessi Una lettera 1934 1/5 Dino Alfieri 4 Una lettera e un telegramma 1918 e 1938 1/6 Adriano Alloati Un biglietto 1961 1/7 Ettore Allodoli Una lettera 1923 1/8 Corrado Alvaro Due lettere 1921-1923 1/9 Eva Amendola Quattro lettere 1920 e 1957 1/10 Giovanni Amendola Tredici lettere e due cartoline postali 1908-1924 Copia dattiloscritta di una lettera di Giovanni Amendola a Giovanni Papini, non firmata 1908 Copia dattiloscritta di una lettera non datata s.d. -
Cesare Pavese Collection Finding
Special Collections and University Archives : University Libraries Cesare Pavese Collection 1931-2006 1931-1950 13 titles (2 linear feet) Call no.: RB 037 Collection overview Simultaneously prolific and tragic, Cesare Pavese was a major figure in 20th century Italian letters. Born in the Piedmont region in 1908 and educated in Turin, Pavese was drawn to English-language literature as a student, writing his thesis on Walt Whitman (1930). Nearly overnight, he became well known as a translator of modern American and British fiction, from Melville, Faulkner, and Steinbeck to James Joyce and Gertrude Stein, and at the same time, he began to publish his own creative work beginning with Lavorare stanca, a book of poetry, in 1936. Although sentenced to three years of internal exile for his anti-fascist sympathies (1938-1941), he continued to write, capped by the appearance of his first two novels in 1941 and 1942. The war's end saw Pavese blossom into an exceptionally creative period, however even as his renown grew, the effects of depression and a failed love affair with the American actress Constance Dowling led him to suicide in August 1950. Two months before he had been awarded the prestigious Strega Prize. This collection of first and early editions by Cesare Pavese, donated by Lawrence G. Smith, includes first and early editions by Cesare Pavese, five of which are inscribed: three to Constance Dowling, one to his friend Leone Ginzburg (and later to Dowling), and the fifth to Doris and Harry. Smith also donated dozens of other volumes by and about Pavese to the Library's general collection. -
Note Biografiche
UCLA Carte Italiane Title Note Biografiche Permalink https://escholarship.org/uc/item/0ng8p17j Journal Carte Italiane, 2(10) ISSN 0737-9412 Author Italiane, Carte Publication Date 2015 DOI 10.5070/C9210029130 eScholarship.org Powered by the California Digital Library University of California Note biografiche Gillian Adler is a Ph.D. Candidate in the English Department at the University of California-Los Angeles. Her dissertation, entitled, “Theorizing History in Chaucer’s Dream Visions and Troilus and Criseyde,” explores Chaucer’s uses of temporality and perspectivalism in his early poetic narratives. Gillian received her B.A. in English from Barnard College-Columbia University and her M.A. in Medieval English Literatures from the University of York, UK. Aria Zan Cabot is a Ph.D. candidate in Italian Studies at the University of Wisconsin-Madison. Aria Cabot holds a B.A. in Italian and English from Smith College (2006) and a Masters degree in Italian from the University of Wisconsin- Madison (2011), where she is currently working on a doctoral dissertation on Eighteenth-century women writers in Italy. Serena Convito is a PhD student in Italian Studies. She holds a Laurea in English and German Literatures from the University of Florence, Italy and a Masters in Modern Italian Literature form McGill. Her field of research focuses on modern and contemporary Italian poetry. Her doctoral dissertation analyzes the poetic production and persona of Alda Merini, utilizing a religious studies framework. She is currently working on the relationship between mental disor- ders and writing in Alda Merini and Dino Campana’s works. Rossella Di Rosa is currently pursuing a Ph.D.