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Alda Merini (21 March 1931, in
Milan Milan ( , , Lombard: ; it, Milano ) is a city in northern Italy, capital of Lombardy, and the second-most populous city proper in Italy after Rome. The city proper has a population of about 1.4 million, while its metropolitan city h ...
– 1 November 2009, in Milan) was an Italian writer and poet. Her work earned the attention and the admiration of other Italian writers, such as
Giorgio Manganelli Giorgio Manganelli (15 November 1922 – 28 May 1990) was an Italian journalist, avant-garde writer, translator and literary critic. A native of Milan, he was one of the leaders of the avant-garde literary movement in Italy in the 1960s, Gruppo 6 ...
,
Salvatore Quasimodo Salvatore Quasimodo (; August 20, 1901 – June 14, 1968) was an Italian poet and translator. In 1959, he won the Nobel Prize in Literature "for his lyrical poetry, which with classical fire expresses the tragic experience of life in our own time ...
, and
Pier Paolo Pasolini Pier Paolo Pasolini (; 5 March 1922 – 2 November 1975) was an Italian poet, filmmaker, writer and intellectual who also distinguished himself as a journalist, novelist, translator, playwright, visual artist and actor. He is considered one of ...
. Merini's writing style has been described as intense, passionate and mystic, and it is influenced by Rainer Maria Rilke. Some of her most dramatic poems concern her time in a mental health institution (from 1964 to 1970). Her 1986 poem ''The Other Truth. Diary of a Misfit'' (L'altra verità. Diario di una diversa) is considered one of her masterpieces. In 1996 she was nominated by the Académie Française as a candidate for the Nobel Prize in Literature. In 2002 she was made Dame of the Republic. In 2007 she won the Elsa Morante Ragazzi Award with ''Alda e Io – Favole'' (Alda and Me: Fairytales), a poem written in cooperation with the fable author Sabatino Scia. In the same year she received an honorary degree in Theory of Communication and Languages at the University of Messina. At the time of her death,
President of the Italian Republic President most commonly refers to: * President (corporate title) *President (education), a leader of a college or university * President (government title) President may also refer to: Automobiles * Nissan President, a 1966–2010 Japanese ...
Giorgio Napolitano described her as an "inspired and limpid poetic voice."


Early years and education

Alda Giuseppina Angela Merini was born on 21 March 1931 in viale Papiniano 57, Milan in a family of modest means. Her father, Nemo Merini, was an employee working at the insurance company "Vecchia Mutua Grandine ed Eguaglianza il Duomo". Her mother, Emilia Painelli, was a housewife. Alda was the second daughter of three children, including Anna (born on 26 November 1926), and Ezio (born in January 1943). Her siblings are featured in her poems, albeit thinly disguised. Little is known about her childhood, other than what she wrote in the short autobiographical notes on the occasion of the second edition of the Spagnoletti Anthology: " wasa sensitive girl, with a rather melancholic character, quite excluded and little understood by my parents but very good in school ... because studying has always been a vital part of my life". After graduating from primary school with very high marks, she attended the three-year school-to-work transition programme at the Istituto Laura Solera Mantegazza in via Ariberto in Milan, while trying to be admitted to Liceo Manzoni. However, she did not succeed, as she did not pass the Italian language test. In the same period she took piano lessons, an instrument she especially loved. At the age of fifteen she wrote her first poem. Her school teacher, impressed, brought it to the attention of literary critic Giacinto Spagnoletti, who replied with an enthusiastic critique. When Merini showed Spagnoleti's letter to her father, he tore it apart, declaring that "poetry will never feed you" The experience caused a breakdown, and in 1947 Merini spent a month in the mental health clinic Villa Turro in Milan. After being discharged, her friend
Giorgio Manganelli Giorgio Manganelli (15 November 1922 – 28 May 1990) was an Italian journalist, avant-garde writer, translator and literary critic. A native of Milan, he was one of the leaders of the avant-garde literary movement in Italy in the 1960s, Gruppo 6 ...
, whom she had met at the house of Spagnoletti together with
Luciano Erba Luciano Erba (18 September 1922 – 3 August 2010) was an Italian poet, literary critic and translator. Life and career Born in Milan, in 1947 Erba graduated in French literature at the Università Cattolica del Sacro Cuore. A member of the so- ...
and David Maria Turoldo, tried to help her by recommending her to the psychoanalysts
Franco Fornari Franco Fornari ( Rivergaro, 18 April 1921 - Milan, 20 May 1985) was an Italian psychiatrist, who was influenced by Melanie Klein and Wilfred Bion. He was a professor at the University of Milan and the University of Trento. From 1973 to 1978 he se ...
and Cesare Musatti.


Career

In 1950, Giacinto Spagnoletti published Merini's work for the first time in ''Antologia della poesia italiana contemporanea 1909–1949'' (Anthology of Contemporary Italian Poetry 1909–1949). The selected works were the lyric poems ''Il gobbo'' (The Hunch), dated 22 December 1948, and ''Luce'' (Light), dated 22 December 1949 and dedicated to Spagnoletti. In 1951, at the suggestion of
Eugenio Montale Eugenio Montale (; 12 October 1896 – 12 September 1981) was an Italian poet, prose writer, editor and translator, and recipient of the 1975 Nobel Prize in Literature. Life and works Early years Montale was born in Genoa. His family were che ...
and
Maria Luisa Spaziani Maria Luisa Spaziani (21 June 1923 – 30 June 2014) was an Italian poet. Biography Spaziani was born in Turin. At nineteen, she founded the review ''Il dado'', working with collaborators such as Vasco Pratolini, Sandro Penna and Vincen ...
, the publisher Giovanni Scheiwiller published two of Merini's previously unpublished poems in ''Poetesse del Novecento'' (Women Poets from 1900). From 1950 to 1953 Merini developed a professional connection and close friendship with
Salvatore Quasimodo Salvatore Quasimodo (; August 20, 1901 – June 14, 1968) was an Italian poet and translator. In 1959, he won the Nobel Prize in Literature "for his lyrical poetry, which with classical fire expresses the tragic experience of life in our own time ...
. Following a brief relationship with Giorgio Manganelli, on 9 August 1953 she married Ettore Carniti, a bakery owner from Milan. The same year
Arturo Schwarz Arturo Umberto Samuele Schwarz (2 February 1924 – 23 June 2021) was an Italian scholar, art historian, poet, writer, lecturer, art consultant and curator of international art exhibitions. He lived in Milan, where he amassed a large collection o ...
published her first volume of poems entitled ''La presenza di Orfeo'' (The Presence of Orpheus). In 1955 she published her second collection of poems, ''Paura di Dio'' (Fear of God). It included poems written between 1947 and 1953. It was followed in 1954 by ''Nozze romane'' (Roman Wedding) and, in the same year,
Bompiani Bompiani is an Italian publishing house based in Milan. It was founded in 1929 by Valentino Bompiani. In 1990, Bompiani became part of the RCS MediaGroup. It was sold in 2015 to the Giunti Group. It is widely regarded as one of the leading literar ...
published the prose work ''La pazza della porta accanto'' (The Mad Woman from Next Door). In 1955, she gave birth to her first daughter, Emanuela. Merini dedicated the collection of poems ''Tu sei Pietro'' (You are Pietro), published by Scheiwiller in 1962, to Pietro De Pascale, the doctor who took care of her child. Merini's pregnancy was followed by a bout of depression, and she spent a period of time in isolation until she was sent to the mental health clinic Paolo Pini. Merini divided her time between her home and the clinic until 1972. She had three more daughters, Flavia, Barbara and Simona, who ended up being raised in foster families due to Merini's fragile mental health.


''Terra Santa''

In 1979, Merini started putting together a particularly intense body of work based on her experience at the psychiatric ward. On 7 July 1983 her husband suddenly died and Merini, without any support from the literary community, worked hard to get more of her poems published to support herself and her family but to no avail. However, in 1982, Paolo Mauri, had offered to publish thirty of her poems, chosen from a typewritten document of about one hundred, in his journal (n. 4, Winter 1982-Spring 1983). In 1984 Scheiwiller republished Merini's forty poems in the collection ''Terra Santa'' (Holy Land). Maria Corti called the book "a masterpiece", and Merini went on to win the Librex Montale Prize. During that time, Merini started a relationship with the poet Michele Pierri, who had been very supportive of her poems during a very difficult time. In October 1983 Alda and Michele got married and moved to
Taranto Taranto (, also ; ; nap, label= Tarantino, Tarde; Latin: Tarentum; Old Italian: ''Tarento''; Ancient Greek: Τάρᾱς) is a coastal city in Apulia, Southern Italy. It is the capital of the Province of Taranto, serving as an important com ...
. In the time following her wedding she wrote twenty poems-portraits called ''La gazza ladra'' (The Thieving Magpie), later to be released in the volume ''Vuoto d'amore'' (Empty Love), together with some works by Pierri. During her time in Taranto she also finished ''L'altra verità. Diario di una diversa'' (The Other Truth. Diary of a Misfit).


''L'altra verità. Diario di una diversa''

"I couldn't have written anything about the flowers in that moment because I myself had become a flower, I myself had a stem and I myself produced sap." - Alda Merini, from ''L'altra verità. Diario di una diversa''
In July 1986, after a brief spell in the psychiatric hospital in Taranto, Merini moved back to Milan and initiated a therapy cycle with the doctor Marcella Rizzo, to whom she dedicated more than a poem. In the same year she started writing again and got newly in touch with Vanni Scheiwiller, who published ''L'altra verità. Diario di una diversa'', her first book written in prose that, as Giorgio Manganelli stated in the preface, "it is neither a document nor a testimony on the ten years spent by the writer in a mental institution. It is a 'reconnaissance' through epiphanies, deliria, tunes, songs, revelations and apparitions, of a space - not a place - where, failing every habit and everyday perspicacity, the natural hell and the numinuous nature of human being burts out." The book was followed by ''Fogli bianchi'' (White sheets of paper, 1987), ''La volpe e il sipario'' (The Fox and the Curtain, 1997) and ''Testamento'' (Testament, 1988). In 1987 she was a finalist for the literary prize Premio Bergamo.


''Caffè sui Navigli''

Merini's years in Milan were very productive. During the winter of 1989 she started spending time at the cafe/bookshop Chimera, not far from where she lived, offering typewritten poems to her friends. Chimera proved to be a particularly inspirational setting, and it was there that Merini wrote her next two books, ''Delirio amoroso'' (Love Delirium, 1989) and ''Il tormento delle figure'' (The Figure's Torment, 1990). In 1991 she published ''Le parole di Alda Merini'' (The Words of Alda Merini) and ''Vuoto d'amore'' (Empty Love). These were followed by ''Ipotenusa d'amore'' (Hypothene of Love, 1992), ''La palude di Manganelli o il monarca del re'' (The Manganelli Swamp or the King's Monarch, 1993), ''Aforismi'' (Aphorisms, with photographs by Giuliano Grittini, 1993) and ''Titano amori intorno'' (Titan's Loves Around, 1993). In 1993 she won the Premio Librex Montale for poetry. The prize significantly elevated her status within the Italian literary community, and Merini was rated together with writers such as Giorgio Caproni,
Attilio Bertolucci Attilio Bertolucci (18 November 1911 – 14 June 2000) was an Italian poet and writer. He was father to film directors Bernardo and Giuseppe Bertolucci. Biography Bertolucci was born at San Lazzaro ( province of Parma), to a family of agricult ...
, Mario Luzi,
Andrea Zanzotto Andrea Zanzotto (10 October 1921 – 18 October 2011) was an Italian poet. Biography Andrea Zanzotto was born in Pieve di Soligo (province of Treviso, Veneto), Italy to Giovanni and Carmela Bernardi. His father, Giovanni (born 18 November ...
and Franco Fortini. In 2007 ''Alda e Io – Favole'', written in collaboration with the fable writer Sabatino Scia, won the Elsa Morante Ragazzi prize. On 17 October 2007 Merini received an honorary degree in Theory of Communication and Language at the School of Educational Sciences at the University of Messina, giving a lectio magistralis on the meandering twists and turns of events that constituted her life.


''Reato di vita: Autobiografia e poesia''

In 1994, Merini's collection of poems ''Sogno e Poesia'' (''Dream and Poetry'') was published as a special limited edition featuring engravings by twenty contemporary artists. It was followed by ''Reato di vita: Autobiografia e poesia'' (''Life Crime: Autobiography and Poetry'') published by Edizioni Melusine. In 1995 she published ''La Pazza della porta accanto'' (''The Mad Woman from Next Door'') with Bompiani and ''Ballate non pagate'' (''Unpaid Dances'') with Einaudi. The same year Apulian musician Vincenzo Mastropirro put to music some of Merini's verses from ''Ballate.'' In 1996 she received the Viareggio Prize for the volume ''La Vita Facile'' (The Easy Life). She also put together a small publication for La Vita Felice publishing house made of old and new poems, a confessional diary, a selection of short stories and an interview entitled ''Un'anima indocile'' (''A Restless Soul''). In the same year Merini met the artist Giovanni Bonaldi with whom she formed a genuine and strong friendship. They began to collaborate and in 1997 Girardi published the collection of poems ''La volpe e il sipario'' (''The Fox and the Curtain'') with illustrations by Gianni Casari. In this collection it becomes evident the technical finesse of Merini's improvisational poetry that others would then transcribe. This development in her work led to the composition of shorter texts and simple aphorisms. In November of the same year, Ariete published ''Curva di fuga'' (''The Vanishing Curve''), which Merini presented at Castello Sforzesco in Soncino, where she was presented with the honorary citizenship. In 1997 Bonaldi drew five illustrations for a collection of poems and epigrams of Merini entitled ''Salmi della gelosia'' (''Psalms of Jealousy''), published by Ariete. The same year she was awarded the Procida Prize.


''Alda Merini: una donna sul palcoscenico''

In 2009, the documentary ''Alda Merini: una donna sul palcoscenico'' (''Alda Merini: A Woman on Stage'') directed by Cosimo Damiano Damato, was presented on Author's Day at the 66th
Venice Film Festival The Venice Film Festival or Venice International Film Festival ( it, Mostra Internazionale d'Arte Cinematografica della Biennale di Venezia, "International Exhibition of Cinematographic Art of the Venice Biennale") is an annual film festival h ...
. The film, produced by Angelo Tumminelli for Star Dust International, included portions of Merini's poems read by
Mariangela Melato Mariangela Melato (19 September 1941 – 11 January 2013) was an Italian cinema and theater actress. She began her stage career in the 1960s. Her first film role was in ''Thomas e gli indemoniati'' (1969), directed by Pupi Avati. She played in m ...
, with cinematography by Giuliano Grittini. Merini and Damato became great friends during the filming and Merini gave him unpublished poems to include in the film. Merini wrote a poem, "Una donna sul palcoscenico," specifically for the purpose of including it in the film: ''One day I lost words/ I came here to tell you this and not because you responded/ I don't love conversations or questions: I noticed that I once sang in a voiceless choir/ I meditated a long time on the silence, and to silence there is no response./ I threw away my poems/ I didn't have paper to write them on./ Then I noticed that strange animals like ancestral beasts in the form of men from asylums were coming close to me/ some of them helped me feel unique, looked at me. / For them, I thought, there were no stoplights, buildings, streets./ This ramshackle place, my mind has found solitude./ Then a saint with something to give arrived/ a saint that was not chained, that was not an evildoer,/ the one thing that I had had during all these years./ I would have followed him / but I forgot how to fall in love./ He came, a saint that illuminated me like a star./ A saint responded to me: why don't you love yourself? My indolence was born./ I no longer see people that hit me, and I no longer visit the nuthouse./ I have died in indolence.'' The film received positive reviews. Roberta Bottari wrote in Il Messaggero: "With a voice that betrays her childlike candor, a smile that illuminates her eyes and the unmistakable fire-red lipstick, Alda Merini abandoned herself to Cosimo Damato. She trusts him, she 'feels' that she will not be betrayed. And while the director stands with the still camera, waiting for a look, a twitch, a word from the woman, she seduces him speaking of poetry, mysticism, philosophy, music, of foolishness poured out in verse, of Christ and passion, without censuring family pain and the experience of the asylum."


Death

Alda Merini died in Milan on 1 November 2009, following a brief illness. She is interred in the
Monumental Cemetery of Milan The Cimitero Monumentale (" Monumental Cemetery") is one of the two largest cemeteries in Milan, Italy, the other one being the Cimitero Maggiore. It is noted for the abundance of artistic tombs and monuments. Designed by the architect Carlo Ma ...
.


Selected bibliography

*''A Rage of Love'', Guernica (1996) *''Unpaid Ballad'', Dante University Press (2001) *''The Holy Land'', Guernica (2001) *''Love Lessons: Selected Poems of Alda Merini'', Facing Pages (2009)


Music

* ''Canto di spine: versi italiani del '900 in forma canzone'', an album by Italian band Altera. Merini plays the theme from ''
Johnny Guitar ''Johnny Guitar'' is a 1954 American Western film directed by Nicholas Ray and starring Joan Crawford, Sterling Hayden, Mercedes McCambridge, Ernest Borgnine and Scott Brady. It was produced and distributed by Republic Pictures. The screen ...
'' on piano and sings her poem "Il canto". * ''Milva canta Merini'', an album by Italian singer
Milva Maria Ilva Biolcati, (; 17 July 1939 – 23 April 2021), known as Milva (), was an Italian singer, stage and film actress, and television personality. She was also known as ''La Rossa'' (Italian for "The Redhead"), due to the characteristic co ...
with lyrics by Merini and music by Giovanni Nuti (2004) * ''Dio'', a composition by Francesco Trocchia for female choir and piano with lyrics by Merini (2007)


Tribute

Merini was honoured with a street in the Milanese suburb of
Rozzano Rozzano ( lmo, Rozzan ) is a ''comune'' (municipality) in the Metropolitan City of Milan in the Italian region Lombardy, located about south of Milan. Rozzano borders the following municipalities: Milan, Assago, Zibido San Giacomo, Opera, Pieve ...
. On 21 March 2016,
Google Doodle A Google Doodle is a special, temporary alteration of the logo on Google's homepages intended to commemorate holidays, events, achievements, and notable historical figures. The first Google Doodle honored the 1998 edition of the long-running an ...
commemorated her 85th birthday.


References


External links

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MEMORIAL
{{DEFAULTSORT:Merini, Alda 1931 births 2009 deaths Italian women poets Writers from Milan Viareggio Prize winners 20th-century Italian poets 20th-century Italian women writers