Paolo Volponi
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Paolo Volponi (6 February 1924, in
Urbino Urbino ( ; ; Romagnol: ''Urbìn'') is a walled city in the Marche region of Italy, south-west of Pesaro, a World Heritage Site notable for a remarkable historical legacy of independent Renaissance culture, especially under the patronage of F ...
, – 23 August 1994, in
Ancona Ancona (, also , ) is a city and a seaport in the Marche region in central Italy, with a population of around 101,997 . Ancona is the capital of the province of Ancona and of the region. The city is located northeast of Rome, on the Adriatic ...
) was an
Italian Italian(s) may refer to: * Anything of, from, or related to the people of Italy over the centuries ** Italians, an ethnic group or simply a citizen of the Italian Republic or Italian Kingdom ** Italian language, a Romance language *** Regional Ita ...
writer, poet, and politician.


Biography

Volpino was born February 6, 1924, in
Urbino Urbino ( ; ; Romagnol: ''Urbìn'') is a walled city in the Marche region of Italy, south-west of Pesaro, a World Heritage Site notable for a remarkable historical legacy of independent Renaissance culture, especially under the patronage of F ...
,
Italy Italy ( it, Italia ), officially the Italian Republic, ) or the Republic of Italy, is a country in Southern Europe. It is located in the middle of the Mediterranean Sea, and its territory largely coincides with the homonymous geographical ...
. He would join the
Italian partisans The Italian resistance movement (the ''Resistenza italiana'' and ''la Resistenza'') is an umbrella term for the Italian resistance groups who fought the occupying forces of Nazi Germany and the fascist collaborationists of the Italian Social ...
in 1943. He studied law at Urbino University, where he graduated in 1947. His career as a writer was profoundly influenced by his meeting with the enlightened social thinker and industrialist Adriano Olivetti in 1950, for whom he worked as an assistant and then as director of social services at the
Olivetti Olivetti S.p.A. is an Italian manufacturer of computers, tablets, smartphones, printers and other such business products as calculators and fax machines. Headquartered in Ivrea, in the Metropolitan City of Turin, the company has been par ...
factory at
Ivrea Ivrea (; pms, Ivrèja ; ; lat, Eporedia) is a town and ''comune'' of the Metropolitan City of Turin in the Piedmont region of northwestern Italy. Situated on the road leading to the Aosta Valley (part of the medieval Via Francigena), it strad ...
.''Encyclopedia of Contemporary Italian Culture'', edited by Gino Moliterno (Routledge, 2000) He moved to
Turin Turin ( , Piedmontese: ; it, Torino ) is a city and an important business and cultural centre in Northern Italy. It is the capital city of Piedmont and of the Metropolitan City of Turin, and was the first Italian capital from 1861 to 1865. The ...
in 1972 to join Fiat and was appointed president of the Fondazione Agnelli in 1975 but was obliged to resign because of his open support for the
Italian Communist Party The Italian Communist Party ( it, Partito Comunista Italiano, PCI) was a communist political party in Italy. The PCI was founded as ''Communist Party of Italy'' on 21 January 1921 in Livorno by seceding from the Italian Socialist Party (PSI) ...
. He was elected to the Italian Senate in 1983. Volpino died on August 23, 1994.


Works

His first volume of poems, ''Il ramarro'', was published in 1948; he won the
Viareggio Prize The Viareggio Prize ( it, Premio Viareggio, italic=no or ) is an Italian literary prize, first awarded in 1930. Named after the Tuscan city of Viareggio, it was conceived by three friends, , Carlo Salsa and Leonida Rèpaci, to rival the Milanes ...
in 1960 for ''Le porte dell'Appennino'' and the Mondello Prize in 1986 for ''Con testo a fronte''. His novels explore the ills of Italian society in the years of industrial expansion after the Second World War, while powerfully constructing a visionary fictional world. His first novel, ''Memoriale'' (1962), describes the atmosphere of growing violence in a factory environment and in society as seen through the eyes of a working man, leading to his alienation and a gradual descent into madness. ''La macchina mondiale'' won the
Strega Prize The Strega Prize ( it, Premio Strega ) is the most prestigious Italian literary award. It has been awarded annually since 1947 for the best work of prose fiction written in the Italian language by an author of any nationality and first published ...
in 1965. Its tragic main character, a peasant-philosopher living in the Marche region, has been described as "surely one of the most bewilderingly pathetic figures in contemporary Italian fiction". In ''Corporale'' (1974), an ex-communist intellectual becomes obsessed by the threat of nuclear war and builds himself a shelter in the hope of emerging, once it is all over, closer to the animal world. ''Il sipario ducale'' (1975), with which he won the
Viareggio Prize The Viareggio Prize ( it, Premio Viareggio, italic=no or ) is an Italian literary prize, first awarded in 1930. Named after the Tuscan city of Viareggio, it was conceived by three friends, , Carlo Salsa and Leonida Rèpaci, to rival the Milanes ...
in 1975 for the second time, marked a return to a more traditional form with a story told against the background of a bomb attack in Piazza Fontana, Milan in 1969. ''Il pianeta irritabile'' (1978) is an allegorical story set in 2293 where four characters – a baboon, an elephant, a goose and a dwarf – escape a final explosion and wander off looking for a safe kingdom, encountering traps and terrifying obstacles, in a perpetual guerrilla activity whose scenes take place under diluvian rains that threaten to engulf the whole planet. There is no real end in sight, and this is the most disturbing aspect of the whole novel. "Everything is pointless. Volponi is the Samuel Beckett of science fiction in this work."James Kirkup, ''The Independent'' obituary, 2 September 1994 ''Il lanciatore di giavellotto'' (1981) contains a portrait of a troubled adolescent boy, Dami, which is "the most memorable of all such portraits since JD Salinger's ''The Catcher in the Rye'', written 30 years before". ''Le mosche del capitale'' (1989) charts the rise and fall of an industrialist poet. With ''La strada per Roma'' (1991), Volponi became the first of only two Italian writers to win the Strega Prize twice.


Bibliography


Fiction

* ''Memoriale'' (1962) – trans. Belén Sevareid – ''My Troubles Began'' (Grossman: New York, 1964); ''The Memorandum'' (Marion Boyars: London, 1967) * ''La macchina mondiale'' (1965) – trans. Belén Sevareid – '' The Worldwide Machine'' (Grossman: New York, 1964; Calder and Boyars: London, 1969) * ''Corporale'' (1974) * ''Il sipario ducale'' (1975) – trans. Peter Pedroni – ''Last Act in Urbino'' (Italica Press: New York, 1995) * ''Il pianeta irritabile'' (1978) * ''Il lanciatore di giavellotto'' (1981) – trans. Richard Dixon - ''The Javelin Thrower'' (Chicago University Press / Seagull Books, 2019) * ''Le mosche del capitale'' (1989) * ''La strada per Roma'' (1991)


Poetry

* ''Il ramarro'' (1948) * ''L'antica moneta'' (1955) * ''Le porte dell'Appennino'' (1960); * ''La nuova pesa'' (1964) * ''Le mura di Urbino'' (1973) * ''La vita'' (1974) * ''Foglia mortale'' (1974) * ''Con testo a fronte'' (1986) * ''Nel silenzio campale'' (1990) * ''È per un'impudente vanteria'' (1991)


Non-fiction

* ''Scritti dal margine'' (1994) * ''Il leone e la volpe'' (1995)


Works in magazines

* ''Una luce celeste'' (1965) * ''I sovrani e la ricchezza'' (1967) * ''Accingersi all'impresa'' (1967) * ''La barca Olimpia'' (1968) * ''Olimpia e la pietra'' (1968) * ''Case dell'alta valle del Metauro'' (1989)


Compilations

* ''Poesie e poemetti'' 1946–1966 (1980) * ''Catalogo generale delle opere di Dolorès Puthod. Dipinti e disegni dal 1948 al 1994'' (Milan, Giorgio Mondadori, 1994) . * ''Poesie'' (2001) * ''Romanzi e prose I, II, III'' (2002–2003) Volponi’s poems in translation appear in ''From Pure Silence to Impure Dialogue: a survey of post-war Italian poetry 1945–1965'', edited and translated by Vittoria Bradshaw (New York: Las Americas, 1971).


References


Further reading

* Gian Carlo Ferretti, ''Volponi'' (Florence: La Nuova Italia, 1972) * Gregory Lucente, "The Play of Literary Self-consciousness in Paolo Volponi's Fiction: Violence and the Power of the Symbol," ''World Literature Today'' 61 (Winter 1987), 19–23 * Peter Pedroni, "Interview with Paolo Volponi", ''Italian Quarterly 25'' (Spring 1984) * Peter Pedroni, "Introduction", ''Last Act in Urbino'' (New York: Italica Press, 1995) * Massimo Colella, ''Cartografia del contemporaneo. Lettura di 'Con testo a fronte' di Paolo Volponi (1986)'', in «Rivista di Studi Italiani» (Toronto), XXXVIII, 2, 2019, pp. 177-207. {{DEFAULTSORT:Volponi, Paolo 1924 births 1994 deaths Italian male poets Strega Prize winners Viareggio Prize winners Italian communists 20th-century Italian novelists 20th-century male writers 20th-century Italian poets University of Urbino alumni Italian male novelists