Giosuè Carducci

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Giosuè Carducci
Carducci, c. 1900
Carducci, c. 1900
BornGiosuè Alessandro Giuseppe Carducci
(1835-07-27)27 July 1835
Valdicastello di Pietrasanta, Tuscany
Died16 February 1907(1907-02-16) (aged 71)
Bologna, Italy
OccupationPoet
NationalityItalian
Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature
1906

Giosuè Alessandro Giuseppe Carducci (Italian: [dʒozuˈɛ kkarˈduttʃi]; 27 July 1835 – 16 February 1907) was an Italian poet, writer, literary critic and teacher. He was noticeably influential,[1] and was regarded as the official national poet of modern Italy.[2] In 1906, he became the first Italian to receive the Nobel Prize in Literature.[3] The Swedish Academy's motivation was that "not only in consideration of his deep learning and critical research, but above all as a tribute to the creative energy, freshness of style, and lyrical force which characterize his poetic masterpieces."[4]

Biography

Giosuè Carducci

He was born in Valdicastello (part of Pietrasanta), a small town in the Province of Lucca in the northwest corner of the region of Tuscany. His father, a doctor, was an advocate of the unification of Italy and was involved with the Carbonari. Because of his politics, the family was forced to move several times during Carducci's childhood, eventually settling for a few years in Florence.[5]

From the time he was in school, he was fascinated with the restrained style of

Roman Antiquity, and his mature work reflects a restrained classical style, often using the classical meters of such Latin poets as Horace and Virgil. He translated Book 9 of Homer's Iliad
into Italian.

Carducci was awarded a scholarship to study at the prestigious Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa. After graduating in 1856, he began teaching school. The following year, he published his first collection of poems, Rime. These were difficult years for Carducci: his father died, and his brother committed suicide.

In 1859, he married Elvira Menicucci, and they had four children. He briefly taught Greek at a high school in Pistoia, and then was appointed Professor of Italian Literature at the University of Bologna. Here, one of his students was Giovanni Pascoli, who became an eminent poet himself and later succeeded him at the university.

Carducci was a popular lecturer and a fierce critic of literature and society. In his youth he was an atheist,[6] whose political views were vehemently hostile to the Catholic Church. In the course of his life his views on religion shifted towards a socially oriented theism which he exposed in his famous "Discorso sulla libertà perpetua di San Marino" ("A Speech on San Marino's Perpetual Freedom"), pronounced on September the 30th, 1894 before the authorities and people of that ancient Republic and celebrating "the Universal God of Peoples, Mazzini's and Washington's God".[7]

His anti-clerical revolutionary vehemence was prominently showcased in one famous poem, the deliberately blasphemous and provocative "

papal states.[8]

While "Inno a Satana" had quite a revolutionary impact, Carducci's finest poetry came in later years. His collections Rime Nuove (New Rhymes) and Odi Barbare (Barbarian Odes) contain his greatest works.[9]

He was the first Italian to receive the

Goethe and Heine
into Italian.

The Museum of the Risorgimento, Bologna is housed in the Casa Carducci, the house where he died at the age of 71, and contains an exhibit on the author.

Legacy

Carducci confessed his sins and was reconciled to the Catholic Church in 1895.[17] On 11 September 1978, Pope John Paul I mentioned him as a "model" for university professors and teachers of Latin.[18]

Works

It is not always easy to follow the development of Carducci's poetry through the collections he edited. The poet in fact organized his compositions several times and in different ways and gave a definitive arrangement only later in the edition of his Opere published for Zanichelli between 1889 and 1909. The following is a list of poetic works published in one volume, then rearranged into the 20 volumes of his Opere.

  • Rime, San Miniato, 1857.
  • Levia Gravia [it], 1868.
  • Poesie, Firenze, Barbera, 1871.
  • Primavere elleniche, 1872.
  • Nuove poesie, 1873.
  • Odi barbare, 1877.
  • Juvenilia, 1880.
  • Levia Gravia, 1881.
  • Giambi ed Epodi [it], 1882.
  • Nuove odi barbare, 1882.
  • Rime nuove [it], 1887.
  • Terze odi barbare, 1889.
  • Delle Odi barbare. Libri II ordinati e corretti, 1893.
  • Rime e ritmi [it], 1899.
  • Poesie. MDCCCL-MCM, 1901.

Below are the poetic volumes in the Opere. The volumes, however, do not correspond to the chronological order with which the poet had published his first collections, but refer more than anything else to the distinctions of genres and therefore we find poems of the same period in different collections. The collections follow this order:

  • Juvenilia, in six books, 1850–1860
  • Levia Gravia, in two books, 1861–1871
  • Inno a Satana, 1863
  • Giambi ed Epodi, in two books, 1867–1879
  • Intermezzo, 1874–1887
  • Rime Nuove, in nine books, 1861–1887
  • Odi barbare, in two books, 1873–1889
  • Rime e Ritmi, 1889–1898
  • Della Canzone di Legnano, Part I, 1879

Juvenilia

The first collection of lyrical poems, which Carducci collected and divided in six books under the title Juvenilia (1850–1860), is undoubtedly inspired by the classical tradition of the Amici pedanti group that was constituted at that time for the purpose of fighting the

stilnovo style, of Dante and Petrarch and, among the moderns, Vittorio Alfieri, Monti, Foscolo and Leopardi
.

But the Carduccian spirit is already visible; his love for the beauty of style, the purity of sentiments and the celebration of liberty, as well as the ability to appreciate all that is genuine, therefore also the language of the common people.[11][19]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Baldi, Giusso, Razetti, Zaccaria, Dal testo alla storia. Dalla storia al testo, Torino, 2001, vol. 3/1B, p. 778: "Partecipò intensamente alla vita culturale del tempo e ... sostenne infinite polemiche letterarie e politiche".
  2. ^ Giulio Ferroni, Profilo storico della letteratura italiana, Torino, 1992, p. 780: "Si trasforma in poeta ufficiale dell'Italia umbertina".
  3. ^ "Giosue Carducci | Italian poet". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 22 August 2017.
  4. ^ "Vita, opere e poetica di Giosuè Carducci" (in Italian). 13 June 2014. Retrieved 5 August 2016.
  5. ^ Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Carducci, Giosuè" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 5 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  6. ^ Biagini, Mario, Giosuè Carducci, Mursia, 1976, p. 208.
  7. ^ https://www.liberliber.it/mediateca/libri/c/carducci/la_liberta_perpetua_di_san_marino/pdf/carducci_la_liberta_perpetua.pdf[bare URL PDF]
  8. ^ Carducci, Giosuè, Selected Verse/ Giosuè Carducci: edited with a translation, introduction and commentary by David H. Higgins, (Aris & Phillips; Warminster, England), 1994. See also: Bailey, John Cann, Carducci The Taylorian Lecture (Clarendon Press, Oxford) 1926.
  9. JSTOR 475605
    .
  10. ^ Scalia, Samuel Eugene (1937). Carducci. New York: S.F. Vanni.
  11. ^ a b Bickersteth, Geoffrey Langdale (1913). Carducci. London: Longmans, Green. p. 14.
  12. ^ Gilbert, Sari (2 June 1981). "Freemasonry in Italy Has Had 2 1/2 Centuries of Controvesy". Washington Post. Retrieved 28 July 2021.
  13. ^ "Notable Italian Freemasons".
  14. ^ Adolfo Lippi (22 November 2023). "Versilia, così l'impronta della Massoneria ha segnato l'ex Perla del Tirreno" (in Italian).
  15. ^ Tomasin, Lorenzo (2007). "Classica e odierna". Studi sulla lingua di Carducci. Florence: Olschki.
  16. ^ Selections from Carducci; Prose and Poetry with introduction, notes and vocabulary by A. Marinoni. New York: William R. Jenkins. 1913. vii–ix.
  17. ^ "Inside the secret conversion of Italy's Christopher Hitchens". Crux. 14 May 2021. Retrieved 14 May 2021.
  18. ^ "Angelus, 17 settembre 1978 | Giovanni Paolo I".
  19. ^ G. Bertoni, La lingua poetica di Giosue Carducci, in Regia Università di Bologna, cit., pp. 91–95

References

External links