Edoardo Sanguineti
The Honourable Edoardo Sanguineti | |
---|---|
Edoardo Sanguineti at a meeting in Genoa on lexicon and Open Source publications. | |
Member of the Italian Chamber of Deputies | |
In office 15 June 1979 – 11 July 1983 | |
Constituency | Genoa |
Personal details | |
Born | (1930-12-09)9 December 1930 Genoa, Kingdom of Italy |
Died | 18 May 2010(2010-05-18) (aged 79) Genoa, Italian Republic |
Resting place | Monumental Cemetery of Staglieno[1] |
Political party | Italian Communist Party |
Occupation | Poet, novelist, essayist, translator |
Edoardo Sanguineti (9 December 1930 – 18 May 2010) was a Genoese poet, writer and academic, universally considered one of the major Italian authors of the second half of the twentieth century.
Biography
In 1956, Sanguineti published his first poetry collection, Laborintus. The author adopted a “labyrinthine” structure in these poems, preceding the poetic sperimentalism that characterized the 60s.
During the 1960s he was a leader of the neo-avant-garde Gruppo 63 movement, founded in 1963 at Solunto. His work was published in the first issue of 0 to 9 magazine in 1967.
He was also an active translator of Joyce, Molière, Shakespeare, Bertolt Brecht, and select Greek and Latin authors.
From 1979 until 1983, Sanguineti was a member of the Chamber of Deputies of the Italian Parliament. He was elected as an independent on the list of the PCI.
He was an atheist.[2]
Death
Sanguineti died on 18 May 2010 at Villa Scassi Hospital in Genoa following emergency surgery for an abdominal aneurysm. He was 79.[3]
Works
- Capriccio italiano, Feltrinelli, Milano, 1963
- Il Giuoco dell'Oca, Feltrinelli, Milano, 1967
- Laborintus, Magenta, Varese, 1956
- Opus metricum, Rusconi e Paolazzi, Milano, 1960 (contains Laborintus ed Erotopaegnia)
- Triperuno, Feltrinelli, Milano, 1964 (contains Opus metricum e Purgatorio de l'Inferno)
- Natural Stories # 1 (Drama Series 16), Guernica, Toronto, 1998. Translated from: Storie Naturali #1, Feltrinelli, Milano, 1971.
- Re-spira (Breathe) poem for Antonio Papasso, 1983, MoMA, New York City
- Il colore è mio - Antonio Papasso -Retrospettiva 1999, Palazzo Comunale di Bracciano.
- Il Sonetto del foglio Volante, poem for Antonio Papasso, 2006 - Italian Air Force Museum, Vigna di Valle
Translations
- J. Joyce, Poesie, Mondadori, Milano, 1961
References
- ^ "Pantheon, Sanguineti tra i grandi" (in Italian). Il Secolo XIX. 20 May 2010. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
- ^ Aldo Cazzullo, I ragazzi di via Po, Mondadori, 1997, pag. 158.
- ^ "Edoardo Sanguineti, Italian poet, 79, dies". The Boston Globe. Associated Press. 18 May 2010. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
- v
- t
- e
- Giovan Battista Angioletti (1927)
- Giovanni Comisso (1928)
- Vincenzo Cardarelli (1929)
- Gino Rocca (1930)
- Giovanni Titta Rosa (1931)
- Leonida Rèpaci (1932)
- Raul Radice (1933)
- Carlo Emilio Gadda (1934)
- Enrico Sacchetti (1935)
- Silvio Negro (1936)
- Dario Ortolani (1947)
- Pier Antonio Quarantotti Gambini (1948)
- Giulio Confalonieri (1949)
- Vitaliano Brancati (1950)
- Indro Montanelli (1951)
- Francesco Serantini (1952)
- Leonardo Borghese (1953)
- Giuseppe Marotta (1954)
- Alfonso Gatto (1955)
- Giuseppe Lanza (1956)
- Pier Angelo Soldini (1957)
- Lorenzo Montano (1958)
- Italo Calvino (1959)
- Enrico Emanuelli (1960)
- Giorgio Vigolo (1961)
- Giuseppe Dessì (1962)
- Ottiero Ottieri (1963)
- Tommaso Landolfi (1964)
- Biagio Marin (1965)
- Manlio Cancogni (1966)
- Primo Levi (1967)
- Piero Chiara (1968)
- Niccolò Tucci (1969)
- Alberto Vigevani (1970)
- Piero Gadda Conti (1971)
- Anna Banti (1972)
- Sergio Solmi (1973)
- Gianni Celati (1974)
- Enzo Forcella (1975)
- Mario Soldati (1976)
- Sandro Penna (1977)
- Carlo Cassola (1978)
- Mario Rigoni Stern (1979)
- Giovanni Macchia (1980)
- Pietro Citati (1981)
- Vittorio Sereni (1982)
- Giorgio Bassani (1983)
- Natalia Ginzburg (1984)
- Francesca Duranti (1985)
- Leonardo Sciascia (1986)
- Claudio Magris (1987)
- Luciano Erba (1988)
- Luigi Meneghello (1989)
- Fleur Jaeggy (1990)
- Livio Garzanti (1991)
- Giorgio Bocca (1992)
- Giovanni Giudici (1993)
- Alberto Arbasino (1994)
- Daniele Del Giudice (1995)
- Raffaello Baldini (1996)
- Sergio Ferrero (1997)
- Giovanni Raboni (1998)
- Fabio Carpi (1999)
- Andrea Zanzotto
- Mariano Bargellini (2000)
- Serena Vitale (2001)
- Roberto Calasso
- Giorgio Orelli (2002)
- Michele Mari
- Edoardo Sanguineti
- Eva Cantarella (2003)
- Franco Cordero (2004)
- Rosetta Loy (2005)
- Filippo Tuena
- Eugenio Borgna (2006)
- Alessandro Spina (2007)
- Andrej Longo (2008)
- Melania Gaia Mazzucco (2009)
- Corrado Stajano (2010)
- Andrea Bajani (2011)
- Gianfranco Calligarich and Giovanni Mariotti (2012)
- Antonella Tarpino (2013)
- Maurizio Cucchi and Valerio Magrelli (2014)
- Sandro Veronesi (2015)
- Paolo Di Stefano and Paolo Maurensig (2016)
- Vivian Lamarque (2017)
- Helena Janeczek (2018)
- Marco Balzano (2019)
- Enrico Deaglio (2020)
- Giorgio Fontana (2021)
- Benedetta Craveri (2022)
This biographical article about an Italian writer or poet is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e