Originally published in Italian as Scrittori e populo, Giulio Einaudi editore s.p.a, 1988. Includes bibliographical references.
Contents:
The Writer and the People -- PART 1: Populism and Contemporary Italian Literature : 1.The Beginnings: From Vincenzo Gioberti to Alfredo Oriani -- 2. From the First to the Second World War: Interventionism, Fascism, Anti-Fascism -- 3. The Resistance and Gramscianism: Apogee and Crisis of Populism -- PART 2: The Crisis of Populism : 1. Cassola -- 2. Passolini.
Summary:
"This classic work - the only monograph to have emerged from the original workerist tradition - reconstructs the relations between literary production and the image of the 'people'. The issues it confronts are some of the those most central to postwar Italian history as well as to forms of populism that have had such a spectacular resurgence in recent years. Asor Rosa was one of the central figures of the heretical Marxist traditions of operaismo (workerism) - alongside Mario Tronti and Antonio Negri - first coming to light in the hugely influential journals Quaderni Rossi, Classe Operaia and Contropiano. In this volume, he turns his attention to the formation of a modern national tradition in Italy, the genesis of Italian Marxist historicism, Antonio Gramsci, the relationship between Fascism and the Left, militant anti-Fascism - and does so through a detailed reconstruction and critique of some of the greatest figures of modern Italian literature, from Giovanni Verga to Carlo Cassola and Pier Paolo Pasolini. Considered one of the books that prepared the ground for the 'long 1969' in Italy, which can be said to have lasted throughout the 1970s, The Writer and the People is now available in English for the first time." --Book jacket.
This resource is supported by the Institute of Museum and Library Services under the provisions of the Library Services and Technology Act as administered by State Library of Iowa.