University of Toronto Press
My Karst and My City and Other Essays
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Edited by:
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Translated by:
About this book
My Karst and My City and Other Essays is the first book available in English on the work of Scipio Slataper, one of the most prominent intellectuals active in Trieste at the turn of the twentieth century.
Author / Editor information
Scipio Slataper (1888–1915) was an Italian writer, most famous for his lyrical essay My Karst. He is considered, alongside Italo Svevo, as the initiator of the prolific tradition of Italian literature in Trieste.
Coda Elena :
Elena Coda is an associate professor in the School of Languages and Cultures at Purdue University.
Benson Nicholas :
Nicholas Benson is the translator of volumes by Attilio Bertolucci and Aldo Palazzeschi and the recipient of an NEA Translation Fellowship.
Reviews
"This volume is an important milestone in the literary criticism of Trieste, a valuable companion in future explorations of the Adriatic city that makes Slataper’s rich and multifaceted work finally available in English."
Nicoletta Pireddu, Professor of Italian and Comparative Literature and Inaugural Director of the Georgetown Humanities Initiative, Georgetown University:
"This collection of Scipio Slataper’s autobiographical, political, and critical writings is a groundbreaking contribution to the study of Italian and European modernism. It showcases the multifaceted aspects of Slataper’s pioneering vision on individual and collective identity, nationness, and multiculturalism, highlighting the complex history of Trieste and the tensions and contradictions within the still young Italian nation. Elena Coda's superb introductory essay and detailed notes contextualize Slataper’s thought within a broad cultural, historical, and philosophical framework. My Karst and My City and Other Essays provides unique insights into the competing ideologies that were tearing a continent apart on the verge of World War I."
Sandra Parmegiani, Associate Professor of European Studies and Italian, University of Guelph:
"A welcome addition to translations of Triestine literature and culture made available to English-speaking readers, this book is an important contribution to the body of study on Scipio Slataper. In her substantial and well-researched introduction, Elena Coda contextualizes Slataper the man and the writer within modernist and futurist debates and accompanies the translation of My Karst and My City with a selection of writings that allow the reader to follow the philosophical, political, and literary trajectory of Slataper’s life to the very eve of his death in 1915. This book, whose importance cannot be overstated, will become a seminal text in the scholarship on Slataper and Triestine literature within the pre-World War I historical and philosophical context."
Topics
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Frontmatter
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Contents
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Acknowledgments
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Introduction
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A Note on the Translations
lxxxv - PART ONE My Karst and My City
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I
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II
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III
53 - PART TWO From Political Writings: Letters on Trieste
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Trieste Has No Cultural Traditions
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The Life of the Spirit
87 - PART THREE From Literary and Critical Writings
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To Young Italian Intellectuals
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Futurism
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Crepuscular Confusion
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PART FOUR From Ibsen
113 - PART FIVE From Political Writings
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Irredentism Today
125 -
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The National and Political Future of Trieste
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National Rights Are Affirmed with War
158 - PART SIX From Letters to Three Women Friends
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To Elody (Florence, 6 June 1912)
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To Gigetta (Florence, 8 February 1912)
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To Gigetta (23 November 1915)
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Index
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