Margherita Guidacci
Template:Short description Script error: No such module "Infobox".Script error: No such module "Check for unknown parameters". Margherita Guidacci (Script error: No such module "IPA".; 25 April 1921 – 19 June 1992) was an Italian poet.
Early life and career
Born in Florence,[1] Guidacci graduated from the University of Florence in 1943 and traveled to England and Ireland in 1947.
After moving to Rome upon marriage, the poet taught English language and literature at the Liceo scientifico Cavour for ten years, from 1965 to 1975.[2] Guidacci obtained the libera docenza ("free teaching") in the English language and literature in 1972, and from 1975 to 1981, she taught English and American Literature at the University of Macerata and the College of Maria Assunta attached to the Vatican.[3]
Poetry and translations
The poetry of Margherita Guidacci is deeply spiritual but not in the religious sense. Rather her poems include profound sentiments and a view of life as a search for regeneration and resurrection from death. Guidacci regarded life as a passage and its desolation and pain a means toward transformation beyond death.Script error: No such module "Unsubst".
Guidacci is noted for her Italian translations of English poets, including John Donne's sermons and Emily Dickinson's poetry.[4] T. S. Eliot[5] and Elizabeth Bishop are among other poets Guidacci translated into her native language.[6]
Literary awards
In 1978, Guidacci was awarded the Biella Poesia literary prize for her collection Il vuoto e le forme. Guidacci traveled to the United States in 1986, and was the recipient of the 1987 Caserta Prize for her complete works. Among literary prizes Guidacci was awarded are: Carducci Prize, 1957; Ceppo Prize, 1971; Lerici Prize, 1972; Gabbici Prize, 1974; Seanno Prize, 1976.[7]
Paparazzi
The English usage of the word paparazzi is credited to Margherita Guidacci's translation of Victorian writer George Gissing's travel book By the Ionian Sea (1901). A character in Margherita Guidacci's Sulle Rive dello Ionio (1957) is a restaurant-owner named Coriolano Paparazzo. The name was in turn chosen by Ennio Flaiano, the screenwriter of the Federico Fellini film, La Dolce Vita, who got it from Guidacci's book. By the late 1960s, the word, usually in the Italian plural form paparazzi, had entered the English lexicon as a generic term for intrusive photographers.[8][9]
Personal life
Guidacci married the sociologist Luca Pinna in 1949. In 1957, they moved to Rome. Her husband died in 1977, and she continued to live in Rome until her death in 1992.[2]
Published works
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- Terra senza orologi, Milan, Edizioni Trentadue, 1973.
- Taccuino slavo, Vicenza, La Locusta, 1976.
- Il vuoto e le forme, Padua, Rebellato, 1977.
- L'altare di Isenheim, Milan, Rusconi, 1980.
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- L'orologio di Bologna, Florence, Città di vita, 1981.
- Inno alla gioia, Florence, Centro internazionale del libro, 1983.
- La via crucis dell'umanità, Florence, Città di vita, 1984.
- Liber Fulguralis, Messina, La mea stregata, 1986.
- Poesie per poeti, Milan, Istituto di propaganda libraria, 1987.
- Una breve misura, Chieti, Vecchi faggio editore, 1988.
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- Anelli del tempo, Firenze, Città di vita, 1993.
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- Le poesie, ed. Maura Del Serra, Florence 1999; revised and expanded edition, Florence 2020.
Translations
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References
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- ↑ Template:In lang Mort de Margherita Guidacci, Angèle Paoli
- ↑ a b Encyclopedia of Italian literary studies: A-J, index, Volume 1 edited by Gaetana Marrone, Paolo Puppa, Luca Somigli
- ↑ Italian Women Writers Margherita Guidacci
- ↑ Rizzo, Patricia Thompson. Emily Dickinson and the "blue peninsula": Dickinson's reception in Italy The Emily Dickinson Journal - Volume 8, Number 1, Spring 1999, pp. 97-107
- ↑ T. S. Eliot Collection, 1905, 1917-1979 Script error: No such module "webarchive".. Harry Ranson Humanities Research Center at the University of Texas at Austin
- ↑ Encyclopedia of Italian literary studies Margherita Guidacci; Biography; published essays, translations, poems
- ↑ An Encyclopedia of continental women writers, Volume 1; By Katharina M. Wilson
- ↑ Word Origins and History Script error: No such module "webarchive". paparazzi
- ↑ The Hollywood Scandal Almanac, by Jerry Roberts, p. 120
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External links
- Contemporary Italian Women Poets
- Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies - Margherita Guidacci, edited by Gaetana Marrone, Paolo Puppa
- Excerpts from La sabbia e l’angelo, translated into English
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- Italian women poets
- 1921 births
- 1992 deaths
- 20th-century Italian women writers
- 20th-century Italian poets
- Writers from Florence
- Italian writers
- Italian poets
- Italian women
- Italian women writers
- People from Florence
- Italian translators
- 20th-century Italian translators
- Teachers of English as a second or foreign language
- Teachers of English
- Women in Florence