Giovanni Papini
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| birthplace =
Florence1956 | 8 | 1 | mf=y}}| deathplace = Florence| occupation = essayist, journalist, literary critic, poet, novelist | Italy>Italian| period = 1903–1956| genre = prose poetry, fantasy, autobiography, travel literature, satire| subject = political philosophy, history of religion | Futurism (art)>Futurism | Modernism| influences =
Enrico Corradini| influenced =
Mircea Eliade,
Mina Loy,
Scipio Slataper| signature = | website = }}
Giovanni Papini (January 9, 1881 - July 8, 1956) was an
Italian journalist, essayist,
literary critic, poet, and novelist.
Early life
Born in
Florence as the son of a modest furniture retailer (and former member of
Giuseppe Garibaldi's
Redshirts) from
Borgo degli Albizi, Papini was
baptized secretly to avoid the aggressive
atheism of his father, and he lived a rustic, lonesome, and precociously introspective childhood. From that time onwards he felt a strong aversion to all beliefs, to all churches, as well as to any form of servitude (which he saw as connected to religion); he also became enchanted with the impossible idea of writing an
encyclopedia wherein all cultures would be summarized. Trained as a schoolteacher, he taught for a few years after 1899, then became a librarian. The literary life attracted Papini, who founded the magazine
Il Leonardo, together with
Giuseppe Prezzolini, in 1903, then joined
Enrico Corradini's group as co-editor of
Il Regno. He started publishing short-stories and essays: in 1903,
Il tragico quotidiano ("The Tragic Everyday"), in 1907
Il pilota cieco ("The Blind Pilot") and
Il crepuscolo dei filosofi ("The Twilight of the Philosophers"). The latter constituted a
polemic with established and diverse intellectual figures, such as
Immanuel Kant,
Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel,
Auguste Comte,
Herbert Spencer,
Arthur Schopenhauer, and
Friedrich Nietzsche - Papini proclaimed to the death of philosophers and the demolition of thinking itself. He briefly flirted with
Futurism and other violent and liberating forms of
Modernism (Papini is the character in several poems of the period written by
Mina Loy).
Before and during World War I
After leaving
Il Leonardo in 1907, Giovanni Papini founded
Anima together with
Giovanni Amendola. His
Parole e sangue ("Words and Blood") essay of the period showed his unequivocal atheism, summoned in his advice:
''Humans: become atheists each and all!... God will nevertheless welcome you with all [H]is heart!
Furthermore, Papini sought to create scandal by speculating that
Jesus and
John the Apostle had a
homosexual relationship.He broke off with Prezzolini, co-editor of
Anima, and the paper ceased to appear. Papini founded
Lacerba, published between 1913 and 1915 (right before Italy's entry into
World War I). In
1912, he published his best-known work, the
autobiography Un uomo finito (tr.: "The Failure").His 1915 collection of
prose poetry
Cento pagine di poesia, followed by
Buffonate and
Maschilità, and the 1916
Stroncature - Papini faced
Giovanni Boccaccio,
William Shakespeare,
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe, but also contemporaries such as
Benedetto Croce and
Giovanni Gentile, and less prominent disciples of
Gabriele D'Annunzio. He published
verse in 1917, grouped under the title
Opera prima. In
1921, Papini announced his newly-found
Roman Catholicism, publishing the international bestseller essay
Storia di Cristo ("Life of Christ").
Fascism and later years
After further verse works, he published the
satire Gog (
1931) and the essay
Dante vivo (tr. "If Dante Were Alive";
1933).He moved towards
Fascism, and his beliefs earned him a teaching position at the
University of Bologna in 1935 (although his studies only qualified him for primary school teaching); the Fascist authorities confirmed Papini's "
impeccable reputation" through the appointment. In 1937, Papini published the only volume of his
History of Italian Literature, which he dedicated to
Benito Mussolini: "
to Il Duce, friend of poetry and of the poets", being awarded top positions in
academia, especially in the study of
Italian Renaissance. An
Antisemite, he believed in an international plot of
Jews, applauding the
racial discrimination laws enforced by Mussolini in 1938.{{Fact|date=February 2007}} When the Fascist regime crumbled (1943), Papini entered the
Franciscan convent in
La Verna.Largely discredited at the end of
World War II, he was defended by the Catholic
political right. His work concentrated on different subjects, including a biography of
Michelangelo, while he continued to publish dark and tragic essays. He collaborated with
Corriere della Sera, contributing articles that were published as a volume after his death.According to
The Spectator,
NATO allegedly encouraged Papini, in
1951, to publish a fake interview with
Pablo Picasso, to dramatically undercut his pro-Communist image. In
1962, the artist asked his biographer
Pierre Daix, to expose the fake interview, which he did in
Les Lettres Françaises.
(1)(2)References
- Biography partially taken from the introduction to Gog by Ettore Allodoli
-
[weblink]
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[weblink]
External links
Giovanni PapiniGiovanni PapiniGiovanni Papini조반니 파피니Giovanni PapiniIoannes PapiniGiovanni PapiniGiovanni PapiniGiovanni PapiniGiovanni Papini
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- time: 6:37pm EDT - Fri, Mar 19 2010