Guido Piovene
- Machine translation, like DeepL or Google Translate, is a useful starting point for translations, but translators must revise errors as necessary and confirm that the translation is accurate, rather than simply copy-pasting machine-translated text into the English Wikipedia.
- Do not translate text that appears unreliable or low-quality. If possible, verify the text with references provided in the foreign-language article.
- You must provide copyright attribution in the edit summary accompanying your translation by providing an interlanguage link to the source of your translation. A model attribution edit summary is
Content in this edit is translated from the existing Italian Wikipedia article at [[:it:Guido Piovene]]; see its history for attribution.
- You may also add the template
{{Translated|it|Guido Piovene}}
to the talk page. - For more guidance, see Wikipedia:Translation.
Guido Piovene | |
---|---|
Piovene in 1951 | |
Born | (1907-07-27)27 July 1907 Vicenza, Italy |
Died | 12 November 1974(1974-11-12) (aged 67) London, England |
Occupation | Writer |
Guido Piovene (27 July 1907 – 12 November 1974) was an Italian writer and journalist.
Biography
Born in Vicenza into a noble family, Piovene graduated in philosophy in Milan and then devoted himself to journalism, notably collaborating with Corriere della Sera, La Stampa and Il Tempo.[1][2] He took part in the anti-fascist resistance with the Movimento Comunista d'Italia. According to Felice Chilanti's daughter, he wrote the statutes for its youth association COBA (so named in homage to Joseph Stalin's youthful pseudonym).[3]
His 1970 novel Le stelle fredde (The Cold Stars) won the Strega Prize.[1] In 1974 he co-founded the newspaper Il Giornale with Indro Montanelli.[1]
References
- ^ a b c Gaetana Marrone. Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies: A-J, index, Volume 1. Routledge, 2007. ISBN 1579583903.
- ^ Franco Cordelli (5 March 2007). "Piovene. Visse cercando di espiare una colpa che dentro di sé sapeva irredimibile". Corriere della Sera. Retrieved 3 July 2015.
- ^ Chilanti, Gloria (1996). Bandiera rossa e borsa nera. Bologna: Mursia.
Further reading
- Gabriele Catalano. Costanti tematiche nell'opera narrativa di Guido Piovene. Ferraro, 1974.
- Giuseppe Marchetti. Invito alla lettura di Guido Piovene. Mursia, 1977. ISBN 9205300985.
- Stefano Strazzabosco. Guido Piovene tra idoli e ragione. Marsilio, 1996. ISBN 8831763601.
- Simona Mazzer. Guido Piovene: Una Biografia Letteraria. Metauro Ed., 1999. ISBN 888754302X.
- Massimo Rizzante. Guido Piovene: tra realtà e visione. Dipartimento di scienze filologiche e storiche, 2002. ISBN 8884430178.
- Maurizio Serra. Guido Piovene. Il diavolo e l'acquasanta. Liaison, 2009. ISBN 8895586085.
- Enza Del Tedesco, Alberto Zava. Viaggi e paesaggi di Guido Piovene. Serra, 2009. ISBN 9788862271332.
- Luciano Simonelli. Guido Piovene. Diario del Novecento. Simonelli Editore, 2011. ISBN 8876476989.
- Sandro Gerbi. Tempi di malafede. Guido Piovene ed Eugenio Colorni. Hoepli, 2012. ISBN 8820352389.
- v
- t
- e
- 1947 Ennio Flaiano
- 1948 Vincenzo Cardarelli
- 1949 Giovanni Battista Angioletti
- 1950 Cesare Pavese
- 1951 Corrado Alvaro
- 1952 Alberto Moravia
- 1953 Massimo Bontempelli
- 1954 Mario Soldati
- 1955 Giovanni Comisso
- 1956 Giorgio Bassani
- 1957 Elsa Morante
- 1958 Dino Buzzati
- 1959 Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
- 1960 Carlo Cassola
- 1961 Raffaele La Capria
- 1962 Mario Tobino
- 1963 Natalia Ginzburg
- 1964 Giovanni Arpino
- 1965 Paolo Volponi
- 1966 Michele Prisco
- 1967 Anna Maria Ortese
- 1968 Alberto Bevilacqua
- 1969 Lalla Romano
- 1970 Guido Piovene
- 1971 Raffaello Brignetti
- 1972 Giuseppe Dessì
- 1973 Manlio Cancogni
- 1974 Guglielmo Petroni
- 1975 Tommaso Landolfi
- 1976 Fausta Cialente
- 1977 Fulvio Tomizza
- 1978 Ferdinando Camon
- 1979 Primo Levi
- 1980 Vittorio Gorresio
- 1981 Umberto Eco
- 1982 Goffredo Parise
- 1983 Mario Pomilio
- 1984 Pietro Citati
- 1985 Carlo Sgorlon
- 1986 Maria Bellonci
- 1987 Stanislao Nievo
- 1988 Gesualdo Bufalino
- 1989 Giuseppe Pontiggia
- 1990 Sebastiano Vassalli
- 1991 Paolo Volponi
- 1992 Vincenzo Consolo
- 1993 Domenico Rea
- 1994 Giorgio Montefoschi
- 1995 Mariateresa Di Lascia
- 1996 Alessandro Barbero
- 1997 Claudio Magris
- 1998 Enzo Siciliano
- 1999 Dacia Maraini
- 2000 Ernesto Ferrero
- 2001 Domenico Starnone
- 2002 Margaret Mazzantini
- 2003 Melania Gaia Mazzucco
- 2004 Ugo Riccarelli
- 2005 Maurizio Maggiani
- 2006 Sandro Veronesi
- 2007 Niccolò Ammaniti
- 2008 Paolo Giordano
- 2009 Tiziano Scarpa
- 2010 Antonio Pennacchi
- 2011 Edoardo Nesi
- 2012 Alessandro Piperno
- 2013 Walter Siti
- 2014 Francesco Piccolo
- 2015 Nicola Lagioia
- 2016 Edoardo Albinati
- 2017 Paolo Cognetti
- 2018 Helena Janeczek
- 2019 Antonio Scurati
- 2020 Sandro Veronesi
- 2021 Emanuele Trevi
- 2022 Mario Desiati
This biographical article about an Italian writer or poet is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e