Fr. 70.00

Italian Vices - Nation and Character From the Risorgimento to the Republic

English · Paperback / Softback

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Informationen zum Autor Silvana Patriarca is Associate Professor in the Department of History, Fordham University. She is the author of award-winning Numbers and Nationhood: Writing Statistics in Nineteenth-Century Italy (1996). Klappentext A fascinating study of national character in modern Italian history that sheds new light on Italian political culture. "Patriarca's theoretical sophisticated and deeply researched history of the discourse of national character in Italy represents one of the most impressive achievements in this resurgence [of scholarly interest in the identity of the Italian nation]...Her subtle use of linguistic analysis and gender theory makes the book a model of interdisciplinary scholarship." -The Journal of Interdisciplinary History "Patriarca has done painstaking research into representations of civic identity in pamphlets, political tracts and self-help books. As an analysis of the patriots, moralists, and makers of public opinion who wrote about national character, Patriarca's book stands as an excellent study of what constitutes Italianness in the eyes of a literate elite for more than a century and a half." -The American Historical Review "To define the character of the Italians has always been a territory inevitably crowded with stereotypes. Silvana Patriarca sets out to study these stereotypes through a simple and effective method...It is an enterprise in which she is remarkably successful thanks also to the use of gender categories." -La Stampa "A book of great interest, with a good contribution to its theme and with many perspectives which are unusual in the ideological history of modern Italy." -Corriere della Sera "The author explains in convincing fashion that "resorting to self-stereotypes of national character has at times offered more or less 'convenient justifications'." Particularly enlightening are the pages on the elaboration of the fascist past where this function of the discourse becomes very clear... A brilliant book." -Indice dei libri del mese "...an excellent study of what constituted Italianness in the eyes of a literate elite for more than a century and a half." -Alice A. Kelikian, American Historical Review "Professor Patriarca's clear and cogent anatomy of the philosophers, critics, journalists and historians who have interpreted the Italian character over the past two centuries is comprehensive and rewarding..." -John Gooch, Canadian Journal of History "...timely and welcome contribution to the growing literature that studies the self-images of nations." -Adrian Lyttelton, The Journal of Modern History Shedding light on Italian political culture, this fascinating study of Italian national character and its vices shows how they first became a political issue during the struggle for national independence and that they were consequently shaped by foreign images, stereotypes of the Italians and changing political and intellectual contexts. Inhaltsverzeichnis Introduction; 1. Indolence and regeneration; 2. Making Italians of character; 3. Latin individualism in the age of empire; 4. Virtues of war: Italian character 'tested' and 'revealed'; 5. 'A difficult substance to modify'; 6. Autobiographies of the nation; 7. Good people; 8. 'Italians, that's the way they are'; Conclusion....

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