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El. knyga: Formation of a National Audience in Italy, 1750-1890: Readers and Spectators of Italian Culture

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    Negalite skaityti šios el. knygos naudodami „Amazon Kindle“.

The late eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries witness significant advancement in the production and, crucially, the consumption of culture in Italy. During the long process towards and beyond Italy becoming a nation-state in 1861, new modes of writing and performing the novel, the self-help manual, theatrical improvisation develop in response to new practices and technologies of production and distribution. Key to the emergence of an inclusive national audience in Italy is, however, the audience itself. A wide and varied body of consumers of culture, animated by the notion of an Italian national cultural identity, create in this period an increasingly complex demand for different cultural products. This body is energized by the wider access to education and to the Italian language brought about by educational reforms, by growing urbanization, by enhanced social mobility, and by transcultural connections across European borders. This book investigates this process, analyzing the ways in which authors, composers, publishers, performers, journalists, and editors engage with the anxieties and aspirations of their diverse audiences. Fourteen essays by specialists in the field, exploring individual contexts and cases, demonstrate how interests related to gender, social class, cultural background and practices of reading and spectatorship, exert determining influence upon the production of culture in this period. They describe how women, men, and children from across the social and regional strata of the emerging nation contribute incrementally but actively to the idea and the growing reality of an Italian national cultural life. They show that from newspapers to salon performances, from letters to treatises in social science, from popular novels to literary criticism, from philosophical discussions to opera theaters, there is evidence in Italy in this period of unprecedented participation, crossing academic and popular cultures, in the formation of a national audience in Italy. This cultural transformation later produces the mass culture in Italy which underpins the major movements of the twentieth century and which undergoes new challenges and reformulations in the Italy we know today.
Acknowledgments vii
Introduction ix
Part I Readership and Consumerism
1(78)
1 The Economics of Reading: Cultural Consumption of Novels and letteratura amena in Eighteenth-Century Venice
3(18)
Giacomo Mannironi
2 "The Virtue of Wanting": Galatei and Readers in Nineteenth-Century Italy: Training the Citizen and Educating the Public between Bourgeois Values and the Risorgimento
21(22)
Roberto Risso
3 National Readership and Cultural Consumerism in Late Nineteenth-Century Italy: Edmondo De Amicis's Sull'Oceano and Its Strategic Appeal to Emotions
43(18)
Gabriella Romani
4 A "Question of Rule of Thumb"!: Antonio Fogazzaro between Publishers and Readers
61(18)
Giulia Brian
Part II Authorship, Readership, and the Press
79(72)
5 Constructing the Myth of Vico between Press and Literature (1802-1846)
81(20)
Martina Piperno
6 Toward an Archaeology of Italian Modernity: Rethinking the Classicist/Romantic Quarrel
101(16)
Fabio Camilletti
7 Defining Young Audiences in Post-Unification Italy: Participation and Interaction in the Political and Literary Press
117(22)
Federico Casari
8 A Force Field: Literature, Journalism and the Market at the End of the Nineteenth Century
139(12)
Fabio Finotti
Part III Gendered Readership and Spectator-ship
151(130)
9 From Academy to Stage: Improvisation, Gender, and National Character
153(18)
Paola Giuli
10 The Revolution in Reading: From Manzoni's "twenty-five readers" to the "twenty-five thousand female readers" of romanzi d'appendici
171(22)
Adriana Chemello
11 Reading as "evasione militante": Fosca (1869) by Iginio Ugo Tarchetti
193(20)
Olivia Santovetti
12 Bovarism in a New Key: The Reader of Novels and the Social Sciences in fin-de-siecle Italy
213(26)
Maria Grazia Lolla
13 La Piccola Posta: Twitter for the Nineteenth-Century Woman?
239(20)
Ombretta Frau
Cristina Gragnani
14 Evenings Out: Female Spectators of Opera and Theater in Late Nineteenth-Century Italy
259(22)
Katharine Mitchell
Index 281(4)
Contributors 285
Gabriella Romani is associate professor of Italian at Seton Hall University

Jennifer Burns is associate professor of Italian at University of Warwick