ITALIAN LITERATURE AND THE CONSTRUCTION OF NATIONAL IDENTITY DURING THE 19TH CENTURY
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.62229/aubllrlxxiii/24/7Keywords:
Italian Literature, Risorgimento, Ugo Foscolo, Giacomo Leopardi, Ippolito Nievo, Giuseppe Gioachino Belli, Cristina TrivulzioAbstract
In this article we are commenting the weak points of the Italian literary canon built during the 19th century, which was, at that time, linked to the legitimating of national identity and independence. The idea that an Italian literary canon existed, even in the absence of a national state, had been discussed by Foscolo, Nievo, and Leopardi, and became a central point in Francesco de Sanctis’ History of Italian Literature. De Sanctis describes the evolution of Italian literature seen as a coherent pattern, starting with the Middle Ages and Dante Aligheri who is presented as a national poet. But this type of conception reduces the complexity and variety of regional and local cultures, like for example the poems in roman dialect by Giuseppe Gioachino Belli, and completely ignores women writers, such as, for example, Cristina Trivulzio.