Giorgio Bassani (
March 4,
1916 -
April 13,
2000) was a novelist, poet, essayist, editor, and international intellectual. Born in
Bologna, he studied at the
University of Bologna[?] with the art historian
Roberto Longhi[?], and privately with the historian and philosopher
Benedetto Croce[?]. In 1943 he took part in the
anti-Fascist Resistance[?] for which he was arrested in
Ferrara in May 1944 and was released in July. He moved to
Rome and there edited the literary review
Botteghe oscure for Princess
Caetani[?] from its founding in 1948 until 1960. He was also an editor of
Paragone, a journal founded by Longhi and his wife
Anna Band[?]. He was an editor for the publishing house Feltrinelli (and apparently was the first to recognize the merit of
Tomasi de Lampedusa[?]'s
Il gattopardo), and he served as president of
"Italia Nostra." Bassani had previously published novels and collections of poetry, but his career took off in 1956 with a volume of short stories,
Cinque storie ferraresi. He then realized that Ferrara was his real subject matter, with its
Christian and
Jewish elements and its perspectives and its landscapes, and he produced the series of novels that comprise
Il romanzo di Ferrara which includes
Dentra le mura;
Il giardino dei Finzi-Contini;
Gli occhiali d'oro;
Dietro la porta;
L'airone and
L'odore di fieno. These realisticaly document the Italian Jewish community under
Fascism in a style that manifests the difficulties of searching for truth in the meanderings of memory and moral conscience. He was the recipient of the Veillon, the Strega, and the Viaggio prizes. He collaborated on several screen plays.
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