Claim Missing Document
Check
Articles

Found 1 Documents
Search

Hemingway, Vittorini, and the Gramscian “Nazionale-Popolare” Arrigoni, Carlo
Mediterranean Journal of Social Sciences Vol. 3 No. 7 (2012): Special Issue
Publisher : Richtmann Publishing

Show Abstract | Download Original | Original Source | Check in Google Scholar

Abstract

1946 witnessed the cultural and political debate between the Italian Communist Party (PCI) and the journal “Il Politecnico”,edited by Elio Vittorini. The PCI criticized “Il Politecnico” for being “intellectualist” and for intensifying the crevice between intellectualsand the people, thus contradicting the journal’s initial premises, that is, the creation of a new culture. The PCI’s grounds were based onthe publication of the novel For Whom the Bell Tolls by Ernest Hemingway. The American novelist was incapable, according to the PCI,of understanding and narrating beyond his own immediate and egotistical impressions.The existing turmoil between the world of cultureand the masses constitutes one of Antonio Gramsci’s fundamental themes, especially if we consider the concept of “nazionalepopolare”,which underlies the entire debate mentioned above. Persuaded that the PCI’s position derives, not only from a wrongtheoretical approach, but also from a critical error in the judgment of the American writer, I will analyze the author under the light of thegramscian category of “nazionale-popolare”. My main purpose is to suggest new means of comprehending the importance ofHemingway to Vittorini and his generation (Pavese, in primis, down to Calvino), and to read under an innovative perspective therelevance of American literature to the Italian culture of the mid-twentieth century.