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Fictions of Appetite

Alimentary Discourses in Italian Modernist Literature

by Enrico Cesaretti (Author)
©2013 Monographs VIII, 276 Pages
Series: Italian Modernities, Volume 17

Summary

Fictions of Appetite explores and investigates the aesthetic significance of images of food, appetite and consumption in a body of modernist literature published in Italian between 1905 and 1939. The corpus examined includes novels, short stories, poems, essays and plays by F.T. Marinetti, Aldo Palazzeschi, Massimo Bontempelli, Paola Masino and Luigi Pirandello. The book underlines the literary relevance and symbolic implications of the «culinary sign», suggesting a link between the crisis of language and subjectivity usually associated with modernism and figures of consumption and corporeal self-obliteration in «alimentary» discourse. In revisiting these works under label of modernism, which has traditionally been shunned in the Italian critical field, the volume brings critical discourse on early twentieth-century Italian literature closely into line with that of other Western literatures. The author argues that an alimentary perspective not only sheds striking new light on each of the texts examined, but also illustrates the signifying power of the culinary sign, its relations to the aesthetic sphere and its prominent role in the construction of a modernist sensibility.

Details

Pages
VIII, 276
Year
2013
ISBN (PDF)
9783035304992
ISBN (Softcover)
9783034309714
DOI
10.3726/978-3-0353-0499-2
Language
English
Publication date
2013 (September)
Keywords
food novels poems plays consumption
Published
Oxford, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt am Main, New York, Wien, 2013. VIII, 276 pp.

Biographical notes

Enrico Cesaretti (Author)

Enrico Cesaretti is Associate Professor of Italian at the University of Virginia. He is the author of Castelli di carta: retorica della dimora tra Scapigliatura e Surrealismo (2001) and has published articles on nineteenth-and twentieth-century Italian literature. His other research interests include travel theory and environmental humanities.

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Title: Fictions of Appetite