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User:A.Biancalani/Italo Alighiero Chiusano

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Italo Alighiero Chiusano
Occupationwriter, literary critic, Germanist
NationalityItalian

Italo Alighiero Chiusano (Wrocław, 1926 - Frascati, 15 February 1995) was an Italian independent writer, literary critic, Germanist, literary historian, essayist, author of dramas, and journalist.

Chiusano authored several television screenplays[1].
In the Seventies and the Eighties he was co-writer of some fictions broadcast by RAI, inspired from famous authors and dedicated to great literary characters or themes:



Biography and works[edit]

Chiusano was born in the Silesia, a German territory that became part of Poland after the Second World War. However, his origin was Italian (as can be easily noted from his baptism names: Italo and Alighiero). Chiusano's father, was a diplomat from Pinerolo and his mother from Turin.

Chiusano's intellectual formation was heavily influenced by the German language; he studied and wrote literary criticism of German literature.

He wrote articles for the Italian newspapers "La Stampa" and "L'Osservatore Romano". In the newspaper La Repubblica he published a series of articles on famous authors of the German school. These articles discussed the work of Thomas Bernhard, Heinrich Böll (whose religiosity and anti-militarism was a common feature, and on whom he wrote a biography in 1974), Goethe, Schiller, Kleist, Theodor Fontane, Musil, Schnitzler, Mann, Dürrenmatt, and many others.

Chiusano had a Catholic education (he was defined by Vittorio Messori "open minded Christian"), and was fluent in German, French, English, Spanish and Portoguese. He spent his childhood and youth traveling throughout Europe and Brazil (Ajaccio, Stuttgart, Rotterdam, São Paulo were some of the cities where he lived).

He attended high school in Brazil and in 1948 he graduated in law in Rome. In the early 1950's he worked as a journalist, translator, and author of dramas for radio.

In 1964 he married Leyla Givonetti, with whom he had a son, Mattia, and a daughter, Agata.

As an writer he possessed a dry and incisive style. His historical novel "L'Ordalia", set in Medieval times, was a finalist for the 1979 Campiello prize. Among his other major works of fiction are: "La prova dei sentimenti" (1966), "Inchiesta sul mio amore" (1972), "L'ordalia" (1979), set in Italy of Arduino and Otto III, "La derrota" (1982), "Il vizio del gambero" (1986), "Konradin" (1990), a portrait of Conradin and "Eroi di vetro" (1989).

As essayist and literary critic he was the author in 1976 of a history of modern German theater and, in 1981, a "Life of Goethe". For the theater he wrote "Le notti di Verna" (1981) and "Il Sacrilegio" (1982).

Furthermore, he was the author of two other works of fundamental importance in the literary field: "Literatur", published in 1984 and containing almost two hundred articles devoted to his beloved German literature, and "Altre lune" (1987), a collection of articles on German, British, Russian, Spanish, and Latin American writers in addition to specific pages on two Italian poets, Mario Luzi and Giorgio Caproni.


Notes[edit]