Sergio Atzeni (14 October 1952 in
Capoterra – 6 September 1995 in
Carloforte) was an Italian writer.
Life and career
Born in
Capoterra, southern
Sardinia
Sardinia ( ; ; ) is the Mediterranean islands#By area, second-largest island in the Mediterranean Sea, after Sicily, and one of the Regions of Italy, twenty regions of Italy. It is located west of the Italian Peninsula, north of Tunisia an ...
, Atzeni lived in
Orgosolo during his childhood until he moved to
Cagliari
Cagliari (, , ; ; ; Latin: ''Caralis'') is an Comune, Italian municipality and the capital and largest city of the island of Sardinia, an Regions of Italy#Autonomous regions with special statute, autonomous region of Italy. It has about 146,62 ...
where, as a journalist, he worked for some of the most important Sardinian newspapers. He also became a member of the
Italian Communist Party
The Italian Communist Party (, PCI) was a communist and democratic socialist political party in Italy. It was established in Livorno as the Communist Party of Italy (, PCd'I) on 21 January 1921, when it seceded from the Italian Socialist Part ...
, but later left the party, being disillusioned with politics. In 1986, he left Sardinia and travelled across Europe, but in the last part of his life he settled in
Turin
Turin ( , ; ; , then ) is a city and an important business and cultural centre in northern Italy. It is the capital city of Piedmont and of the Metropolitan City of Turin, and was the first Italian capital from 1861 to 1865. The city is main ...
where he wrote his most important novels, including ''Il figlio di Bakunìn'' (''Bakunin's Son''), ''Passavamo sulla terra leggeri'' and ''Il quinto passo è l'addio''. In 1995, he died in
Carloforte while swimming in the sea during a holiday back in Sardinia.
All of Atzeni's works are set in Sardinia and were written in Italian. He experimented with different techniques and styles across his novels. Most notably, he used a very original language that fused elegant literary Italian and the "
patter" used by the
working-class
The working class is a subset of employees who are compensated with wage or salary-based contracts, whose exact membership varies from definition to definition. Members of the working class rely primarily upon earnings from wage labour. Most c ...
in Cagliari and Sardinia, where many words and sayings are borrowed from the
Sardinian language
Sardinian or Sard ( , , , , or , ) is a Romance languages, Romance language spoken by the Sardinians on the Western Mediterranean island of Sardinia.
The original character of the Sardinian language among the Romance idioms has long been know ...
. In this way, Atzeni reproduces the immediacy of the spoken language in his novels. In some of his novels (e.g. ''Il quinto passo è l'addio'' and ''Bellas mariposas'') he also used techniques akin to the "
magic realism" style of many Southern American authors, where fantastic elements appear in the realistic setting.
Sergio Atzeni is considered, with
Giulio Angioni
Giulio Angioni (28 October 1939 – 12 January 2017) was an Italian writer and anthropologist.
Biography
Angioni was a leading Italian anthropologist, professor at the University of Cagliari and fellow of St Antony's College of the University o ...
and
Salvatore Mannuzzu, one of the initiators of the so-called
Sardinian Literary Spring, the Sardinian narrative of today in the European arena, which followed the work of individual prominent figures such as
Grazia Deledda,
Emilio Lussu
Emilio Lussu (4 December 1890 – 5 March 1975) was a Sardinian people, Sardinian and Italian writer, anti-fascist intellectual, military officer, Italian resistance movement, partisan, and politician. He is also the author of the novel ''One Yea ...
,
Giuseppe Dessì,
Gavino Ledda,
Salvatore Satta
Salvatore Satta (9 August 1902 in Nuoro – 19 April 1975 in Rome) was an Italian jurist and writer.
He is famous for the novel ''The Day of Judgment (novel), The Day of Judgment'' (orig. ) (1975), and for several important studies on civil law. ...
. Some of his novels have been translated into French, but only one, ''Bakunin's Son'', has been translated into English.
Atzeni died by drowning in the
Mediterranean Sea
The Mediterranean Sea ( ) is a sea connected to the Atlantic Ocean, surrounded by the Mediterranean basin and almost completely enclosed by land: on the east by the Levant in West Asia, on the north by Anatolia in West Asia and Southern Eur ...
off the coast of
San Pietro Island on 6 September 1995.
Bibliography
*''Aray Dimoniu ''(1984)
A short tale inspired by Sardinian traditional tales of demons and magic.
*''L'Apologo del giudice bandito'' (1986) (
Apologue of the Bandit Judge)
Set in the year 1492 in Cagliari. Starting from an imaginary trial of the Spanish rulers of Sardinia against the
locusts
Locusts (derived from the Latin ''locusta'', locust or lobster) are various species of short-horned grasshoppers in the family Acrididae that have a Swarm behaviour, swarming phase. These insects are usually solitary, but under certain circu ...
that were spreading famine in Sardinia, several characters are introduced, including the Spanish viceroy, Spanish soldiers and aristocrats, humble Sardinian peasants and drunkards, and finally the Sardinian chief (a "Judge" according to the Sardinian medieval tradition) that gives the name to the novel.
*''Il figlio di Bakunin'' (1991) (Bakunin's Son)
A son tries to find out more about his father: every person interviewed by the son speaks in first person and tells a story about the son's father. The son discovers his father was from a bourgeois family, then became a miner in the 1930s, and a political activist and member of parliament after the war. In this way, the book spans the dramatic changes between the beginning of the 20th century and the 1950s in Sardinia, as experienced and told by the different characters in the book.
This book is available in English by Italica Pres
*''Il quinto passo è l'addio'' (1995) (The Fifth Step is a Farewell).
This novel is probably the most autobiographical of Atzeni's novels. It tells the story of a man who while on a ferryboat, leaving Sardinia for good, remembers and revokes his past experiences in Cagliari, including an unhappy love story and several frustrations and humiliations caused by the corruption and small-mindedness of politicians and employers.
*''Passavamo sulla terra leggeri'' (1996) (Lightly We Passed on Earth )
This novel was published after Atzeni's death, but Atzeni had submitted it to the publisher before his death. The narrator of the book is asked to preserve the memory of Sardinian history by an old acquaintance and so is told the history of Sardinia, from the mythical origins to the defeat of the independent kingdom of
Arborea and the final conquest of Sardinia by the Spaniards in the 15th Century.
*''Bellas Mariposas ''(1996) (Beautiful Butterflies)
This was also published after Atzeni's death, but it was still a work in progress. It is a short story told in a first-person narrative by a young girl from a working-class neighbourhood of Cagliari. The language used borrows many phrases and words from the Sardinian dialect spoken in Cagliari, and even the title of the story itself is in Sardinian.
*''Due colori esistono al mondo, il verde è il secondo ''(1997)
A collection of poetry
*''Raccontar fole ''(1999)
An essay on the misleading representation of Sardinia given by historians and travellers in the 18th and 19th centuries.
*''Racconti con colonna sonora ''(2002 )
A collection of short stories, mainly crime-fiction stories.
*''Gli anni della grande peste ''(2003)
A collection of newspaper articles and short stories published in different magazines.
*''I sogni della città bianca ''(2005)
A collection of short stories written in the early 1980s
*''Scritti giornalistici ''(2005)
A collection of newspaper articles.
References
External links
Italica Press: Atzeni's BiographyAtzeni's biography and work
{{DEFAULTSORT:Atzeni, Sergio
1952 births
1995 deaths
People from the Metropolitan City of Cagliari
20th-century Italian writers
20th-century Italian male writers
Italian male journalists
20th-century Italian journalists
Deaths by drowning in Italy