3Press release
CONTACT:
Nicola Di Nino
nd2268@columbia.edu
www.italianpoetryreview.net
Italian Poetry Review (IPR)
in cooperation with
The Department of Italian at Columbia University
The Italian Academy for Advanced Studies in America
And the Department of Modern Languages and Literatures at Fordham University
presents
Un poeta sperso tra gli uomini
A lost poet among men
Antonio Barolini tra Italia e America
Antonio Barolini between Italy and America
Friday, April 30, from 10am to 2pm
In the Library of the Italian Academy
1161 Amsterdam Avenue, New York
New York, NY – April 6 2010 - The Italian Poetry Review (IPR) has organized a symposium on the writer Antonio Barolini, the centenary of whose birth falls in 2010.
The symposium will be held at the Italian Academy at Columbia University on Friday, April 30 from 10am to 2pm. The Italian Academy is located at 1161 Amsterdam Avenue.
Speakers at the symposium include the poet's widow Helen Barolini and his daughter Professor Teodolinda Barolini, as well as Nicola Di Nino (Columbia University), the organizer of the symposium, Paolo Valesio (Chair of the Department of Italian at Columbia), Renato Camurri (University of Verona), Monica Giachino and Michela Rusi (University ÒCaÕ Foscari Ó of Venice).
Antonio Barolini (1910-1971) was a poet, novelist and journalist whose life spanned Italy and United States. In 1943, he directed the local newspaper in his native city Vicenza, where he was jailed for his attempts at freedom of expression. Later, he collaborated with another intellectual from Vicenza: Neri Pozza who, with BaroliniÕs guidance launched what became a prestigious publishing house. In this period, Barolini wrote a collection of poems Il meraviglioso giardino (1942) and a novel La memoria di Stefano (1943).
In the 1950s, Barolini moved to the United States and began a new and creative phase of his literary career. He collaborated with The New Yorker and published the poetry collection Elegie di Croton (1959), with which he won the prestigious Premio Bagutta, and the novel Una lunga pazzia (1962).
His literary production, which earned the praise of writers such as Pier Paolo Pasolini, Eugenio Montale, Pietro Pancrazi, Geno Pampaloni, and others, is in need of a revisitation today. To this end, the Barolini heirs have donated the full archives of the Barolini papers to the Biblioteca Bertoliana of Vicenza. These documents include correspondence with major political and cultural figures of Italy and the United States during the 1960s and 1970s
Admission is free and open to the public.
For additional information and RSVP, please email: nd2268@columbia.edu