Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian Novel

The production, distribution and consumption of the Italian novel in the global editorial market has accompanied the gradual creation of a national branding process that does not coincide with the literary identity Italy tends to associate with. When considering the main analysis approaches of the I...

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Main Author: Anna Sofia Lippolis
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Department of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at McGill University 2023-05-01
Series:Journal of Cultural Analytics
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.22148/001c.68341
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author Anna Sofia Lippolis
author_facet Anna Sofia Lippolis
author_sort Anna Sofia Lippolis
collection DOAJ
description The production, distribution and consumption of the Italian novel in the global editorial market has accompanied the gradual creation of a national branding process that does not coincide with the literary identity Italy tends to associate with. When considering the main analysis approaches of the Italian literary canon—the top-down one of the country’s yearly national bestsellers, literary prizes, suggested readings in Literature courses at University and school anthologies—and the larger-scale, bottom-up view of digital platforms like Amazon and Goodreads, Wikipedia stands in a middle, unexplored ground between the two. Through the comparative quantitative analysis of data derived from some of these sources, this article aims to gain more awareness on Italian literature from 1980 to 2021, to start addressing why national book prizes winners do not make it to the global market and if it is possible to talk about a national cultural resistance, which allowed authors like Elena Ferrante and Goliarda Sapienza to become literary sensations abroad before it happening in their own country. While some studies have already dealt with the unchanging aspect and the lack of diversity of the Italian literary canon, there has been little quantitative research on the two brands of the country, the national and the global, and on the dynamics between them. As well as proposing a methodology for the ongoing study of literary reception of Italian novels under multiple points of view, this article contributes to the discussion on the reliability of measures for studying the canon.
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spelling doaj-art-3f43b5e4b8c1492e8db8ec4b6bc403812025-08-20T03:20:46ZengDepartment of Languages, Literatures, and Cultures at McGill UniversityJournal of Cultural Analytics2371-45492023-05-018210.22148/001c.68341Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian NovelAnna Sofia LippolisThe production, distribution and consumption of the Italian novel in the global editorial market has accompanied the gradual creation of a national branding process that does not coincide with the literary identity Italy tends to associate with. When considering the main analysis approaches of the Italian literary canon—the top-down one of the country’s yearly national bestsellers, literary prizes, suggested readings in Literature courses at University and school anthologies—and the larger-scale, bottom-up view of digital platforms like Amazon and Goodreads, Wikipedia stands in a middle, unexplored ground between the two. Through the comparative quantitative analysis of data derived from some of these sources, this article aims to gain more awareness on Italian literature from 1980 to 2021, to start addressing why national book prizes winners do not make it to the global market and if it is possible to talk about a national cultural resistance, which allowed authors like Elena Ferrante and Goliarda Sapienza to become literary sensations abroad before it happening in their own country. While some studies have already dealt with the unchanging aspect and the lack of diversity of the Italian literary canon, there has been little quantitative research on the two brands of the country, the national and the global, and on the dynamics between them. As well as proposing a methodology for the ongoing study of literary reception of Italian novels under multiple points of view, this article contributes to the discussion on the reliability of measures for studying the canon.https://doi.org/10.22148/001c.68341
spellingShingle Anna Sofia Lippolis
Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian Novel
Journal of Cultural Analytics
title Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian Novel
title_full Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian Novel
title_fullStr Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian Novel
title_full_unstemmed Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian Novel
title_short Italian Nostalgia: National and Global Identities of the Italian Novel
title_sort italian nostalgia national and global identities of the italian novel
url https://doi.org/10.22148/001c.68341
work_keys_str_mv AT annasofialippolis italiannostalgianationalandglobalidentitiesoftheitaliannovel