Alberto Moravia Biography and List of WorksBooks by Alberto Moravia | Shop used books at Biblio.com Italian journalist, short-story writer, and novelist who's work explored sex, social alienation, and other contemporary issues - he was a major figure in 20th-century Italian literature. Moravia was married to fellow author Elsa Morante (1941-1963), best known for her novel LA STORIA (1974). "Alas, Fausta had told the truth: everything was left exactly as it had been on the day I went away. One seemed to be poking one's nose into the study of one of those long-dead writers whose rooms have been transformed into museums, which are visited by people reverently and hat in hand. Except that there was a difference: those writers whose rooms have been transformed into museums were for the most part real, genuine writers; or were, in their lifetime, sublimated artists of the first water, and their studies are faithful mirrors of their sublimation. I, on the contrary, am desublimated, and my study was clearly a museum of mediocrity, of approximation, of self-didactism, of foolish aspirations, of the near miss, of amateurishness." (from The Two of Us, 1971) Moravia was born in Rome into a well-to-do middle-class family. His mother was Teresa (de Marcanich) Pincherle, and his father, Carlo Pincherle, an architect and a painter. At the age of nine Moravia was stricken with a tubercular infection of the leg bones, which he later considered the most important factor in his early development. From 1916 to 1925 he spent considerable periods in sanatoriums. During these years Moravia started to write and published his first major novel, GLI INDIFFERENTI (Time of Indifference) in 1929. It was perhaps the first European Existentialist novel. The story focuses on three days in the life of a Roman family, who keep up a bourgeois front while living at the edge of poverty. The condemnation of the Roman bourgeoisie under fascism became sensation. In order not to arouse the authorities' disapproval, Moravia wrote in an allegorical style, but his increasing involvement in politics led to his books being banned. Later Moravia employed his archetypes; an impotent intellectual, his virile rival, a voluptuous seductress, and an aging mistress, in his other books. Generally Moravia regarded women as being superior to men. He saw sex as the enemy of love. Variations on the women of Gli indifferenti are found in LA ROMANA (1947, The Woman of Rome), in which the protagonist, Adriana, is a prostitute, LA CIOCIARA (1958, Two Women), which recounts the war experiences of a middle-class businesswoman and her daughter who flee into the mountains to escape Allied bombings. Moroccan soldiers rape the daughter; she becomes a prostitute and her mother a thief. Moravia's criticism of society in presented on an allegorical level - proletariat is raped by capitalism. In the 1930s Moravia worked as a foreign correspondent for La Stampa and La Gazetta del Popolo. He travelled in the U.S., Poland, China, Mexico, and other countries. His works were censored by Benito Mussolini's fascist government, and placed by the Vatican on the Index librorum prohibitarum (Index of Forbidden Books). Moravia criticized sharply the dehumanised, capitalist world. He was especially influenced by the thoughts of Marx and Freud. After the publication of LE AMBIZIONI SBAGLIATE (1935, The Wheel of Fortune), Moravia lost his job at the Gazetta del Popolo. In 1937 appeared Moravia's L'IMBROGLIO, a collection of short stories, which included L'Architetto, La Tempesta, and La Provinciale. Several of his stories were first published in newspapers. RACCONTI ROMANI (1954, Roman Tales) and NUOVI RACCONTI ROMANI (1959, More Roman Tales) include some of Moravia's best sketches of working-class characters in everyday situations. From 1941 to 1943 Moravia lived in Anacapri (Capri). In 1943 he fled into the mountains of Ciociaria. He had written in 1941 a comic parody of the Mussolini government, LA MASCHERATA, attacked fascism in his articles in Il Popolo di Roma, and was in danger of being arrested. He went into hiding in the peasant community in Fondi, near Cassino, until the Allied Liberation. In 1953 Moravia edited, with Alberto Carocci, Nuovi Argomenti, from 1955 he was the film critic for L'Espresso, and in 1955 he was a State Department lecturer in the United States. Between the years 1958 and 1970 he travelled throughout the world. In 1982 he edited with Leonardo Sciascia and Enzo Siciliano Nuovi Argomenti. Among Moravias later works are LA NOIA (1960, The Empty Canvas), L'ATTENZIONE (1965, The Lie), and IO E LUI (1971, The Two of Us), a story of a film writer who tries to understand his independently behaving large penis. LA VITA INTERIORE (1978, Time of Desecration) was composed in the form of an interview between the ostensible narrator and the interviewee, Desideria. He wrote for several magazines, contributing Corriere della Sera regulary from 1946. From his wide travels Moravia produced several articles and travel books, including UN MESE IN URSS (1958), LA RIVOLUZIONE CULTURALE IN CINA (1968), and VIAGGI. ARTICOLI 1930-1990 (1994). Moravia's autobiography ALBERTO MORAVIA'S LIFE was published in 1990. In 1984 he was elected Italian representative to the European Parliament. Moravia died in Rome on September 26, 1990. He lived most of his life in Rome; the city played an important role in his fiction. For further reading: Moravia by Giuliano Dego (1966); Three Italian Novelist by D. Heiney (1968); The Existentialism of Albeto Moravia by J. Ross and D. Freed (1972); Selected Essays by E. Montale (1978): Vita di Moravia (Alberto Moravia's Life) by Alberto Moravia and Alain Elkann (1990); Woman as Object by S. Wood (1990); The Architecture of Imagery in Alberto Moravia's Fiction by J.M. Kozma (1993); Homage to Alberto Moravia, ed. by Rocco Capozzi and Mario B. Mignone (1993); Alberto Moravia by Thomas Erling Peterson (1996) Free shipping on select books. No minimum purchase
Selected works:
Find books by Alberto Moravia at Biblio.com
Find books by Alberto Moravia at Biblion.co.uk
|