Who’s Afraid of Italo Svevo? Routes of European Modernism between Trieste and Virginia Woolf’s London

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2024-03-01

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<jats:title>Abstract</jats:title> <jats:p>The Triestine author Italo Svevo spent a considerable amount of time in London and its environs between 1901 and 1926. His experiences there influenced his modernist writing, including Zeno’s Conscience, his most famous novel. Leonard and Virginia Woolf’s Hogarth Press was the first to publish Svevo’s work in English. His story “The Hoax” marked their first translation from Italian and his short story collection The Nice Old Man and the Pretty Girl and Other Stories their second, helping shape the press’s international modernist program. Despite residing in the same quickly changing city in the same period and despite their literary connections, Svevo and Virginia Woolf have rarely been compared. They have been difficult to envision together in part because their gender, backgrounds, and nationalities separate them. By exploring Woolf’s and Svevo’s shared modernist networks, including London’s influence and Hogarth Press, this article reveals Svevo’s significance as an author who has not easily fit Anglophone paradigms of modernist fiction and whose associations with Woolf contribute to the growing challenges to nation-based literary histories.</jats:p>

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10.1215/00267929-10929018

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Ziolkowski, Saskia Elizabeth (2024). Who’s Afraid of Italo Svevo? Routes of European Modernism between Trieste and Virginia Woolf’s London. Modern Language Quarterly, 85(1). pp. 29–52. 10.1215/00267929-10929018 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/31241.

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Scholars@Duke

Ziolkowski

Saskia Ziolkowski

Associate Professor of Romance Studies

Website: https://sites.duke.edu/saskiaziolkowski/

I work on Italian literature and culture from a comparative perspective, especially in terms of the connections between Italy and German-language countries. My research topics include modernism, the novel, animal studies, world literature, Jewish studies, migration, literary history, and issues of identity. My book Kafka’s Italian Progeny (University of Toronto Press, awarded the American Association of Italian Studies 2020 Book Prize in Literary Studies) explores Franz Kafka’s sometimes surprising connections with key writers — from Massimo Bontempelli, Lalla Romano, and Italo Calvino to Antonio Tabucchi, Paola Capriolo, and Elena Ferrante — who have shaped Italy’s literary landscape.

I am currently working on a monograph on Jewishness in modern Italian literature and have published related articles “Jewish Images and Transnational Histories in Italian Writing, from Elsa Morante to Helena Janeczek” in Annali d'italianistica (2024), Italian Ghetto Stories: A Transnational Literary History" in Forum Italicum (2023), and “For a Jewish Italian Literary History: From Italo Svevo to Igiaba Scego” in Italian Culture (2022), and a chapter "Neither Rich, Nor Poor, Neither Jewish, Neither Catholic: The Legacies of Natalia Ginzburg’s Negations" in Natalia Ginzburg's Global Legacies (2024). In addition to "For a Jewish Italian Literary History: From Italo Svevo to Igiaba Scego," I have two other recent pieces that focus on Svevo: "Italo Svevo and Women's Writing" in I mondi di Zeno and "Who's Afraid of Italo Svevo? Routes of European Modernism between Trieste and Virginia Woolf’s London" (MLQ). 


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