Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/128031
Title: Anna Banti and Virginia Woolf : a grammar of responsibility
Authors: Boldrini, Lucia
Keywords: Women in literature
Italian literature -- History -- 20th century
English literature -- History -- 20th century
Feminism and literature -- Italy
Modernism (Literature) -- Italy
Authors, Italian -- Biography
Art and literature
Historical fiction, Italian
Issue Date: 2009
Publisher: University of Malta. Institute of Anglo-Italian Studies
Citation: Boldrini, L. (2009). Anna Banti and Virginia Woolf : A grammar of responsibility. Journal of Anglo-Italian Studies, 10, 135-149.
Abstract: This paper considers the dialogue that Anna Banti establishes with two female artists, two of her elders and models: the writer Virginia Woolf, and the Renaissance painter Artemisia Gentileschi. But first, let me set the scene - two scenes in fact, striking in their contrast, haunting in their combination. The first is the beginning of Banti's Artemisia (1947): it is 1944 and the narrator- a projection of Ban ti herself - is sitting in her nightgown on the ground in the Giardino de' Boboli, in Florence, where she has taken refuge having escaped the destruction of her home; she hears a voice: 'non piangere,' 'don't cry.' The Allied troops were entering Florence, the German army were leaving, blowing up bridges before abandoning the town, and the narrator's home, her possessions, her nearly completed manuscript of Artemisia Gentileschi were lost under the rubble. [excerpts]
URI: https://www.um.edu.mt/library/oar/handle/123456789/128031
ISSN: 15602168
Appears in Collections:Journal of Anglo-Italian Studies, vol. 10

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