[go: up one dir, main page]

Laura Mancinelli OMRI (18 December 1933 – 7 July 2016) was an Italian writer, Germanist, medievalist and university professor.[1]

Laura Mancinelli

Born(1933-12-18)18 December 1933
Udine, Friuli-Venezia Giulia, Kingdom of Italy
Died7 July 2016(2016-07-07) (aged 82)
Turin, Piedmont, Italy
Resting placeExilles Cemetery, Exilles, Piedmont, Italy, IT
Occupationwriter, author of novels, Germanist and translator, medievalist
NationalityItalian
Alma materUniversity of Turin
Notable worksThe Song of the Nibelungs. Problems and values
The Twelve Abbots of Challant
The Miracle of Saint Odilia

Mancinelli also wrote academic texts, children's books, essays (numerous of medieval history), and novels.[2]

Life

edit

Laura Mancinelli was born in Udine in 1933, then, after a period of short stays between Rovereto and Mantua where she spent her early childhood, in 1937 the family moved permanently to Turin.

After her school education and studies, she graduated from the University of Turin in 1956 with a degree in German literature with a focus on modern literature.

In the years following her doctorate she taught without ever giving up her passion for medieval German culture. In 1969 she wrote the essay The Song of the Nibelungs. Problems and values.

In the 1970s she taught Germanic philology at the University of Sassari and then called in Venice by the Germanist Ladislao Mittner [de], in 1976 she founded the Department of History of German Language at the University of Venice.[3]

On the advice of his colleague and friend, Claudio Magris, in 1972 she edited and translated into Italian from the original volume, the Nibelungenlied, followed in 1978 by Tristan [de] (Gottfried von Straßburg) and in 1989 by Gregorius and Poor Heinrich (Hartmann von Aue[4]).

In the early 1990s, affected by multiple sclerosis, Laura Mancinelli left the Chair of German philology.

Mancinelli died on 7 July 2016 in Turin as a result of her illness.[5][6][7][8] The farewell ceremony took place on 11 July 2016 in the monumental cemetery of Turin; the funeral took place in Exilles in the Susa Valley, where the writer had set one of her novels.

Career

edit

Writing career

edit

After returning to Turin as holder of the University Chair of Germanic philology, in 1981 Laura Mancinelli made her debut in fiction, publishing, The Twelve Abbots of Challant (winner the same year of the Mondello Prize[9]), a historical novel that the author had begun to write in 1968. After came Il fantasma di Mozart in 1986 and The Miracle of Saint Odilia in 1989.

Other works were: Amadé, a tale of Mozart's journey in Turin as an adolescent; La casa del tempo; Gli occhi dell'imperatore, winner of the Rapallo Prize in 1994; Raskolnikov; I tre cavalieri del Graal and Il principe scalzo. In 1999, the theatrical performance Notte con Mozart, based on the play of the same name in two acts (published in 1991), was performed at Regio in Turin.

From 1994 onwards, she devoted herself entirely to writing and published more than fifteen works throughout the decade, despite hospital stays and lengthy rehabilitation.

In 2001, La sacra rappresentazione (The holy representation) came out in bookshops. It recounts the handover of the Fortress of Exilles from France (Dauphiné) to Savoy, which took place after a night of revelry by the French garrison in 1708. In the same year, the author was simultaneously working on an autobiographical novel that occupied her for several years and was published in 2002 under the title Andante con tenerezza.

In 2009 she published the novel Gli occhiali di Cavour, followed by Due storie d'amore in 2011, free interpretations of the story of two famous couples, Kriemhild and Siegfried, Tristan and Iseult.

Bibliography

edit

Novels

edit
  • I dodici abati di Challant (1981; English translation: The Twelve Abbots of Challant, 2003)
  • Il fantasma di Mozart (1986)
  • Il miracolo di santa Odilia (1989; English translation: The Miracle of Saint Odilia, 2003)
  • Amadé (1990)
  • La casa del tempo (1993)
  • Gli occhi dell'imperatore (1994)
  • Raskolnikov (1996)
  • I tre cavalieri del Graal (1996)
  • Il principe scalzo (1999)
  • La musica dell'isola (2000)
  • Attentato alla Sindone (2000)
  • La sacra rappresentazione ovvero Come il forte di Exilles fu conquistato ai francesi (2001)
  • Biglietto d'amore (2002)
  • I colori del cuore (2005)
  • Un misurato esercizio della cattiveria (2005)
  • Il ragazzo dagli occhi neri (2007)
  • Natale sotto la Mole (2008)
  • Due storie d'amore (2011)
  • Un peccatore innocente (2013)

Translation of Classics of Austrian and German Literature

edit
  • (in Italian) Nibelungenlied, Turin: Einaudi, 1972
  • (in Italian) Gottfried von Strassburg, Tristan, Turin: Einaudi, 1978
  • (in Italian) Heimito von Doderer, I demoni. Dalla cronaca del caposezione Geyrenhoff, Turin: Einaudi, 1979
  • (in Italian) Hartmann von Aue, Gregorio and Il povero Enrico, Turin: Einaudi, 1989
  • (in Italian) Konrad Bayer, The Head of Vitus Bering, Alessandria: Edizioni dell'Orso, 1993

Honours

edit

National honours

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "Mancinelli, Laura in the Italian Encyclopaedia of Science, Letters, and Arts". www.treccani.it (in Italian).
  2. ^ "Laura Mancinelli in Giulio Einaudi Editor". www.einaudi.it (in Italian).
  3. ^ "Gli occhi di Laura, in Le lingue occidentali nei 150 anni di storia di Ca' Foscari" (PDF) (in Italian).
  4. ^ Laura Mancinelli. "La leggenda del cavaliere Hartmann" (PDF) (in Italian). Il Racconto dell'inatteso - l'Unità.
  5. ^ Isabella Bossi Fedrigotti. "Morta Laura Mancinelli, germanista e scrittrice" (in Italian). Corriere della Sera.
  6. ^ Luigi Forte. "Laura Mancinelli, il Medioevo tra rigore e prosa fantastica" (in Italian). La Stampa.
  7. ^ "Addio alla scrittrice e germanista Laura Mancinelli" (in Italian). la Repubblica.
  8. ^ "TG Valle d'Aosta – Edizione delle 19.30 del 8 luglio 2016" (in Italian).
  9. ^ RAI Regione Sicilia. "RAI Regione Sicilia – VII Premio Letterario Internazionale Mondello" (in Italian).
  10. ^ Sito web del Quirinale: dettaglio decorato.

Sources

edit
edit