| Salvatore Quasimodo
Salvatore Quasimodo, the Italian poet, critic, and translator, was born
in 1901 in Modica, Sicily. He studied at the Politecnico in Rome, but his
studies were curtailed by financial trouble. In 1926 he was appointed to
the government Civil Engineering Department. His first poems were published
in the avant-garde literary review Solaria in 1930, followed later
in that year by his first book, Acque e terre (Waters and Lands,
1930).
Quasimodo's work falls roughly into two periods, divided by World War
II. Beginning with the nostalgic poems about Sicily in Acque e terre,
the first, or "hermetic," period is characterized by metaphysical content
and a recondite style, as exemplified by the verse in Òboe sommerso
(Sunken Oboe, 1932), Erate e Apollion (1936), and Poesie
(1938). "Hermeticism" was a name applied to a 20th-century school of Italian
poets headed by Quasimodo, Giuseppe Ungaretti, and Eugenio
Montale. The verse of these poets originated in the French symbolist
school of Mallarmé and Valéry.
Typical of hermetic poetry is a deliberate rarefication of poetic language;
this is the result of the poet's attempt to verbalize a personal impression
that seems to transcend common experience, in a language that coneys it
with the maximum fidelity and immediacy. The hermetic reject rhetoric and
the stylistic mechanics of traditional poetry, adopting instead occult
symbolism and a vocabulary that is extremely personal and idiosyncratic.
Following the publication of Poesie, he resigned from his government
job and became the assistant of Cesare Zavattini, who edited several literary
periodicals, and the editor of the magazine Tempo. In 1941, Quasimodo
was appointed to the chair of Italian literature at the Guiseppe Verdi
Conservatory in Milan. During World War II, Quasimodo was involved in an
anti-Fascist movement and was briefly imprisoned. The poems in Poesie
nuove (1942) contained hints of what he was to produce in the "engagé"
period after World War II, in which his poetry was concerned with the interpretation
of contemporary history, social conditions, and the frustrations and aspirations
of the common man, as in Giorno dopo giorno (Day After Day, 1947),
La
vita non é sogno (Life Is Not a Dream, 1949), Il falso e
vero verde (1956), and La terra impareggiabile (The Incomparable
Earth, 1958).
Quasimodo was awarded the Etna-Taormina International Prize in Poetry
along with Dylan Thomas
in 1953 and the Nobel Prize for literature in 1959. His last book of verse
was Dare e avere (To Give and To Have, 1966). He also translated
Greek and Roman lyric and epic poems, as well as works of Molière,
Shakespeare,
Pablo Neruda, and E.
E. Cummings, among many others, into Italian. Quasimodo died in Naples
on June 14, 1968.
This bio was last updated on Aug 22, 2001.
A Selected Bibliography
Poetry
Acque e terre (1929)
Òboe sommerso (1932)
Odore di eucalyptus (1933)
Erato e Apòllion (1936)
Poesie (1938)
Nuove poesie (1942)
Ed é subito sera (1942)
Con il piede straniero sopra ilcuore (1946)
Giorno dopo giorno (1947)
La vita non è sogno (1948)
Il falso e vero verde (1955)
La terra impareggiabile (1958)
Tutte le poesie (1960)
Dare e avere (1966)
Essays
Il poeta e il politico, e altri saggi (1960)
Poetry in Translation
Lirici Greci (1940)
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