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Grazia Deledda

Grazia Maria Cosima Damiana Deledda (Italian pronunciation: [ˈɡrattsja deˈlɛdda]; 27 September 1871 – 15 August 1936), also known in Sardinian language as Gràssia or Gràtzia Deledda[1][2] (pronounced [ˈɡɾa(t)si.a ðɛˈlɛɖːa]), was an Italian writer who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1926[3] "for her idealistically inspired writings which with plastic clarity picture the life on her native island [i.e. Sardinia] and with depth and sympathy deal with human problems in general".[4] She was the first Italian woman to receive the prize, and only the second woman in general after Selma Lagerlöf was awarded hers in 1909.[5]

Grazia Deledda
Deledda in 1926
Native name
Gràssia Deledda
Gràtzia Deledda
BornGrazia Maria Cosima Damiana Deledda
(1871-09-27)27 September 1871
Nuoro, Italy
Died15 August 1936(1936-08-15) (aged 64)
Rome, Italy
OccupationWriter, novelist
Literary movementRealism, Decadence
Notable awardsNobel Prize in Literature
1926
Spouse
Palmiro Madesani
(m. 1900)
ChildrenSardus Madesani (1901–1938)
Francesco Madesani (1904–1981)
Signature

Biography edit

Deledda was born in Nuoro, Sardinia, into a middle-class family, to Giovanni Antonio Deledda and Francesca Cambosu, as the fourth of seven siblings. She attended elementary school (the minimum required at the time) and was then educated by a private tutor (a guest of one of her relatives) and moved on to study literature on her own. It was during this time that she started displaying an interest in writing short novels, mostly inspired by the life of Sardinian peasants and their struggles. Her teacher encouraged her to submit her writing to a newspaper and, at age 13, her first story was published in a local journal.[6] Some of Deledda's early works were published in the fashion magazine L'ultima moda between 1888 and 1889. In 1890 Trevisani published Nell'azzurro (Into the Blue), her first collection of short stories. Deledda's main focus was the representation of poverty and the struggles associated with it through a combination of imaginary and autobiographical elements. Her family wasn't particularly supportive of her desire to write.

Deledda's first novel, Fiori di Sardegna (Flowers of Sardinia) was published in 1892. Her 1896 book Paesaggi sardi, published by Speirani, is characterized by a prose both informed by fiction and poetry. Around this time Deledda initiated a regular collaboration with newspapers and magazines, most notably La Sardegna, Piccola Rivista and Nuova Antologia. Her work earned significant visibility as well as critical interest. In October 1899, Deledda met Palmiro Madesani, a functionary of the Ministry of Finance, in Cagliari.[7] Madesani and Deledda were married in 1900 and the couple moved to Rome right after the publication of Deledda's Il vecchio della montagna (The Old Man from the Mountain, 1900). Despite the birth of her two sons, Sardus (1901) and Francesco "Franz" (1904),[8] Deledda managed to continue to write prolifically, publishing about a novel a year.[8]

 
Deledda with her husband Palmiro and son Sardus, Rome, circa 1904

In 1903 she published Elias Portolu, which was met with commercial and critical success, boosting her reputation as a writer. This was followed by Cenere (Ashes, 1904); L'edera (The Ivy, 1908); Sino al confine (To the Border, 1910); Colombi e sparvieri (Doves and Sparrows, 1912); and her most popular book, Canne al vento (Reeds in the Wind, 1913).

In 1916 Cenere was the inspiration for a silent movie with famed Italian actress Eleonora Duse. It was the first and only time that Duse, a theatre performer, appeared in a film. Deledda was one of the contributors of the nationalist women's magazine, Lidel, which was established in 1919.[9]

In 1926 Henrik Schück, a member of the Swedish Academy, nominated Deledda for the Nobel Prize in Literature.[10] Deledda won "for her idealistically inspired writings which with plastic clarity picture the life on her native island and with depth and sympathy deal with human problems in general." She was awarded the Prize in a ceremony in Stockholm in 1926. Her initial response to the news was "Già?" ("Already?")

Deledda's win contributed to an increase in popularity of her writing. Benito Mussolini, who had just consolidated his grip on power, sent Deledda a signed portrait of himself with a dedication where he expressed his "profound admiration" for the writer. Flocks of journalists and photographers started visiting her home in Rome. Deledda initially welcomed them but eventually grew tired of the attention. One day she noticed that her beloved pet crow, Checca, was visibly irritated by the commotion, with people constantly coming in and out of the house. "If Checca has had enough, so have I," Deledda was quoted as saying, and she returned to a more retired routine. The events also put a strain on Deledda's extremely methodical writings schedule. Her day would start with a late breakfast, followed by a morning of hard reading, lunch, a quick nap and a few hours of writing before dinner.

Deledda continued to write even as she grew older and more fragile. Her subsequent works, La Casa del Poeta (The House of the Poet, 1930) and Sole d'Estate (Summer Sun, 1933), indicate a more optimistic view of life even as she was experiencing serious health issues.

Deledda died in Rome at the age of 64 of breast cancer. La chiesa della solitudine (The Church of Solitude, 1936), Deledda's last novel, is a semi-autobiographical depiction of a young Italian woman coming to terms with a fatal disease. A completed manuscript of the novel Cosima was discovered after her death and published posthumously in 1937.[5]

Accolades edit

Deledda's work has been highly regarded by writers of Italian literature, including Luigi Capuana, Giovanni Verga, Enrico Thovez, Pietro Pancrazi [it], Renato Serra [it]. Sardinian writers including Sergio Atzeni, Giulio Angioni and Salvatore Mannuzzu, were greatly influenced by her work, prompting them to found what has later become known as the Sardinian Literary Spring. In 1947 artist Amelia Camboni was commissioned a portrait of Deledda, currently standing close to her home in Rome in the Pincio neighbourhood.

Deledda's birthplace and childhood home in Nuoro was declared a national heritage building and purchased in 1968 by the Municipality of Nuoro, which in 1979 handed it over to the Regional Ethnographic Institute (ISRE) for the symbolic price of 1,000 Italian Lire. The Institute transformed the house into a museum commemorating the writer, and it's now called the Museo Deleddiano.[11] The museum consists of ten rooms showcasing the most important episodes in Deledda's life.[12]

 
Bust of Grazia Deledda by Amelia Camboni [it], Pincio, Rome

A coal power plant opened in Portoscuso in 1965. As of 2013, this powerplant called Grazia Deledda has a capacity of 590 MW.[13]

Tribute

On 10 December 2017 Google celebrated her with a Google Doodle.[14]

Work edit

The life, customs, and traditions of the Sardinian people are prominent in Deledda's writing.[8] She often relies on detailed geographical descriptions and her characters often present a strong connection with their place of origins. Many of her characters are outcasts who silently struggle with isolation.[8] Overall Deledda's work focuses on love, pain and death, upon which rests feelings of sin and fatality. Her novels tend to criticize social values and moral norms rather than the people who are victims of such circumstances. In her works it can be recognized the influence of the verism of Giovanni Verga and, sometimes, also that of the decadentism of Gabriele D'Annunzio, although her writing style is not so ornate. Despite her groundbreaking role in Italian and World literature, Deledda has failed to be acknowledged as a feminist writer, possibly due to her tendency of depicting women's pain and suffering as opposed to women's autonomy.[8]

Complete list of works edit

Below is a complete list of Deledda's works:[15]

  • Stella d'Oriente (1890)
  • Nell'azzuro (1890)
  • Fior di Sardegna (1891)
  • Racconti sardi (1894)
  • Tradizioni popolari di Nuoro in Sardegna (1894)
  • La via del male (1896)
  • Anime oneste (1895)
  • Paesaggi sardi (1897)
  • La tentazioni (1899)
  • Il tesoro (1897)
  • L'ospite (1897)
  • La giustizia (1899)
  • Nostra Signora del buon consiglio: leggenda sarda (1899)
  • Le disgrazie che può causare il denaro (1899)
  • Il Vecchio della montagna (1900)
  • Dopo il divorzio (1902; English translation: After the Divorce, 1905)
  • La regina delle tenebre (1902)
  • Elias Portolu (1900)
  • Cenere (1904; English translation: Ashes, 1908)
  • Odio Vince (1904)
  • Nostalgie (1905)
  • L'ombra del passato (1907)
  • Amori moderni (1907)
  • L'edera (1908), English translation as Ivy by Mary Ann Frese Witt and Martha Witt (2019)
  • Il nonno (1908), English translation of the short story "Il ciclamino" as "The Cyclamen" by Maria Di Salvatore and Pan Skordos, in "Journal of Italian Translation", Volume XIV, Number 1, Spring 2019
  • Il nostro padrone (1910)
  • Sino al confine (1910)
  • I giuochi della vita (1911)
  • Nel deserto (1911)
  • L'edera: dramma in tre atti (1912)
  • Colombi e sparvieri (1912)
  • Chiaroscuro (1912)
  • Canne al vento (1913), Reeds in the Wind (1999 English translation by Martha King)
  • Le colpe altrui (1914)
  • Marianna Sirca (1915)
  • Il fanciullo nascosto (1915)
  • L'incendio nell'oliveto (1918)
  • Il ritorno del figlio (1919)
  • Naufraghi in porto (1920)
  • La madre (1920; English translation: The Woman and the Priest, 1922; English translation: The Mother, by Mary G. Steegman, 1923)
  • Il segreto dell'uomo solitario (1921)
  • Cattive compagnie: novelle (1921)
  • La grazia (1921)
  • Il Dio dei viventi (1922)
  • Silvio Pellico (1923)
  • Il flauto nel bosco (1923)
  • La danza della collana; A sinistra (1924)
  • La fuga in Egitto (1925)
  • Il sigillo d'amore (1926)
  • Annalena Bilsini (1927)
  • Il vecchio e i fanciulli (1928)
  • Il dono di natale (1930)
  • La casa del poeta (1930)
  • Eugenia Grandet, Onorato di Balzac (1930)
  • Il libro della terza classe elementare: letture, religione, storia, geografia, aritmetica (1931)
  • Giaffa: racconti per ragazzi (1931)
  • Il paese del vento (1931)
  • Sole d'estate (1933)
  • L'argine (1934)
  • La chiesa della solitudine (1936); English translation by E. Ann Matter, The Church of Solitude (University of New York Press, 2002)
  • Cosima (1937) published posthumously, English translation by Martha King (1988)
  • Il cedro del Libano (1939) published posthumously
  • Grazia Deledda: premio Nobel per la letteratura 1926 (1966)
  • Opere scelte (1968)
  • Letter inedite di Grazia Deledda ad Arturo Giordano direttore della rivista letteraria (Alchero: Nemaprress, 2004)

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Gràtzia Deledda". sardegnacultura.it (in Sardinian). Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  2. ^ Serra, Sarvadore (3 September 2016). "Gràssia Deledda, unu Nobel sardu a s'Itàlia". Limba Sarda 2.0 (in Sardinian). Retrieved 17 May 2020.
  3. ^ Grazia Deledda (Italian author). britannica.com
  4. ^ https://www.nobelprize.org/nobel_prizes/literature/laureates/1926/press.html Award speech, apparently citing the Swedish Academy.
  5. ^ a b Hallengren, Anders. "Grazia Deledda: Voice of Sardinia". Nobel Media. Retrieved 16 April 2014.
  6. ^ "The Nobel Prize in Literature 1926". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  7. ^ "Grazia Deledda". The Florentine. 25 March 2010. Retrieved 9 September 2019.
  8. ^ a b c d e Migiel, Marilyn. (1994). "Grazia Deledda." Italian Women Writers: A Bio-bibliographical Sourcebook. By Rinaldina Russell. Westport, CT: Greenwood. 111-117. Print.
  9. ^ Eugenia Paulicelli (2002). "Fashion, the Politics of Style and National Identity in Pre-Fascist and Fascist Italy". Gender & History. 14 (3): 552. doi:10.1111/1468-0424.00281. S2CID 144286579.
  10. ^ "Nomination Archive". NobelPrize.org. Retrieved 18 October 2019.
  11. ^ "Museo Deleddiano". SardegnaTurismo - Sito ufficiale del turismo della Regione Sardegna. 20 November 2015. Retrieved 14 August 2020.
  12. ^ "Museo Deleddiano di Nuoro". Fidelity House (in Italian). 5 February 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  13. ^ "ABB to supply control system for Enel's 590MW Grazia Deledda Sulcis plant - NS Energy". 2013.
  14. ^ "Celebrating Grazia Deledda". 10 December 2017.
  15. ^ "IWW Results". uchicago.edu.

Bibliography edit

  • Attilio Momigliano, "Intorno a Grazia Deledda", in Ultimi studi, La Nuova Italia, Florence, 1954.
  • Emilio Cecchi, "Grazia Deledda", in Storia della Letteratura Italiana: Il Novecento, Garzanti, Milan, 1967.
  • Antonio Piromalli, "Grazia Deledda", La Nuova Italia, Florence, 1968.
  • Natalino Sapegno, "Prefazione", in Romanzi e novelle, Mondadori, Milan, 1972.
  • Giulio Angioni, "Grazia Deledda: l'antropologia positivistica e la diversità della Sardegna", in Grazia Deledda nella cultura contemporanea, Satta, Nuoro, 1992
  • Giulio Angioni, "Introduzione", in Tradizioni popolari di Nuoro, Ilisso, Biblioteca Sarda, Nuoro, 2010.
  • "Museo Deleddiano di Nuoro". Fidelity House (in Italian). 5 February 2015. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  • Garwood, Duncan (2009). Sardinia. Lonely Planet. p. 193. ISBN 978-1741048193. Retrieved 24 May 2016.
  • Onnis, Omar; Mureddu, Manuelle (2019). Illustres. Vita, morte e miracoli di quaranta personalità sarde (in Italian). Sestu: Domus de Janas. ISBN 978-88-97084-90-7. OCLC 1124656644.

Voice recording edit

The voice of Grazia Deledda speaking (in Italian) at the Nobel Prize Ceremony in 1926.

External links edit

  •   Media related to Grazia Deledda at Wikimedia Commons
  • Works by Grazia Deledda in eBook form at Standard Ebooks
  • Works by Grazia Deledda at Project Gutenberg
  • Works by or about Grazia Deledda at Internet Archive
  • Works by Grazia Deledda at LibriVox (public domain audiobooks)  
  • Grazia Deledda on Nobelprize.org  
  • Werkverzeichnis
  • Summary of works by Grazia Deledda and complete texts
  • Martha King's English translation of Cosima.
  • Martha King's English translation of Canne al vento as Reeds in the Wind.
  • BBC Radio 4's 10-part dramatisation of Reeds in the Wind 2012
  • Il bilinguismo di Grazia Deledda - Il Manifesto Sardo (article written in Italian)
  • Biography: Deledda, Grazia at The Italian Women Writers project
  • Newspaper clippings about Grazia Deledda in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW  

grazia, deledda, grazia, maria, cosima, damiana, deledda, italian, pronunciation, ˈɡrattsja, deˈlɛdda, september, 1871, august, 1936, also, known, sardinian, language, gràssia, gràtzia, deledda, pronounced, ˈɡɾa, ðɛˈlɛɖːa, italian, writer, received, nobel, pri. Grazia Maria Cosima Damiana Deledda Italian pronunciation ˈɡrattsja deˈlɛdda 27 September 1871 15 August 1936 also known in Sardinian language as Grassia or Gratzia Deledda 1 2 pronounced ˈɡɾa t si a dɛˈlɛɖːa was an Italian writer who received the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1926 3 for her idealistically inspired writings which with plastic clarity picture the life on her native island i e Sardinia and with depth and sympathy deal with human problems in general 4 She was the first Italian woman to receive the prize and only the second woman in general after Selma Lagerlof was awarded hers in 1909 5 Grazia DeleddaDeledda in 1926Native nameGrassia DeleddaGratzia DeleddaBornGrazia Maria Cosima Damiana Deledda 1871 09 27 27 September 1871Nuoro ItalyDied15 August 1936 1936 08 15 aged 64 Rome ItalyOccupationWriter novelistLiterary movementRealism DecadenceNotable awardsNobel Prize in Literature 1926SpousePalmiro Madesani m 1900 wbr ChildrenSardus Madesani 1901 1938 Francesco Madesani 1904 1981 SignatureThis article includes a list of references related reading or external links but its sources remain unclear because it lacks inline citations Please help to improve this article by introducing more precise citations December 2023 Learn how and when to remove this template message Contents 1 Biography 2 Accolades 3 Work 4 Complete list of works 5 See also 6 References 7 Bibliography 8 Voice recording 9 External linksBiography editDeledda was born in Nuoro Sardinia into a middle class family to Giovanni Antonio Deledda and Francesca Cambosu as the fourth of seven siblings She attended elementary school the minimum required at the time and was then educated by a private tutor a guest of one of her relatives and moved on to study literature on her own It was during this time that she started displaying an interest in writing short novels mostly inspired by the life of Sardinian peasants and their struggles Her teacher encouraged her to submit her writing to a newspaper and at age 13 her first story was published in a local journal 6 Some of Deledda s early works were published in the fashion magazine L ultima moda between 1888 and 1889 In 1890 Trevisani published Nell azzurro Into the Blue her first collection of short stories Deledda s main focus was the representation of poverty and the struggles associated with it through a combination of imaginary and autobiographical elements Her family wasn t particularly supportive of her desire to write Deledda s first novel Fiori di Sardegna Flowers of Sardinia was published in 1892 Her 1896 book Paesaggi sardi published by Speirani is characterized by a prose both informed by fiction and poetry Around this time Deledda initiated a regular collaboration with newspapers and magazines most notably La Sardegna Piccola Rivista and Nuova Antologia Her work earned significant visibility as well as critical interest In October 1899 Deledda met Palmiro Madesani a functionary of the Ministry of Finance in Cagliari 7 Madesani and Deledda were married in 1900 and the couple moved to Rome right after the publication of Deledda s Il vecchio della montagna The Old Man from the Mountain 1900 Despite the birth of her two sons Sardus 1901 and Francesco Franz 1904 8 Deledda managed to continue to write prolifically publishing about a novel a year 8 nbsp Deledda with her husband Palmiro and son Sardus Rome circa 1904In 1903 she published Elias Portolu which was met with commercial and critical success boosting her reputation as a writer This was followed by Cenere Ashes 1904 L edera The Ivy 1908 Sino al confine To the Border 1910 Colombi e sparvieri Doves and Sparrows 1912 and her most popular book Canne al vento Reeds in the Wind 1913 In 1916 Cenere was the inspiration for a silent movie with famed Italian actress Eleonora Duse It was the first and only time that Duse a theatre performer appeared in a film Deledda was one of the contributors of the nationalist women s magazine Lidel which was established in 1919 9 In 1926 Henrik Schuck a member of the Swedish Academy nominated Deledda for the Nobel Prize in Literature 10 Deledda won for her idealistically inspired writings which with plastic clarity picture the life on her native island and with depth and sympathy deal with human problems in general She was awarded the Prize in a ceremony in Stockholm in 1926 Her initial response to the news was Gia Already Deledda s win contributed to an increase in popularity of her writing Benito Mussolini who had just consolidated his grip on power sent Deledda a signed portrait of himself with a dedication where he expressed his profound admiration for the writer Flocks of journalists and photographers started visiting her home in Rome Deledda initially welcomed them but eventually grew tired of the attention One day she noticed that her beloved pet crow Checca was visibly irritated by the commotion with people constantly coming in and out of the house If Checca has had enough so have I Deledda was quoted as saying and she returned to a more retired routine The events also put a strain on Deledda s extremely methodical writings schedule Her day would start with a late breakfast followed by a morning of hard reading lunch a quick nap and a few hours of writing before dinner Deledda continued to write even as she grew older and more fragile Her subsequent works La Casa del Poeta The House of the Poet 1930 and Sole d Estate Summer Sun 1933 indicate a more optimistic view of life even as she was experiencing serious health issues Deledda died in Rome at the age of 64 of breast cancer La chiesa della solitudine The Church of Solitude 1936 Deledda s last novel is a semi autobiographical depiction of a young Italian woman coming to terms with a fatal disease A completed manuscript of the novel Cosima was discovered after her death and published posthumously in 1937 5 Accolades editDeledda s work has been highly regarded by writers of Italian literature including Luigi Capuana Giovanni Verga Enrico Thovez Pietro Pancrazi it Renato Serra it Sardinian writers including Sergio Atzeni Giulio Angioni and Salvatore Mannuzzu were greatly influenced by her work prompting them to found what has later become known as the Sardinian Literary Spring In 1947 artist Amelia Camboni was commissioned a portrait of Deledda currently standing close to her home in Rome in the Pincio neighbourhood Deledda s birthplace and childhood home in Nuoro was declared a national heritage building and purchased in 1968 by the Municipality of Nuoro which in 1979 handed it over to the Regional Ethnographic Institute ISRE for the symbolic price of 1 000 Italian Lire The Institute transformed the house into a museum commemorating the writer and it s now called the Museo Deleddiano 11 The museum consists of ten rooms showcasing the most important episodes in Deledda s life 12 nbsp Bust of Grazia Deledda by Amelia Camboni it Pincio RomeA coal power plant opened in Portoscuso in 1965 As of 2013 update this powerplant called Grazia Deledda has a capacity of 590 MW 13 TributeOn 10 December 2017 Google celebrated her with a Google Doodle 14 Work editThe life customs and traditions of the Sardinian people are prominent in Deledda s writing 8 She often relies on detailed geographical descriptions and her characters often present a strong connection with their place of origins Many of her characters are outcasts who silently struggle with isolation 8 Overall Deledda s work focuses on love pain and death upon which rests feelings of sin and fatality Her novels tend to criticize social values and moral norms rather than the people who are victims of such circumstances In her works it can be recognized the influence of the verism of Giovanni Verga and sometimes also that of the decadentism of Gabriele D Annunzio although her writing style is not so ornate Despite her groundbreaking role in Italian and World literature Deledda has failed to be acknowledged as a feminist writer possibly due to her tendency of depicting women s pain and suffering as opposed to women s autonomy 8 Complete list of works editBelow is a complete list of Deledda s works 15 Stella d Oriente 1890 Nell azzuro 1890 Fior di Sardegna 1891 Racconti sardi 1894 Tradizioni popolari di Nuoro in Sardegna 1894 La via del male 1896 Anime oneste 1895 Paesaggi sardi 1897 La tentazioni 1899 Il tesoro 1897 L ospite 1897 La giustizia 1899 Nostra Signora del buon consiglio leggenda sarda 1899 Le disgrazie che puo causare il denaro 1899 Il Vecchio della montagna 1900 Dopo il divorzio 1902 English translation After the Divorce 1905 La regina delle tenebre 1902 Elias Portolu 1900 Cenere 1904 English translation Ashes 1908 Odio Vince 1904 Nostalgie 1905 L ombra del passato 1907 Amori moderni 1907 L edera 1908 English translation as Ivy by Mary Ann Frese Witt and Martha Witt 2019 Il nonno 1908 English translation of the short story Il ciclamino as The Cyclamen by Maria Di Salvatore and Pan Skordos in Journal of Italian Translation Volume XIV Number 1 Spring 2019 Il nostro padrone 1910 Sino al confine 1910 I giuochi della vita 1911 Nel deserto 1911 L edera dramma in tre atti 1912 Colombi e sparvieri 1912 Chiaroscuro 1912 Canne al vento 1913 Reeds in the Wind 1999 English translation by Martha King Le colpe altrui 1914 Marianna Sirca 1915 Il fanciullo nascosto 1915 L incendio nell oliveto 1918 Il ritorno del figlio 1919 Naufraghi in porto 1920 La madre 1920 English translation The Woman and the Priest 1922 English translation The Mother by Mary G Steegman 1923 Il segreto dell uomo solitario 1921 Cattive compagnie novelle 1921 La grazia 1921 Il Dio dei viventi 1922 Silvio Pellico 1923 Il flauto nel bosco 1923 La danza della collana A sinistra 1924 La fuga in Egitto 1925 Il sigillo d amore 1926 Annalena Bilsini 1927 Il vecchio e i fanciulli 1928 Il dono di natale 1930 La casa del poeta 1930 Eugenia Grandet Onorato di Balzac 1930 Il libro della terza classe elementare letture religione storia geografia aritmetica 1931 Giaffa racconti per ragazzi 1931 Il paese del vento 1931 Sole d estate 1933 L argine 1934 La chiesa della solitudine 1936 English translation by E Ann Matter The Church of Solitude University of New York Press 2002 Cosima 1937 published posthumously English translation by Martha King 1988 Il cedro del Libano 1939 published posthumously Grazia Deledda premio Nobel per la letteratura 1926 1966 Opere scelte 1968 Letter inedite di Grazia Deledda ad Arturo Giordano direttore della rivista letteraria Alchero Nemaprress 2004 See also edit nbsp Italy portalList of female Nobel laureatesReferences edit Gratzia Deledda sardegnacultura it in Sardinian Retrieved 17 May 2020 Serra Sarvadore 3 September 2016 Grassia Deledda unu Nobel sardu a s Italia Limba Sarda 2 0 in Sardinian Retrieved 17 May 2020 Grazia Deledda Italian author britannica com https www nobelprize org nobel prizes literature laureates 1926 press html Award speech apparently citing the Swedish Academy a b Hallengren Anders Grazia Deledda Voice of Sardinia Nobel Media Retrieved 16 April 2014 The Nobel Prize in Literature 1926 NobelPrize org Retrieved 14 August 2020 Grazia Deledda The Florentine 25 March 2010 Retrieved 9 September 2019 a b c d e Migiel Marilyn 1994 Grazia Deledda Italian Women Writers A Bio bibliographical Sourcebook By Rinaldina Russell Westport CT Greenwood 111 117 Print Eugenia Paulicelli 2002 Fashion the Politics of Style and National Identity in Pre Fascist and Fascist Italy Gender amp History 14 3 552 doi 10 1111 1468 0424 00281 S2CID 144286579 Nomination Archive NobelPrize org Retrieved 18 October 2019 Museo Deleddiano SardegnaTurismo Sito ufficiale del turismo della Regione Sardegna 20 November 2015 Retrieved 14 August 2020 Museo Deleddiano di Nuoro Fidelity House in Italian 5 February 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2016 ABB to supply control system for Enel s 590MW Grazia Deledda Sulcis plant NS Energy 2013 Celebrating Grazia Deledda 10 December 2017 IWW Results uchicago edu Bibliography editAttilio Momigliano Intorno a Grazia Deledda in Ultimi studi La Nuova Italia Florence 1954 Emilio Cecchi Grazia Deledda in Storia della Letteratura Italiana Il Novecento Garzanti Milan 1967 Antonio Piromalli Grazia Deledda La Nuova Italia Florence 1968 Natalino Sapegno Prefazione in Romanzi e novelle Mondadori Milan 1972 Giulio Angioni Grazia Deledda l antropologia positivistica e la diversita della Sardegna in Grazia Deledda nella cultura contemporanea Satta Nuoro 1992 Giulio Angioni Introduzione in Tradizioni popolari di Nuoro Ilisso Biblioteca Sarda Nuoro 2010 Museo Deleddiano di Nuoro Fidelity House in Italian 5 February 2015 Retrieved 24 May 2016 Garwood Duncan 2009 Sardinia Lonely Planet p 193 ISBN 978 1741048193 Retrieved 24 May 2016 Onnis Omar Mureddu Manuelle 2019 Illustres Vita morte e miracoli di quaranta personalita sarde in Italian Sestu Domus de Janas ISBN 978 88 97084 90 7 OCLC 1124656644 Voice recording editThe voice of Grazia Deledda speaking in Italian at the Nobel Prize Ceremony in 1926 source source track track track External links edit nbsp Wikisource has original works by or about Grazia Deledda nbsp Media related to Grazia Deledda at Wikimedia Commons Works by Grazia Deledda in eBook form at Standard Ebooks Works by Grazia Deledda at Project Gutenberg Works by or about Grazia Deledda at Internet Archive Works by Grazia Deledda at LibriVox public domain audiobooks nbsp Grazia Deledda on Nobelprize org nbsp Werkverzeichnis Summary of works by Grazia Deledda and complete texts Martha King s English translation of Cosima Martha King s English translation of Canne al vento as Reeds in the Wind BBC Radio 4 s 10 part dramatisation of Reeds in the Wind 2012 Il bilinguismo di Grazia Deledda Il Manifesto Sardo article written in Italian Biography Deledda Grazia at The Italian Women Writers project Newspaper clippings about Grazia Deledda in the 20th Century Press Archives of the ZBW nbsp Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Grazia Deledda amp oldid 1198208719, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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