Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introducing modern Italian culture
- 1 The notion of Italy
- 2 Social and political cultures in Italy from 1860 to the present day
- 3 Questions of language
- 4 Intellectuals, culture and power in modern Italy
- 5 Catholicism
- 6 Socialism, Communism and other ‘isms’
- 7 Other voices: contesting the status quo
- 8 Narratives of self and society
- 9 Searching for new languages: modern Italian poetry
- 10 Drama: realism, identity and reality on stage
- 11 Italian cinema
- 12 Art in modern Italy: from the Macchiaioli to the Transavanguardia
- 13 A modern identity for a new nation: design in Italy since 1860
- 14 Fashion: narration and nation
- 15 The media
- 16 Since Verdi: Italian serious music 1860-1995
- 17 Folk music and popular song from the nineteenth century to the 1990s
- 18 Epilogue: Italian culture or multiculture in the new millennium?
- Index
- Series List
10 - Drama: realism, identity and reality on stage
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 May 2006
- Frontmatter
- Introducing modern Italian culture
- 1 The notion of Italy
- 2 Social and political cultures in Italy from 1860 to the present day
- 3 Questions of language
- 4 Intellectuals, culture and power in modern Italy
- 5 Catholicism
- 6 Socialism, Communism and other ‘isms’
- 7 Other voices: contesting the status quo
- 8 Narratives of self and society
- 9 Searching for new languages: modern Italian poetry
- 10 Drama: realism, identity and reality on stage
- 11 Italian cinema
- 12 Art in modern Italy: from the Macchiaioli to the Transavanguardia
- 13 A modern identity for a new nation: design in Italy since 1860
- 14 Fashion: narration and nation
- 15 The media
- 16 Since Verdi: Italian serious music 1860-1995
- 17 Folk music and popular song from the nineteenth century to the 1990s
- 18 Epilogue: Italian culture or multiculture in the new millennium?
- Index
- Series List
Summary
Introduction
In the Italy of the second half of the eighteenth century comedy had prevailed over tragedy, with authors such as Carlo Goldoni, Pietro Chiari and Carlo Gozzi. This was superseded by the tragic drama of Vittorio Alfieri, Vincenzo Monti, Ippolito Pindemonte, Ugo Foscolo, Silvio Pellico and Alessandro Manzoni. By the mid-nineteenth century the dearth of original texts for the theatre (the emphasis having shifted to opera) was compensated by the skill of 'great actors' such as Gustavo Modena, Adelaide Ristori, Tommaso Salvini and Ernesto Rossi. This has been referred to as drammaturgia dell'attore, the actor's drama, and it is notable that later, when in the rest of Europe the producer had taken over, in Italy the actor still predominated until at least the 1930s. Indeed, the term regista, 'director', was only coined by the linguist Bruno Migliorini in 1932. Alongside the early nineteenth-century tragedies, in response to the expectations of the emerging bourgeoisie, there was a post-Goldonian vein (as in Augusto Bon, Alberto Nota and others) which took the eighteenth-century dramatist’s realism and regionalism into the following century. Overlapping with this trend, and spreading into the period of verismo, is the first group of playwrights I shall discuss: they belong to the unification period and are representative of teatro a tesi, a theatre primarily concerned with ideas.
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- Information
- The Cambridge Companion to Modern Italian Culture , pp. 197 - 214Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2001