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Oriana Fallaci (b. 1930) is an awkward presence on Italian
bookshelves, in world journalism and among feminists. This book,
the first literary study of Fallaci, examines the implications of
the storms and silences that she keeps rousing. A fully emancipated
and successful woman in the man's world of political journalism,
she has antagonised many feminists by her championship of
motherhood and her idolization of heroic manhood. In journalism,
her critics have felt that she has outraged the conventions of
interviewing and reporting. As a novelist, she shatters the
invisible diaphragm of literariness and is accused of betraying, or
simply failing, literature.
This book focuses on Fallaci's direct engagement as a writer with
major political and social issues such as women's liberation,
Vietnam, Islamic fundamentalism and the space programme. A
distinctive and controversial feature of her writing is the way in
which she blurs the interface between reportage and fiction in an
attempt to obliterate the gap that separates the word from the
world.
Fosco speaks as a member of Post-Christian Society that has emerged
from the Great Walk-Out from established religion but as one who
cannot subscribe to the Economic Myth of Rational Humanism. Fosco's
text, which he dubs My Reality , is republished in this volume,
accompanied by six exploratory essays, ranging from the supportive
to the dismissive, which seek to open up debate on the issues which
he poses. Can we work towards a society in which humane values
prevail, or must we accept that ours is, for lack of a better, the
best of possible worlds?
Fosco speaks as a member of Post-Christian Society that has emerged
from the Great Walk-Out from established religion but as one who
cannot subscribe to the Economic Myth of Rational Humanism. Fosco's
text, which he dubs My Reality , is republished in this volume,
accompanied by six exploratory essays, ranging from the supportive
to the dismissive, which seek to open up debate on the issues which
he poses. Can we work towards a society in which humane values
prevail, or must we accept that ours is, for lack of a better, the
best of possible worlds?
This book is a study of biographies and autobiographies of Italian
Australians. It looks at full-length life-writing texts, including
accounts of the Italian Australian experience of war-time
internment, success stories, narratives of trauma and grievance and
life narratives as a form of ethnography. There is a variable zoom
focus, ranging from a whole chapter devoted to a single text, to
surveys of a dozen or more texts in each of four chapters. A final
overview maps out a chronology and typology of Italian Australian
life writing relating it to immigrant life writing generally. Given
its topic, the book has a tightly integrated double analytical
focus. On the one hand, it studies the textual strategies deployed
by the writers, and, on the other hand, it explores the
experiential dimensions highlighted by the texts.
Oriana Fallaci (b. 1930) is an awkward presence on Italian
bookshelves, in world journalism and among feminists. This book,
the first literary study of Fallaci, examines the implications of
the storms and silences that she keeps rousing. A fully emancipated
and successful woman in the man's world of political journalism,
she has antagonised many feminists by her championship of
motherhood and her idolization of heroic manhood. In journalism,
her critics have felt that she has outraged the conventions of
interviewing and reporting. As a novelist, she shatters the
invisible diaphragm of literariness and is accused of betraying, or
simply failing, literature. This book focuses on Fallaci's direct
engagement as a writer with major political and social issues such
as women's liberation, Vietnam, Islamic fundamentalism and the
space programme. A distinctive and controversial feature of her
writing is the way in which she blurs the interface between
reportage and fiction in an attempt to obliterate the gap that
separates the word from the world.
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