Table of contents

Table of Contents

Acknowledgements

iv

List of Illustrations

v

Introduction

1

1. The Country and the City: Vertigo and Legendary Psychasthenia
in Tozzi's Tuscany

31

2. Palazzeschi's Spaces of Difference: The Materassi Sisters at the Window

78

3. Vasco Pratolini's Florentine Spaces of Exclusion

119

4. The Stendhal Syndrome, or The Horror of Being Foreign in Florence

162

5. 'Going Native': Tuscan Houses and Italian Others in Contemporary
American Travel Writing

219

6. The Tuscan Countryside: Nature and the (Non)Domestic in
Elena Gianini Belotti

260

Afterword: Further Tuscan Spaces of Alterity

298

Works Cited

307

 

Description

An important locus for English-speaking writers, the region of Tuscany is also well represented in the Italian literary canon. In Tuscan Spaces, Silvia Ross focuses on constructions of Tuscany in twentieth-century Italian literature and juxtaposes them with English prose works by such authors as E.M. Forster and Frances Mayes to expose the complexity of literary representation centred on a single milieu.

Ross uses the works of writers such as Federigo Tozzi, Aldo Palazzeschi, Vasco Pratolini, and Elena Gianini Belotti, to seek out alternative visions of Tuscan space and emphasizes that each author fashions the region in a manner which reflects their personal poetics, background, and experiences. Theories of cultural geography, space, travel, and narrative contribute to Ross's consideration of the dualisms commonly employed in writings about Tuscany, such as country/city, nature/culture, female/male, and self/other, all of which are in turn affected by her interrogation of the local/foreign opposition that underlies the study as a whole.

Reviews

‘This book presents readers with a number of innovative representations of the region… A well written and interesting book that provides historical context and geographical specificity to a subject that has long engaged writers, directors, tourists, and literary theorists.’

- Elisabetta Tesser