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2026 marks the 110th anniversary of the birth of Natalia Ginzburg (1916–1991), one of the most influential voices in twentieth‑century Italian literature. Her work—spanning fiction, memoir, theater, journalism, and political writing—continues to shape contemporary understandings of family, language, memory, and civic responsibility. To honor this anniversary, we invite scholars from literature, history, cultural studies, translation studies, gender studies, and adjacent fields to submit proposals that explore Ginzburg’s legacy, influence, and ongoing relevance.
Natalia Ginzburg is one of Italy’s most incisive and deceptively understated twentieth‑century writers, whose literary voice blends clarity and restraint with moral urgency. Her unique ability to illuminate the private sphere as a site shaped by history, fascism, war, and social constraint shines through novels, essays, memoirs, and political commentary. Primarily known as a chronicler of family life, Ginzburg also reveals the quiet forms of resistance embedded in ordinary human relationships. Her stark honesty and unwavering moral perspective speak urgently to contemporary debates about memory, identity, and social responsibility.
Proposals may address (but are not limited to) the following themes:
Techniques of understatement and emotional restraint; Humor, irony, and the ethics of simplicity in Ginzburg’s prose; Representations of domestic life and everyday objects; “Lessico famigliare” and the intersection of memory and language; Intimacy, kinship, and self-writing; Ginzburg as public intellectual and member of Parliament; Postwar Italian society and cultural reconstruction; Ambivalence toward feminist movements; Motherhood, marriage, and the roles of women in her work; Writing as moral practice; The ethics of witnessing and testimony; Memory, trauma, and silence in her fiction and nonfiction.
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