Corrado Govoni (Tàmara, Copparo, 29 October 1884 – Lido dei Pini, 20 October 1965).[1] was an Italian poet. His work dealt with modern urban representations, the states of memory, nostalgia, and longing, using an expressive and evocative style of writing.[2]

Biography

Corrado Govoni was an Italian poet whose work emphasized "the minutiae of daily life".[3] Prolific author,[4] he can be considered as a member of both: the crepuscolari, or "twilight poets," and of the futurist movement.[5] In Florence, as a young man, Govoni met the poet Giovanni Papini, who helped him to publish his first book of poems, Le fiale, in 1903, a volume "full of exotic images, difficult and rare rhymes, and unusual lexicon interspersed with archaic vocabulary".[6]

Govoni’s works, during his long literary career, exhibits characteristics of many different literary currents and styles: while his early poems exhibited a ‘liberty-symbolism’, later in his career their style shifts towards crepuscolarsimo and futurism.[7]

In 1944 he experienced the loss of his son, Aladino Govoni, killed by nazi-fascists.[8] In 1950 Govoni won the Viareggio Prize for poetry.[9]

Selected works

Poetry

Prose

Bibliography

References

  1. ^ "Govóni, Corrado nell'Enciclopedia Treccani".
  2. ^ Capello, Francesco (2009). "The City as the Fragmented Mirror of Poetry: Corrado Govoni's Early Works (1903–1915)". The Modern Language Review. 104 (2): 401–420. doi:10.1353/mlr.2009.0128. JSTOR 25654862. S2CID 246641302.
  3. ^ Germano, Joseph E. In Dictionary of Literary Biography. Vol. 114: Twentieth-Century Italian Poets, Thomson Gale (Detroit, MI), 1992.
  4. ^ Peritore, Giuseppe Angelo (1954). "Corrado Govoni". Belfagor. 9 (6): 654–665. JSTOR 26068695.
  5. ^ "Manifesto of Futurism | work by Marinetti | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
  6. ^ Joseph E. Germano in the Dictionary of Literary Biography
  7. ^ "Govoni". imalpensanti.it. Retrieved 2023-05-29.
  8. ^ "Aladino Govoni : medaglia d'oro al V.M. (trucidato alle Fosse Ardeatine il 24-3- 1944) : discorsi commemorativi nel XIX anniversario della morte - OPAC - Biblioteca nazionale di Firenze". opac.bncf.firenze.sbn.it. Archived from the original on 2023-09-06. Retrieved 2022-05-28.
  9. ^ "Premio Letterario Viareggio Rèpaci". www.premioletterarioviareggiorepaci.it.