Anna Radius Zuccari

Anna Radius Zuccari (May 7, 1846 July 13, 1918) was an Italian writer who used the pen name Neera.[1]

The daughter of Fermo Zuccari,[2] an architect, she was born Anna Zuccari in Milan and grew up in Caravaggio. Her mother died when she was ten and she was raised by two older unmarried aunts from her father's family.[1] Her father died when she was twenty. In 1871, she married the banker Emilio Radius.[2] She published her first short story in 1875 in the publication Il Pungolo. Zuccari contributed to various magazines and journals, such as Rivista d'Italia, Nuova Antologia, L'illustrazione italiana, La Lettura and L'Idea Liberale. In 1890, she founded the journal Vita Intima.[1]

Despite her career as a successful author, it was Zuccari's view that a woman's place was in the home, which she called "real feminism".[1]

She died in Milan of cancer at the age of 72, being confined to bed by her illness. During the period before her death, she dictated her memoirs which were published after her death as Una giovinezza del secolo XIX (Portrait of a 19th-century youth).[3]

Selected works[1][2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 Mitchell, Katharine. talian Women Writers: Gender and Everyday Life in Fiction and Journalism ... pp. 157–58.
  2. 1 2 3 Marrone, Gaetana; Puppa, Paolo (2006). Encyclopedia of Italian Literary Studies. pp. 1271–72. ISBN 1135455309.
  3. "Neera (1846-1918)". Italian Women Writers. University of Chicago Library.


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