Paola Drigo

Paola Drigo
Born Paolina Valeria Maria Bianchetti
(1876-01-04)4 January 1876
Castelfranco Veneto, Italy
Died 4 January 1938(1938-01-04) (aged 62)
Padua, Italy
Occupation Writer
Spouse Giulio Giovanni Drigo (m. 1898; wid. 1922)
Children Paolo Drigo

Paola (née Bianchetti) Drigo (4 January 1876 – 4 January 1938) was an Italian writer of short stories, novellas, and novels. Her first collection of short stories, La fortuna, was published in 1913 and caught the attention of literary critics and the public. Her last major works were two novels, Fine d'anno and Maria Zef, both published in 1936. With a style rooted in 19th century Italian realism, she was admired for the detailed psychological analysis of her characters and her descriptions of provincial life in her native Veneto region. The protagonists of her stories (usually women) were people of humble origin or those who had been "humiliated by fate".[1]

Life

Drigo was born Paolina Valeria Maria Bianchetti in Castelfranco Veneto. Her father was Count Giuseppe Valerio Bianchetti who had fought with Garibaldi, later becoming a minor literary and political figure. Her mother, Luigia Anna Loro Biasnchetti, was the daughter of a lawyer and member of the Italian Parliament. Paolino was educated first at the Liceo Canova in Treviso, where she was the first female student in the school's history, and she completed her studies at the Scuola Normale in Padua.[2]

In 1898 she married the engineer and agronomist Giulio Giovanni Drigo. Her first and only surviving child, their son Paolo, was born a year later.[3] A daughter soon followed but died only a few days after her birth, an episode later alluded to in Drigo's autobiographical novel, Fine d'anno.[4] The couple initially lived in a palazzo on the Piazza del Santo in Padua but in 1900 moved to Mussolente where Giulio had bought the Ca' Soderini, a large villa and farming estate with one of the largest and most important parks in the Veneto region.[5] Until the beginning of the First World War, Paola Drigo spent the winter seasons in Rome where she was active in several literary salons. By 1912 her stories and novellas began to appear in La Lettura (published by the Corriere della Sera). Her first collection of stories, La fortuna, was published by Emilio Treves in 1913. The favorable reaction of both critics and the public led to regular collaborations with two other Italian literary magazines, Nuova Antologia and L'Illustrazione Italiana.[6]

With the outbreak of the First World War in 1914, she returned to Mussolente. Another collection of stories, Codino, was published in 1918. Although she continued to contribute stories and articles to several Italian periodicals, she published no further books until 1932. The intervening years were marked by an increasingly strained relationship with her son and by her husband's lengthy and debilitating illness. After his death in 1922, she assumed the administration of their estate while making frequent trips to Rome, Milan, and Padua.[7] Her third collection of stories, La signorina Anna, was published in 1932, followed in 1936 by the publication of her only novels, Fine d'anno and Maria Zef.

She eventually settled in Padua, and spent her final year there. Suffering from depression and a severe gastric ulcer which caused frequent violent hemorrhages, she was largely confined to her bed in a room overlooking the Bacchiglione River. Her last piece, "Finistre sul fiume" ("Windows on the River"), published in the Corriere della Sera on 18 August 1937 was written from her hospital bed. The tale's protagonist reflects on her illness and impending death.[8][9] The piece ends with:

No, I'm not ready yet. O my God, let me stay here a little longer.[10]

Paola Drigo died in Padua six months later on her 62nd birthday. She was buried near her villa in Mussolente, attended by a few relatives and her close friend the poet and writer, Manara Valgimigli.[11] After the funeral Valgimigli wrote to their mutual friend Pietro Pancrazi:[12]

In these days I have often thought about our friend's harsh death and her strong will to live. If I were sure that it was praise, I would say that she was a woman who was truly a man.[13]

Works

Short story collections[14]

Novels

Non-fiction

Modern curated editions of Drigo's fiction

References

  1. Bocelli, Arnaldo (1938). "Drigo, Paola". Enciclopedia Italiana (Appendice I). Treccani. Online version retrieved 15 September 2014 (Italian).
  2. Il Messaggero Veneto (30 December 2003). "Con il romanzo di Paola Drigo si conclude la prima serie". Retrieved 15 September 2014 (Italian).
  3. Paolo Drigo (1899–1968) became a writer, philologist, and geographer. He was a close colleague of the Italian fascist and nationalist, Ettore Tolomei and for some time was the editor-in-chief of the journal Archivio per l' Alto Adige founded by Tolomei in 1906. See Garobbio, Aurelio (1998). A colloquio con il Duce, p. 71. Ugo Mursia. ISBN 8842524220 (Italian)
  4. Larco, Ioana Raluca (2011). "A Journey Beyond Fascist Models: Fine d'anno by Paola Drigo", pp. 3–30 in Larco, I. and Cecchini, F. (eds.) Italian Women and Autobiography: Ideology, Discourse and Identity in Female Life Narratives from Fascism to the Present. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. ISBN 1443826553
  5. Simone, Giulia (2012). Il guardasigilli del regime: l'itinerario politico e culturale di Alfredo Rocco, pp. 70–71. FrancoAngeli. ISBN 8856849313 (Italian)
  6. Barletta, Maurizia (1968). "Bianchetti, Paola". Dizionario Biografico degli Italiani, Vol. 10 (1968). Treccani. Online version retrieved 16 September 2014 (Italian).
  7. Marola, Barbara (2003). Fuori norma: scrittrici italiane del primo Novecento: Vittoria Aganoor, Paola Drigo, Rosa Rosà, Lina Pietravalle, pp. 71–73. L. Tufani. ISBN 888678046X (Italian)
  8. De Fanis, Maria (2001). Geografie letterarie: il senso del luogo nell'alto Adriatico, pp. 143, 153. Meltemi. ISBN 8883530942 (Italian)
  9. Kirschenbaum, Blossom Steinberg (1991). "Paola Drigo". An Encyclopedia of Continental Women Writers, Vol. 1, pp. 333–4. Routledge. ISBN 0824085477
  10. Quoted in Marola p. 73. Original Italian: "No, non sono pronta. Lasciami qui ancora un poco, o mio Dio"
  11. Valgimigli, Manara and Pancrazi, Pietro (2003). Storia di un'amicizia (edited and annotated by Maria Vittoria Ghezzo), pp. 46–47. Lampi di stampa. ISBN 8848801536 (Italian)
  12. Pietro Pancrazi (1893–1952) was a prominent literary critic and writer.
  13. Valgimigli and Pancrazi p. 46. Original Italian: "Ci ho pensato spesso questi giorni, alla dura fine della nostra amica e a quella sua dura voglia di vivere. Se fossi sicuro che e un elogio direi che quella donna era veramente un uomo."
  14. All sections in this bibliography are sourced from Zambon, Patrizia. "Paola Bianchetti". Le Autrici della Letteratura Italiana. Università degli Studi di Padova. Retrieved 16 September 2014 (Italian).

External links

Full texts of Drigo's early illustrated short stories in the original Italian (scanned by the Braidense National Library):

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