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Conquering the city: The representation of Milan in Massimo Bontempelli's La vita operosa
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 January 2016
Summary
The article focuses on the representation of Milan in Massimo Bontempelli's 1920 short novel La vita operosa. In this novel the protagonist-narrator, a writer and journalist returning to Milan after the end of the war, is confronted with a city which has lost all its points of reference and has turned into a place dominated by the ethics of speed and profit. In this context, the protagonist's adventures in Milan assume the features of an ironic and self-ironic journey of discovery for the letterato who finds himself having to redefine his identity and role in a society whose taste and values have profoundly changed.
- Type
- Research Article
- Information
- Modern Italy , Volume 7 , Issue 2: Special Issue: gender and the private sphere in Italy since 1945 , November 2002 , pp. 189 - 199
- Copyright
- Copyright © Association for the study of Modern Italy
References
Notes
∗ I would like to thank Lumley, Robert, Diffley, Paul and Davie, Mark for their comments on a previous draft of this article.Google Scholar
1. On the contextualization of the novel within the periodical see Namer, Fulvia Airoldi, ‘Massimo Bontempelli: una vita intensamente inoperosa’, in Letteratura e industria , Olschki, Florence, 1997, Vol. II, pp. 681–706. All the references and citations from the novel are taken from Massimo Bontempelli, La vita intensa. La vita operosa, Mondadori, Milan, 1998. All the translations from the text are my own.Google Scholar
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14. Bontempelli, , La vita operosa , p. 160.Google Scholar
15. It is worth remembering that in 1926 Bontempelli defined irony not only, as already seen, as detachment and lucidity, but also as ‘transition from the concept of the work of art as subject to that of the work of art as object’ (‘Fondements’, p. 11), Glielmo, , La traversata dell'ironia , p. 46.Google Scholar
16. Bontempelli, , La vita operosa , pp. 157–158.Google Scholar
17. Ibid. , pp. 158–159.Google Scholar
18. Ibid. , p. 159.Google Scholar
19. Ibid. , p. 160.Google Scholar
20. Ibid. , p. 166.Google Scholar
21. Ibid. , p. 160.Google Scholar
22. Ibid. , p. 215.Google Scholar
23. Ibid. , p. 161.Google Scholar
24. Ibid. , p. 161.Google Scholar
25. Ibid. , p. 162.Google Scholar
26. Ibid. , p. 164.Google Scholar
27. Ibid. , p. 164.Google Scholar
28. The narrator adds: ‘Every now and then I stopped in ecstasy amongst the shouting crowd and I could hardly refrain myself from bursting out in admiration for mankind’, La vita operosa , p. 165. Although in Bontempelli's protagonist this excitement is partially due to the participation in the ‘desire to live’ which characterizes post-war Italy, the feeling of empowerment created by being in the midst of the city traffic has been described by Berman as yet another mode of adaptation to metropolitan reality. He quotes Le Corbusier: ‘On that 1st October, 1924, I was assisting in the titanic rebirth … of a new phenomenon … traffic. Cars, cars, fast, fast! One is seized, filled with enthusiasm, with joy … the joy of power. The simple and naive pleasure of being in the midst of power, of strength. One participates in it. One takes part in this society that is just dawning. One has confidence in this new society: it will find a magnificent expression of its power. One believes in it’, Berman, All That is Solid, p. 166.Google Scholar
29. Bontempelli, , La vita operosa , p. 165.Google Scholar
30. Ibid. , p. 167.Google Scholar
31. Ibid. , p. 168.Google Scholar
32. Ibid. , p. 203.Google Scholar
33. Ibid. , p. 212.Google Scholar
34. Ibid. , p. 214.Google Scholar
35. Ibid., p. 218; on the myth of Milan as the ‘moral capital’ of Italy see Spinazzola, Vittorio, ‘La “capitale morale”. Cultura milanese e mitologia urbana’, Belfagor , 36, 3, 1981, pp. 317–327.Google Scholar
36. Bontempelli, , La vita operosa , pp. 176–177.Google Scholar
37. Ibid. , p. 183.Google Scholar
38. Ibid. , p. 187.Google Scholar
39. Ibid. , p. 190.Google Scholar
40. Ibid. , p. 198.Google Scholar
41. See Spinazzola, , “‘La capitale morale”’, p. 326.Google Scholar
42. Namer, Airoldi, ‘Massimo Bontempelli’, p. 687.Google Scholar
43. Galateria, Mascia, ‘Parodia, paradosso e qualche favilla di verità’, p. 311.Google Scholar
44. Baldacci, Luigi, Massimo Bontempelli , Borla, Turin, 1967, p. 35. See also Baldacci, , ‘Massimo Bontempelli’, in Branca, Vittore (ed.), Dizionario critico della letteratura Italiana, vol. 1, UTET, Turin, 1974, pp. 383–387.Google Scholar
45. Despite the critical attitude towards Milanese society, Bontempelli avoids assuming a specifically political stance. Significant, in this respect, is the beginning of Chapter Six, where the protagonist is the impartial witness of a clash between Communists and Fascists. Having managed to find shelter from the excited crowd and having realized that his packet of cigarettes had been destroyed in the riot his only comment to the situation is: ‘This is something I am sorry about!’, La vita operosa , p. 240.Google Scholar
46. Pike, Burton, The Image of the City in Modern Literature , Princeton University Press, Princeton, NJ, 1981, p. 4.Google Scholar