Contested nationhood: Literary Geographies of contemporary Italian Alpine borders

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Date
2025
Authors
Turini, Jacopo
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University College Cork
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Abstract
This thesis examines the articulation of spatial identity, and the sense of nationhood as expressed in Italian literature set in the Alpine border regions from the 1980s to the present. It explores how the presence of the national border, along with its related geopolitical, cultural, and social dynamics, influences Italian-language literary production and the imagined geographies created by it. Texts provide insights into the geographical spaces they represent, while geography, in turn, influences the textual representation of place and spatial identity. Employing a geo-literary approach developed at the intersection of Literary Geography and Geocriticism, this study investigates how national, regional, and local belonging is expressed in selected works set in three Alpine border regions, in relation to the geo-social transformations that have occurred since the 1980s. These regions are the Piedmontese and Ligurian valleys along the Franco-Italian border, the Canton Ticino in Italian-speaking Switzerland, and the multilingual autonomous Italian region of South Tyrol. My geo-literary analysis identifies three types of textual geographies, that is, what emerges from the intersection of the places represented in the texts and the geographical contexts in which these texts are produced. Consequently, the thesis is divided into three chapters. Chapter 1, on the Franco-Italian border, focuses on what I term geographies of transgression. Through the analysis of Vento largo (1991) and Le parole la notte (1998) by Francesco Biamonti, Il mangiatore di pietre (2004) by Davide Longo, and Un viaggio che non promettiamo breve (2016) by Wu Ming 1, the chapter explores how representations of the areas’ traditional transnational identity become tools to address geopolitical and environmental issues and challenge the normative geographies of the nation-state. Chapter 2 examines the Canton Ticino in Italian-speaking Switzerland, analysing Adrea Fazioli’s crime fiction novels L’uomo senza casa (2008), La sparizione (2010), Gli svizzeri muoiono felici (2018), and Le strade oscure (2022); Alberto Nessi’s poetry, and his novel Tutti discendono (2000); and Fabio Pusterla’s poetry, beginning with his debut collection Concessione all’inverno (1985). Their representation of the industrialised and globalised border area between Italy and Switzerland delineates geographies of ambivalence, as I have labelled them, which reflect the region’s cultural marginality and, at the same time, express tension between rootedness and displacement. Chapter 3 focuses on South Tyrol through Francesca Melandri’s Eva dorme (2010), Maddalena Fingerle’s Lingua madre (2021), and Luca D’Andrea’s La sostanza del male (2016). The three writers’ relationship with the region is developed through what I have called geographies of detachment, which reflect a deliberate effort to distance themselves and their work from cultural isolationism and ethnonationalist localism, while critiquing the region’s rigid linguistic boundaries. The Italian Alps represent a complex border zone – sometimes porous and open, at other times closed and isolationist. The findings of this study reveal that the national border is addressed in contemporary Italian literature primarily through local and regional perspectives strongly tied to the experiences of autochthonous communities. Ultimately, this thesis argues that the Alpine borders are a crucial site for examining the tension between change and resistance in the evolution of Italian spatial identities and the sense of cultural and national belonging.
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Keywords
Italian literature , Literary Geography , Italian borders , Geocriticism , Spatial studies , Alps , Spatial identity
Citation
Turini, J. 2025. Contested nationhood: Literary Geographies of contemporary Italian Alpine borders. PhD Thesis, University College Cork.
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