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Description

Italian writer and filmmaker Gianni Celati’s 1989 philosophical travelogue Towards the River’s Mouth explores perception, memory, place and space as it recounts a series of journeys across the Po River Valley in northern Italy. The book seeks to document the “new Italian landscape” where divisions between the urban and rural were being blurred into what Celati terms “a new variety of countryside where one breathes an air of urban solitude.” Celati traveled by train, by bus, and on foot, at times with photographer Luigi Ghirri, at others exploring on his own without predetermined itineraries, taking notes on the places he encountered, watching and listening to people in stations, fields, bars, houses, squares, and hotels. In this way the book took shape as Celati traveled and wrote, gathering and rewriting his notes into “stories of observation” (9). Celati attempts to find meaning by seeking the uncertain limits of our ability to discern everyday surroundings. “Every observation,” as he puts it, “needs liberate itself from the familiar codes it carries, to go adrift in the middle of all things not understood, in order to arrive at an outlet, where it must feel lost.”

At the forefront of the then-nascent spatial turn in the humanities, Towards the River’s Mouth is a key text of what in recent years has been variously termed literary cartography, literary geography, and spatial poetics. Its call to carefully and affectionately examine our surroundings while attempting to step back from habitual ways of perceiving and moving through space, has resonated as much with literary scholars and other writers as with geographers and architects. By now a classic of twentieth-century Italian literature, it has in recent years garnered increasing attention, especially with the growth of ecocriticism and new materialism within the environmental humanities.

This edition, translated into English for the first time, features an introduction that places Towards the River’s Mouth in the context of Celati’s other work, and a selection of ten scholarly essays by prominent figures in comparative literature and Italian studies.

Table of Contents

List of Figures

Acknowledgments

Introduction, Patrick Barron

Towards the River’s Mouth, Gianni Celati

1“Gianni Celati’s Towards the River’s Mouth: The Experience of Place between Writing and Photography,” Marina Spunta

2“Sight, Language, Time: To be Surrounded by the World,” Monica Seger

3“Gianni Celati’s Strada Provinciale delle anime: A ‘Silent’ Film About ‘Nothing,’” Rebecca West

4“The Posthuman Imagination of Gianni Celati’s Cinema,” Matteo Gilebbi

5“Restoring the Imagination of Place: Narrative Reinhabitation and the Po Valley,” Serenella Iovino

6“Forms of Impegno in Towards the River’s Mouth,” Michele Ronchi Stefanati

7“Witnessing the Po River: Disorientation and Estrangement in Primo Levi and Gianni Celati,” Damiano Benvegnù 8“A Tale of Two Giannis: Writing as Rememoration,” Thomas Harrison

9“Walking in the Open Enchanted by the Overheard: Two Reflections on Towards the River’s Mouth,” Massimo Rizzante

10“Introduction toPaesology,”Franco Arminio

Index

About the Contributors

Product details

Published 03 Dec 2018
Format Ebook (Epub & Mobi)
Edition 1st
Extent 236
ISBN 9781498566025
Imprint Lexington Books
Illustrations 8 b/w photos;
Series Ecocritical Theory and Practice
Publisher Bloomsbury Publishing

About the contributors

Anthology Editor

Patrick Barron

Patrick Barron is associate professor of English a…

Contributor

Marina Spunta

Contributor

Monica Seger

Contributor

Rebecca West

Contributor

Matteo Gilebbi

Contributor

Thomas Harrison

Contributor

Franco Arminio

Introduction

Patrick Barron

Patrick Barron is associate professor of English a…

Translator

Patrick Barron

Patrick Barron is associate professor of English a…

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