Italo Svevo, born Aron Hector Schmitz, is recognized as a pioneer of the psychological novel in Italy. His works, particularly the celebrated modernist novel 'Zeno's Conscience,' significantly impacted the literary movement and established him as a distinctive voice. Svevo delved into the complexities of the human psyche with penetrating introspection. His writing is marked by a profound exploration of his characters' inner lives.
First published in 1893, this novel is concerned with the bourgeois soul and its inability to will or act. The heroes are typically men of business, but with cultural pretensions and he depicts them in their free time when they are not working.
A newly translated collection of fiction by the influential Italian modernist, continuing on his landmark work Zeno's Conscience. A Very Old Man collects five linked stories, parts of an unfinished novel that the great Triestine Italo Svevo wrote at the end of his life, after the international success of Zeno’s Conscience in 1923. Here Svevo revisits with new vigor and agility themes that fascinated him from the start—aging, deceit, and self-deception, as well as the fragility, fecklessness, and plain foolishness of the bourgeois paterfamilias—even as memories of the recent, terrible slaughter of World War I and the contemporary rise of Italian fascism also cast a shadow over the book’s pages. It opens with “The Contract,” in which Zeno’s manager, the hardheaded young Olivi, expresses, like the war veterans who were Mussolini’s early followers, a sense of entitlement born of fighting in the trenches. Zeno, by contrast, embodies the confusion and paralysis of the more decorous, although sleepy, way of life associated with the onetime Austro-Hungarian Empire which for so long ruled over Trieste but has now been swept away. As always, Svevo is attracted to the theme of how people fail to fit in. It is they, he suggests, who offer a recognizably human countenance in a world ravaged by the ambitions and fantasies of its true believers.
This enormously engaging, strange novel is both an engrossing saga of a family and a hilarious account of addiction and failure as its helpless hero, notionally undergoing psychiatric help, manages spectacularly to fail to give up smoking, run his business or make sense of his private life.A hymn to self-delusion and procrastination ZENO'S CONSCIENCE has provoked enormous affection in its readers both in Italian and English since its first publication in the 1920s.
Not so long ago Emilio Brentani was a promising young author. Now he is an insurance agent on the fast track to forty. He gains a new lease on life, though, when he falls for the young and gorgeous Angiolina - except that his angel just happens to be an unapologetic cheat. But what begins as a comedy of infatuated misunderstanding turns darker, as Emilio's jealous persistence in his folly - against his friends' and devoted sister's advice, and even his own best knowledge - may lead to severe consequences in his other relationships. Marked by deep humanity and earthy humor, by psychological insight and an elegant simplicity of style, As a Man Grows Older (Senilità, in Italian; the English title was the suggestion of Svevo's great friend and admirer, James Joyce) is a brilliant study of hopeless love and hapless indecision. It is a masterwork of Italian literature, here beautifully rendered into English in Beryl de Zoete's classic translation.
Eigentlich Ettore Schmitz, geboren am 19. Dezember 1861 in Triest. Besuchte eine deutsche Schule (Segnitz bei Würzburg), erhielt eine kaufmännische Ausbildung in Triest, wurde Bankangestellter und später Unternehmer. Seine ersten beiden Romane setzten sich nicht durch. Entdeckt und gefördert wurde er erst durch James Joyce und Valéry Larbaud. Noch vor dem Durchbruch der Psychoanalyse machte Svevo die psychologische Erforschung des Durchschnittsmenschen und seiner banalen Existenz zum Stoff seiner Romane, in denen er auch bereits die Technik des Bewustseinsstromes ausbildete. Er gilt heute neben Joyce, Proust, Kafka und Musil als bahnbrechender Erzähler der modernen Weltliteratur. Italo Svevo kam am 13. September 1928 bei einem Autounfall ums Leben.
Italo Svevo erzählt in seinem Roman ironisch gebrochen die Geschichte eines amourösen Abenteuers, aus dem der risikoscheue Liebhaber als Verlierer hervorgeht. Nachdem es Svevo gelungen war, seinen Roman zu veröffentlichen, zeigte er ihn verschämt seinem Englischlehrer James Joyce, der derart begeistert war, daß er sofort ganze Passagen auswendig lernte.
Eigentlich Ettore Schmitz, geboren am 19. Dezember 1861 in Triest. Besuchte eine deutsche Schule (Segnitz bei Würzburg), erhielt eine kaufmännische Ausbildung in Triest, wurde Bankangestellter und später Unternehmer. Seine ersten beiden Romane setzten sich nicht durch. Entdeckt und gefördert wurde er erst durch James Joyce und Valéry Larbaud. Noch vor dem Durchbruch der Psychoanalyse machte Svevo die psychologische Erforschung des Durchschnittsmenschen und seiner banalen Existenz zum Stoff seiner Romane, in denen er auch bereits die Technik des Bewustseinsstromes ausbildete. Er gilt heute neben Joyce, Proust, Kafka und Musil als bahnbrechender Erzähler der modernen Weltliteratur.Italo Svevo kam am 13. September 1928 bei einem Autounfall ums Leben.
Incoraggiato dal genio di James Joyce, e sostenuto da Montale in un momento in cui era ignorato dalla critica, Ettore Schmitz, in arte Italo Svevo, è oggi considerato uno dei più importanti narratori italiani del primo Novecento. Questo volume raccoglie i racconti che scrisse nell’arco della sua intensa attività letteraria, stroncata dal terribile incidente stradale in cui perse la vita il 13 settembre del 1928. Da La tribù (1897) a Il vecchione, rimasto incompiuto e pubblicato postumo, passando per testi come L’assassino di via Belpoggio (1890), La madre (1924), Una burla riuscita (1926), Vino generoso (1927), l’antologia riassume tutte le tematiche che hanno contraddistinto l’opera del grande autore triestino: l’inettitudine e la mediocrità piccolo borghese, i vizi e le nevrosi dell’uomo comune. Un testo fondamentale che svela, tra l’altro, pagina dopo pagina, l’importanza dell’incontro tra l’autore e la psicoanalisi.