Nadia Cavalera

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Nadia Cavalera (born 20 September 1950 in Galatone, Lecce) is an Italian novelist, poet[1] and literary critic.[2][3][4]

Cavalera attended the Liceo Classico "Palmieri" de Lecce and earned a bachelor's degree in Philosophy in the Università di Lecce, with the thesis "Democrazia e socialismo nel giovane Marx". She started her political activity in PCI when she was 20 years old. She worked in Brindisi for 12 years and since 1988, she has lived and worked as a teacher in Modena. She founded Brindisi's first entirely literary magazine, Gheminga.[5] In 1990, she and the poet Edoardo Sanguineti founded and became editors of the journal Bollettario: quadrimestrale di scrittura e critica,[6][7] issued three times a year, which is a publication of literature and literary criticism of the cultural association "Le avanguardie". The association proposes an avant-garde philosophy that can be permanent, non-elitist and open to the concept of umafeminità (a mix of uomo, man and feminità, femininity, a concept which sees men and women as equal despite their differences). In 2005, she founded the literary prize Premio Alessandro Tassoni, which is administered by the University of Modena and Reggio Emilia.[8][9]

Publications[edit]

Prose[edit]

  • I palazzi di Brindisi – Schena, Fasano, 1986
  • Nottilabio - Roma, La città della luna, 1995

Poetry[edit]

  • Vita Novissima, Modena, Bollettariolibri, 1992
  • Americanata, Modena, Bollettariolibri, 1993
  • Ecce Femina, Napoli, Altri termini, 1994
  • Brogliasso, Modena, Gheminga, 1996
  • Salentudine, Venezia, Marsilio, 2004
  • Superrealisticallegoricamente, Roma, Fermenti, 2005; Premio L'Aquila - Carispaq.

Wordvisual works[edit]

  • Imprespressioni, 1970
  • Adriana, 1972
  • Golphe de Genes, 1975
  • Sospensioni, 1980
  • Amsirutuf: enimma, 1988
  • I prestanomi: uomini senza, 1993
  • La città della luna, 1997

Catalogues[edit]

  • Superrealismo allegorico, Modena, 1993
  • Superrealismo allegorico, Modena,1995
  • Superrealismo allegorico, Modena,1997
  • Superrealismo allegorico, Modena,1999

Books about artists[edit]

  • Il capo: lavoro, romanzo senza parole, 1991
  • Stundaia, 1995

References[edit]

  1. ^ Anthony Contilia (poetry reviewer), Spoesie, pp. 86 EUR 10, Enzymes, 2010,L '"argot" poetic Nadia Cavalera, Retrieved Aug. 30, 2014
  2. ^ Di Luigi Carotenuto, In Poetry, March 5, 2013, Nadia Cavalera. The astutica ergocratica, Retrieved Aug. 30, 2014
  3. ^ di MICHELE BOMBACIGNO, Giovedì, 26 Giugno 2014, Senza Colonne News (Italy),Nadia Cavalera, i suoi Palazzi di Brindisi e quegli articoli scritti negli anni Ottanta. Oppure oggi?, Retrieved Aug. 30, 2014
  4. ^ JUNE 16, 2014, MAZARACULT, Liquida TV (Italian news source),[1], Retrieved Aug. 30, 2014, "...The Prize "Tassoni" this year (14 June 2014), designed and edited by the poet Nadia Cavalera , in its ninth year, has given the award "honorary..."
  5. ^ Bonaffini, Luigi. "Nadia Cavalera". Italian Dialect Poetry. Journal of Italian Translation. Retrieved 25 September 2014.
  6. ^ "Informazioni/Bollettario".
  7. ^ Fuoco, Michele (Nov 16, 2010). "La casa di Nadia Cavalera diventa un foyer culturale". Gazzetta de Modena.
  8. ^ "Premio letterario Alessandro Tassoni". Provincia di Pisa.
  9. ^ Michele Fuoco (26 April 2014). "Il Tassoni cambia corso e diventa un reading annuale". Gazzetta di Modena. Retrieved Aug 30, 2014.

External links[edit]