A complex game of liberation and domination: <i>Il Gattopardo</i>, Sicilian oblivion, and Simonetta Agnello Hornby

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Gregoria Manzin
Mark Nicholls
Annamaria Pagliaro

Abstract

This article stands as a preamble to the collection of essays contained in the present issue of Spunti e Ricerche. The 60th anniversary of the publication of Il Gattopardo (1958) offered the occasion to call on scholars for a discussion on Sicily as a locus to explore trans-historical issues of political and social cohesion. The novel and Visconti’s film were not the sole focus of the resulting 2018 symposium; they were equally deployed as an opening into a broader discourse on Sicilian matters. This contribution examines Simonetta Agnello Hornby’s novel La Mennulara, in its three versions: the original debut novel (2002), the expanded edition (2019), and the graphic novel created by Massimo Fenati (2008). It serves to highlight how the narrative work of Agnello Hornby, as a contemporary Sicilian writer, exemplifies the intertextuality and importance of place of the Sicilian literary discourse: her continuation and rupture with the celebrated Sicilian historical novel speaks for a culture of resilience and resistance; a place where the tension between domination and liberation never fade from view.

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How to Cite
Manzin, G., Nicholls, M., & Pagliaro, A. (2021). A complex game of liberation and domination: <i>Il Gattopardo</i>, Sicilian oblivion, and Simonetta Agnello Hornby. Spunti E Ricerche, 34, 8–21. Retrieved from https://www.spuntiericerche.com/index.php/spuntiericerche/article/view/707
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