Daniele Del Giudice
- European Union Prize for Literature (Movable Horizon, 2009)
Daniele Del Giudice (11 January 1949 – 2 September 2021) was an Italian author and lecturer. He lived in Venice, where he taught theatrical literature at the University Iuav of Venice.[1]
Biography
Born in Rome in 1949, Del Giudice researched avant-garde theatre first in Wrocław, Poland, and later political theatre, focusing on the Italian playwright and actor Dario Fo. He also worked for various newspapers, becoming an established essayist and literary critic. His first novel in 1983, Lo stadio di Wimbledon (Wimbledon Stadium) told the story of writer Roberto Balzen, who gives up writing to lead an active life. The novel was made into a film in 2002.[2] Del Giudice died on 2 September 2021 at the age of 72.[3]
Prizes
- Viareggio Prize (1983) (Opera Prima Narrativa)[4]
- Bergamo Prize (1986)[5]
- Bagutta Prize (1995)[6]
- Flaiano Prize (1995)[7]
- Selezione Premio Campiello (1995, 1997)
- Feltrinelli Prize (2002)[8]
- European Union Prize for Literature (2009)[1]
List of works
- The Wimbledon Stadium
- Atlante occidentale (1985) Translated by Norman MacAfee and Luigi Fontanella as Lines of Light (1988)
- Nel museo di Reims (1988)
- Taccuino Australe (1990) A 6-part diary of a journey to Antarctica, published in Corriere della Sera and Frankfurter Allgemeine Zeitung[9]
- Staccando l'ombra da terra (1994) Translated by Joseph Farrell as Takeoff: The Pilot's Lore (1996)
- Mania (1997)
- Orizzonte mobile (2009)
References
- ^ a b Europa - Twelve European Authors receive the European Union Prize for Literature
- ^ Daniele del Giudice [Italy]
- ^ STEFANO, PAOLO DI (2 September 2021). "È morto Daniele Del Giudice: nei suoi libri la leggerezza e il mistero". Corriere della Sera (in Italian). Archived from the original on 2 September 2021. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
- ^ Premio Letterario Viareggio-Rèpaci Archived 26 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Vincitori e finalisti di tutte le edizioni". Archived from the original on 24 March 2010. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
- ^ "Premio Bagutta". Archived from the original on 22 July 2011. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
- ^ Premio di Narrativa
- ^ "Premi "Antonio Feltrinelli" finora conferiti". Archived from the original on 28 July 2014. Retrieved 25 August 2010.
- ^ Biografia Daniele Del Giudice
External links
- Daniele del Giudice biography
- v
- t
- e
- Giovan Battista Angioletti (1927)
- Giovanni Comisso (1928)
- Vincenzo Cardarelli (1929)
- Gino Rocca (1930)
- Giovanni Titta Rosa (1931)
- Leonida Rèpaci (1932)
- Raul Radice (1933)
- Carlo Emilio Gadda (1934)
- Enrico Sacchetti (1935)
- Silvio Negro (1936)
- Dario Ortolani (1947)
- Pier Antonio Quarantotti Gambini (1948)
- Giulio Confalonieri (1949)
- Vitaliano Brancati (1950)
- Indro Montanelli (1951)
- Francesco Serantini (1952)
- Leonardo Borghese (1953)
- Giuseppe Marotta (1954)
- Alfonso Gatto (1955)
- Giuseppe Lanza (1956)
- Pier Angelo Soldini (1957)
- Lorenzo Montano (1958)
- Italo Calvino (1959)
- Enrico Emanuelli (1960)
- Giorgio Vigolo (1961)
- Giuseppe Dessì (1962)
- Ottiero Ottieri (1963)
- Tommaso Landolfi (1964)
- Biagio Marin (1965)
- Manlio Cancogni (1966)
- Primo Levi (1967)
- Piero Chiara (1968)
- Niccolò Tucci (1969)
- Alberto Vigevani (1970)
- Piero Gadda Conti (1971)
- Anna Banti (1972)
- Sergio Solmi (1973)
- Gianni Celati (1974)
- Enzo Forcella (1975)
- Mario Soldati (1976)
- Sandro Penna (1977)
- Carlo Cassola (1978)
- Mario Rigoni Stern (1979)
- Giovanni Macchia (1980)
- Pietro Citati (1981)
- Vittorio Sereni (1982)
- Giorgio Bassani (1983)
- Natalia Ginzburg (1984)
- Francesca Duranti (1985)
- Leonardo Sciascia (1986)
- Claudio Magris (1987)
- Luciano Erba (1988)
- Luigi Meneghello (1989)
- Fleur Jaeggy (1990)
- Livio Garzanti (1991)
- Giorgio Bocca (1992)
- Giovanni Giudici (1993)
- Alberto Arbasino (1994)
- Daniele Del Giudice (1995)
- Raffaello Baldini (1996)
- Sergio Ferrero (1997)
- Giovanni Raboni (1998)
- Fabio Carpi (1999)
- Andrea Zanzotto
- Mariano Bargellini (2000)
- Serena Vitale (2001)
- Roberto Calasso
- Giorgio Orelli (2002)
- Michele Mari
- Edoardo Sanguineti
- Eva Cantarella (2003)
- Franco Cordero (2004)
- Rosetta Loy (2005)
- Filippo Tuena
- Eugenio Borgna (2006)
- Alessandro Spina (2007)
- Andrej Longo (2008)
- Melania Gaia Mazzucco (2009)
- Corrado Stajano (2010)
- Andrea Bajani (2011)
- Gianfranco Calligarich and Giovanni Mariotti (2012)
- Antonella Tarpino (2013)
- Maurizio Cucchi and Valerio Magrelli (2014)
- Sandro Veronesi (2015)
- Paolo Di Stefano and Paolo Maurensig (2016)
- Vivian Lamarque (2017)
- Helena Janeczek (2018)
- Marco Balzano (2019)
- Enrico Deaglio (2020)
- Giorgio Fontana (2021)
- Benedetta Craveri (2022)
![]() ![]() | This biographical article about an Italian writer or poet is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e