Home / Arts / Books /  The Pursuit of Italy: A History of a Land, its Regions, and their...
  Share
Monday, January 23,2012

The Pursuit of Italy: A History of a Land, its Regions, and their Peoples (Farrar, Straus & Giroux), by David Gilmour

By David Luhrssen
 
A dull author makes for dry history; happily, there is nothing dull in David Gilmour's lucid history of a nation created from many parts. Most Americans are vaguely aware of Italy's north-south divide if only from the vogue for “northern Italian” (i.e. no tomato sauce) cuisine. Gilmour's central thesis is the problem of finding (or imposing) unity in a land of local cultures, many with roots of centuries if not thousands of years. Regions and cities were often at odds with one another and until relatively recently, most Italians scarcely shared a common language. Gilmour is willing on every page to challenge clichéd notions of Italy's past, most of them promulgated by the cliques of nationalists who achieved Italian unity in the 19th century, evidently against the will (or apathy) of most of the land's inhabitants.

 

POST A COMMENT
 
 
Today in Milwaukee
CityGuide2012_banner_410x93_040512.jpg
SpringGuideToHigherEd2012_410x93.jpg
SAG_Click2012.jpg
Express234x120.gif

Join Us at Facebook, Twitter, MySpace and Flickr


 
 
 
*/?>