Title Information
Title
Moving Thresholds: Liminal Writing in the Italian Diaspora
Name: Personal
Name Part
Ferraro, Eveljn
Role
Role Term: Text
creator
Origin Information
Copyright Date
2010
Physical Description
Extent
vii, 226 p.
digitalOrigin
born digital
Note
Thesis (Ph.D. -- Brown University (2010)
Name: Personal
Name Part
Riva, Massimo
Role
Role Term: Text
Director
Name: Personal
Name Part
Stewart-Steinberg, Suzanne
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Personal
Name Part
Fiore, Teresa
Role
Role Term: Text
Reader
Name: Corporate
Name Part
Brown University. Italian Studies
Role
Role Term: Text
sponsor
Genre (aat)
theses
Abstract
This dissertation investigates Italian national identity through the cultures produced by twentieth-century migrations to English-speaking North America. It addresses questions of human mobility and related identity crises and practices of resistance in texts that belong to and expand the framework of Italian Studies. My project adopts the interdisciplinary model of "moving thresholds," a spatial metaphor of crossing relying on anthropological, geographical, philosophical, and sociological theorizations of space and liminality. This condition of being on the threshold - as embodied by the ambiguous spaces that migrants inhabit - challenges essentialist notions of Italian national identity and encourages a dynamic and transnational approach to borders. I focus on multiple literary manifestations of liminality (geographical, ethnic, racial, generational, cultural) and on the writing space as a site of crossings. Five autobiographical and fictional novels, a memoir, and a film, produced in different geo-cultural contexts, are read as interconnected elements of a transnational network within which they participate in a boundary-breaking operation of migration and identity. Centered on Italy, U.S. and Canada as places of departure and arrival, these texts raise issues of identity relevant to the current status of Italy as a receiving nation. As such, this dissertation considers emigration and immigration, infrequently tied together in the analysis of Italian identity, as connected phenomena. Chapter 1 investigates the poetics of suspension that Italian Jewish author Ebe Cagli Seidenberg elaborated in a series of little-known novels that she wrote after leaving Rome due to the 1938 racial laws. In Chapter 2, through Frank G. Paci's works, I explore generational liminality and the challenge of re-tracing cultural traditions for Italian migrants' children in post-World War II Canada. In Chapter 3, I turn to Kym Ragusa's memoir to examine racial liminality and the author's project of cultural bridging between two Southern diasporas originating in the Mediterranean. I conclude with Amelio's Lamerica to reflect on the shifting role of Italy in current global migrations, and self-reflexively, on the writing space of my dissertation, which, by crossing disciplinary boundaries, suggests new approaches to migration in the humanities.
Subject
Topic
Italian national identity
Subject
Topic
Italian migration
Subject
Topic
Diaspora
Subject
Topic
Transnational
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/980660")
Topic
Italian literature
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/998872")
Topic
Liminality
Subject (FAST) (authorityURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast", valueURI="http://id.worldcat.org/fast/1154884")
Topic
Transnationalism
Record Information
Record Content Source (marcorg)
RPB
Record Creation Date (encoding="iso8601")
20111003
Language
Language Term: Code (ISO639-2B)
eng
Language Term: Text
English
Identifier: DOI
10.7301/Z0H41PPQ
Access Condition: rights statement (href="http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/")
In Copyright
Access Condition: restriction on access
Collection is open for research.
Type of Resource (primo)
dissertations