Senso (book)
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Senso is an Italian novella by Camillo Boito, a famous Italian author and architect. It was written around 1882. The book tells a disturbing account of one woman's selfish indulgement into lust. The word "Senso" is Italian for "sense," which also means "feeling"; this refers to the first truly passionate feelings Livia experiences during her affair with Franz.
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[edit] Summary
Senso is set in Italy about 1866, when the War of Unification with Austria was coming to its end.
The story opens a few years after the war, with Livia, an Italian Countess, reminicing about her first truly passionate love affair on her 39th birthday. Through her thoughts, we are transported back to Venice during the war, where Livia, unhappily married to a stuffy old aristocrat, meets and falls in love with Franz Mahler, a dashing young Lieutenant of the Austrian Army.
Although he is obviously using her for her money and social status, Livia throws herself into an affair of complete sexual abandon with Franz, giving away all her money and not caring what the high society thinks about her. Eventually, the war forces Livia's husband to order her to flee Venice. Unable to part with Franz, she meets up with him for one last tryst, where he asks her for more money, Livia complies, giving away all the money that her husband intended for the troops.
Hiding out in a country villa, Livia is almost driven mad by the fact that she is unable to see Franz and is rejoiced when a letter from him finally arrives. In it, he tells her how much he loves and misses her and that the money she gave him helped him stay away from the front. He advises Livia not to look for him, but she doesn't listen. As soon as possible, Livia, still grasping the letter, boards a carriage and flees back to Venice to find her love.
Once there, she finds the city in ruins, with corpses and wounded civilians at every turn. But this doesn't stop Livia. She heads to the apartment that she herself had bought for Franz, but all she finds is a drunken, ungrateful rogue in the company of a prostitute, who openly mocks his lover for letting him use her like that.
Degraded and humiliated, Livia flees into the night, but she soon realizes that she still has Franz's letter. Thirsty for revenge, Livia heads to the headquarters of the Austrian Army, where she hands Franz's letter to a General, convicting him of treason. Although the General clearly sees that Livia is doing this out of spite for being cuckolded by the luscivious Lieutenant Mahler, he is forced to comply and the next morning, Franz is put in front of a firing squad with Livia attending the execution.
[edit] Style
The book is written completely from Livia's point of view, going into great detail to describe her selfish lust, sexual desire and the almost rejoicing feeling she gets during the execution. This gives the novella a highly unnerving and voyeuristic feel.
Also, unlike the similar characters in such novels as Anna Karenina and Madame Bovary, Livia is not treated in sympathetic light. She is shown to be fully aware of what she is doing and embraces it. She does not feel sorry for the people she's hurting or trampling with her deeds nor does she have any self-remorse, all she wants is what is best for herself.
[edit] Film adaptations
Senso was a film adaption in 1954 by noted Italian film director,Luchino Visconti, with Alida Valli as Livia and Farley Granger as Lieutenant Mahler. The film is not very faithful to the novella due to the fact that Visconti pushed Livia's story into the background, while giving more detail to the war itself as well as a new subplot Visconti himself has added about Livia's nationalist cousin, who leads a rebellion against the Austrians.
Senso '45 was the film which was adapted in 2002 by Tinto Brass when he read the novella and found himsel unsatisfied with Visconti's version. The film starred Anna Galiena as Livia and Gabriel Garko as her lover. The story of the film is much more faithful to Camillo Boito's work than the earlier adaptation in terms of tone and story, but the action was transported from the War of Unification to the end of World War II, with Franz becoming a Nazi Lieutenant and Livia updated to being the wife of a high ranking Fascist official. Also, unlike the 1954 version, Senso '45 did not romanticize the affair between Livia and Mahler, it showed for what it was; a selfish indulgment into lust. The film went on to win the Silver Ribbon award for best costume design.
However, it should be worth noting that both films significantly altered Livia's character, making her much older and sympathetic than she appeared in Boito's original novella.