Antonio Tabucchi

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Antonio Tabucchi (born on September 23, 1943 in Pisa) is an Italian writer and academic who teaches Portuguese language and literature at the University of Siena, Italy.

Deeply in love with Portugal, he is an expert, critic and translator of the works of the writer Fernando Pessoa from whom he drew the conceptions of saudade, of fiction and of the heteronomouses. Tabucchi was first introduced to Pessoa's works in the 1960s when attending the Sorbonne. He was so charmed that, back in Italy, he attended a course of Portuguese language for a better comprehension of the poet.

His books and essays have been translated in 18 countries, including Japan. Together with his wife, María José de Lancastre, he translated into Italian many works by Pessoa into Italian and has written a book of essays and a comedy about the writer.

Tabucchi has been awarded the French prize "Médicis étranger" for Nocturne indien (Notturno indiano) and the premio Campiello, and the Aristeion Prize for Sostiene Pereira.

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[edit] Early life

Antonio Tabucchi was born in Pisa but grow up at his maternal grandparents home in Vecchiano, a village near that city.

During his years at university he set out on many journeys around Europe on the trail of the authors who met in the rich library of his maternal uncle. In one of these journeys to Paris, he found in a bookstall near the Gare de Lyon, signed by Alvaro de Campos, one of the heteronomouses of the Portuguese poet Fernando Pessoa the poem Tabacaria (tobacco shop), in the French translation of Pierre Hourcade. From the pages of this libel he extracted the intuition of his interest in his future life for at least twenty years.

A visit to Lisbon sparked his love of the city of the fado and of that country as a whole. As a result, he graduated in 1969 with a thesis on "Surrealism in Portugal". He specialized at the Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa in the seventies and in 1973 he was appointed as teacher of Portuguese Language and Literature in Bologna.

That year he wrote his first novel, Piazza d'Italia (Bompiani 1975), an attempt to describe history from the losers' point of view, in this case the Tuscan anarchists, in the tradition of great Italian writers of a more or less recent past, such as Giovanni Verga, Federico De Roberto, Giuseppe Tomasi Di Lampedusa, Beppe Fenoglio, and contemporary authors, like Vincenzo Consolo.

[edit] More works

In 1978, he was appointed to the university of Genova, and published Il piccolo naviglio (Mondadori), followed by Il gioco del rovescio e altri racconti (Il Saggiatore) in 1981, and Donna di porto Pim (Sellerio 1983). His first important novel, Notturno indiano, was published in 1984, and became the basis of a 1989 a film directed by Alain Corneau. The protagonist tries to trace a friend who has disappeared in India but is actually searching for his own identity.

He published Piccoli equivoci senza importanza (Feltrinelli) in 1985 and, the next year, Il filo dell'orizzonte. This novel features another protagonist (Spino) on a quest to discover something (here, the identity of a corpse) but who is also looking for his own identity -- which was to become a common mission for Tabucchi protagonists. Whether these characters succeed in the attempt is uncertain, but they are compelled to face their image as mirrored by others. A film was drawn from this book, too, in 1993 directed by the Portuguese Fernando Lopes.

In 1987, when I volatili del Beato Angelico (Sellerio) and Pessoana Minima (Imprensa Nacional, Lisboa) came out, he received France's Prix Médicis for best foreign novel (Notturno indiano). The next year he wrote the comedy I dialoghi mancati (Feltrinelli). The President of Portugal appointed him the title Do Infante Dom Herique in 1989, and that same year the French government named him a Chevalier des Arts et des Lettres.

Tabucchi published Un baule pieno di gente. Scritti su Fernando Pessoa (Feltrinelli) in 1990, and the next year, L'angelo nero (Feltrinelli 1991). In 1992 he wrote in Portuguese Requiem, a novel later translated into Italian (Feltrinelli, winner of Premio P.E.N. Club italiano) and he published Sogni di sogni (Sellerio).

1994 was a very important year for the author. It was the year of Gli ultimi tre giorni di Fernando Pessoa (Sellerio), but more important of the novel that brought him the most recognition: Sostiene Pereira (Feltrinelli), winner of the Prizes Super Campiello, Scanno and Jean Monnet for European Literature. The protagonist of this novel becomes the symbol of the defence of freedom for information for the political opponents of all anti-democratic regimes. In Italy, during the election campaign, the opposition against the controversial communication magnate Silvio Berlusconi aggregated around this book. The director Roberto Faenza drew from it the eponymous film (1995) in which he cast Marcello Mastroianni as Pereira and Daniel Auteuil as Dr. Cardoso.

In 1997 Tabucchi wrote the novel La testa perduta di Damasceno Monteiro, (The Missing Head of Damasceno Monteiro) based on the true story of a man whose headless corpse was found in a park. It was discovered that the man had been murdered in a police station of the Republican National Guard (GNR). The news story struck the writer's sensitiveness and imagination. The event's setting in Porto also gave the author the opportunity to show his love for the city. In order to finish this novel, Tabucchi worked on the documents gathered by the investigators at the European Council in Strasburg who enforce civil rights and the conditions of detention in Europe, including the relationship between citizens and police. The novel proved prophetic when police Sergeant José dos Santos later confessed the murder, was convicted and sentenced to 17 years' imprisonment.

Also in 1997, Tabucchi wrote Marconi, se ben mi ricordo (Eri), followed the next year by L'Automobile, la Nostalgie et l'Infini (Seuil, Parigi 1998). That year the Leibniz Academy awarded him the Prize Nossack.

He wrote Gli Zingari e il Rinascimento (Sipiel) and Ena poukamiso gemato likedes (Una camicia piena di macchie. Conversazioni di A.T. con Anteos Chrysostomidis, Agra, Atene 1999) in 1999. "Doubts are like stains on a freshly laundered white shirt. The task of every writer and of every man of letters is to instil doubts for the perfection, because perfection generates ideologies, dictators and totalitarian ideas. Democracy is not a state of perfection."

In 2001 Tabucchi published the epistolary novel, Si sta facendo sempre più tardi. In it, 17 letters which celebrate the triumph of the word, which like "messages in the bottle", have no addressee, they are missives the author addressed to an "unknown poste restante". The book received the 2002 Prize France Culture (the French cultural radio) for foreign literature.

He spends six months of the year in Lisbon, with his wife, a native of the city, and their two children. The rest of the year he spends in Tuscany where he and teaches Portuguese lterature at the University of Siena. In fact Tabucchi considers himself a writer only in an ontological sense, because from the existential point of view he is glad of being able to define himself a "university professor". Literature for Tabucchi is not a profession, "but something that involves desires, dreams and imagination". (Antonio Tabucchi, un dubitatore impegnato. Intervista di Asbel Lopez).

Tabucchi regularly contributes articles to the cultural pages of the newspapers Corriere della Sera and El País. In 2004, he was awarded the [Francisco de Cerecedo] journalism prize, granted by the Association of European Journalists and handed by Spain's Crown heir, Prince Felipe de Borbón, in recognition for the quality of his journalistic work and his outspoken defence of freedom of expression.

[edit] Works

[edit] External links

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