Muzi Epifani

Muzi Epifani
Born Maria Luisa Gabriella Epifani
March 18, 1935
Benghazi, Libya
Died February 12, 1984 (aged 48)
Rome, Italy
Language Italian
Nationality Italian
Education Heidelberg University
Alma mater Sapienza University of Rome

Maria Luisa Gabriella Epifani, better known as Muzi Epifani (March 18, 1935 – February 12, 1984), was an Italian writer and poet.

Biography

Muzi Epifani was born in Benghazi, Libya. She studied literature and philosophy at the Heidelberg University and the University of Rome La Sapienza, where she obtained a degree in aesthetics under the supervision of Emilio Garroni. She was particularly influenced by the Hermeneutics of Hans-Georg Gadamer[1] and the anthropological thought of Ernesto De Martino, whose missions she worked on in Lucania and Salento.[2] During her studies at La Sapienza, she met Alex Duran (to whom she dedicated her novel Pazzi & creature), Gabriele Giannantoni, Enzo Siciliano, and Franco Voltaggio.

Epifani was one of the first Italian writers to develop a distinctive style of female writings alongside Natalia Ginzburg, Luce d'Eramo, Dacia Maraini, Biancamaria Frabotta, Gabriella Sobrino, and Angiola Sacripante.[3] She was a very attentive reader of English female writers such as Katherine Mansfield and, above all, Virginia Woolf.

She collaborated with various newspapers, such as "l'Unità", "l'Avanti!", "Paese Sera". She was considered an environmental activist and "Il Globo" published her own innovative column on the protection of the Italian landscape and environment entitled "Article 9", in reference to the Constitution of the Republic of Italy ("The Republic promotes the development of culture and scientific and technological research, providing safeguard of the landscape and historical and artistic heritage on the Nation").[4] Epifani also worked as a journalist for RAI, Italy's national public broadcasting company, in the fields of theatre and literature.

In her “Il Premio Viareggio? La mia vita”, Gabriella Sobrino described Muzi Epifani as always "surrounded by her children".[5] They would work during the nights together "when we had finally managed to put to bed the children who would gather around us like puppies in their multi-coloured pyjamas".[6]

In 1976, her comedy "La fuga" (The fugue) won the "Young Theatre" Prize. In this satirical play, Epifani intertwined a personal affair with a current political debate concerning the abortion law in Italy. The writer exposed the Italian hypocrisy of people who would permit abortion in the private sphere whilst at the same time criticising it in public.

Epifani is the mother of the film director Francesca Archibugi and of the economist Daniele Archibugi, a professor at Birkbeck College, University of London.[7] She died in Rome.

Works

Novels and poetry collections

Plays

Translations into Italian

See also

Further reading

References

  1. Jean Grondin, (2011). Hans-Georg Gadamer. A Biograpy. New Heaven: Yale University Press.
  2. Clara Gallini and Francesco Faeta (ed.) (1999). I viaggi nel Sud di Ernesto De Martino. Turin: Bollati Boringhieri. p. 17. See also Vittorio Lanternari, La mia alleanza con Ernesto De Martino, Liguori, Naples 1997, pp. 24–27.
  3. Luce d'Eramo and Gabriella Sobrino (eds.) (1989). Europa in versi. La poesia femminile del '900. Roma: Il Ventaglio.
  4. Mario Pirani (2010). Poteva andare peggio. Mezzo secolo di ragionevoli illusioni. Milan: Mondadori.
  5. An interview with Gabriella Sobrino by Paola Bolaffio. "Il refuso".
  6. “Custode del Viareggio”, 1º May 2008. Il cantone.
  7. In ricordo di Muzi Epifani La Repubblica, 12 febbraio 2014.
  8. Clotho is the youngest of the Three Fates. Epifani had herself two elder sisters (see Angiola Sacripante, Prefazione, Cloto).