- Salvatore Di Giacomo
Infobox Person
name= Salvatore Di Giacomo
caption= Salvatore Di Giacomo, Neapolitan poet
birth_date= birth date|1860|3|12|mf=y
birth_place=Naples ,Italy
dead=dead
death_date= death date and age|1934|4|4|1860|3|12|mf=y
death_place=Naples ,Italy Salvatore Di Giacomo (
March 12 1860 –April 4 1934 ) was a Neapolitanpoet ,songwriter andplaywright .Di Giacomo is credited as being one of those responsible for renewing Neapolitan dialect poetry at the beginning of the 20th century. The language of Salvatore Di Giacomo is, however, not the everyday
Neapolitan language of his contemporaries, it has a distinct 18th-century flavour to it, archaisms that recall the golden age of Neapolitan culture, the period between 1750-1800, when Neapolitan was the language of the best-loved form of musical entertainment inItaly , the Neapolitancomic opera , and was even the language of the Bourbon court ofNaples , itselfEarly career
Di Giacomo was born in
Naples .He studied
medicine briefly, largely to satisfy his father's wishes, but gave it up for the life of a poet. He then founded aliterary journal , "Il Fantasio", in 1880, and, like many young writers, had a variedapprenticeship , working in a print shop, as ajournalist and publishing some of his early verse in the Neapolitan daily, "il Mattino". He even wrote a series of youthful stories "à la"E.T.A. Hoffman andEdgar Allan Poe set in an imaginary Germantown inhabited by sinisterstudents and mad doctors.He had a lifelong love of libraries as well as literary and historical research, founding, in the course of his career, the Lucchese section of the National
library in Naples and holding the position of assistantlibrarian at the library of the San Pietro a Maiella music conservatory. He was, withBenedetto Croce , one of the founders of the literary journal, "Napoli Nobilissima". He received a critical boost in 1903 when Croce published a defense of dialect poetry. Di Giacomo published no anthology of his own collected poems until 1907, when he was 47 years old.Plays and lyrics
Di Giacomo's plays, such as "A San Francesco" and "Assunta Spina", are bitter stories about turn-of-the-century life in the Naples of the "
Risanamento " (the massive, decades-long urban renewal of the city that displaced tens of thousands of persons), workers whose health is ruined by their labors, prostitution, betrayal, prison, crime, etc. As a song lyricist, he wrote easily and abundantly for the famous Neapolitan song festival ofPiedigrotta , a fact that still leads some critics to dismiss him as a lightweight.Use of language
Di Giacomo seemingly viewed standard language as necessary for modern commerce and politics, but almost by definition devoid of the life that people bring to the language they speak, the vernacular turn of phrase that exists only at a particular place in a particular time for a particular people. He closed his own essay on Neapolitan dialect poetry, written in 1900, with this passionate quote from
Dante : "With the gifts God gives us from Heaven, we shall try to renew the language of the common people."ources
This entry is an abridgement of an [http://faculty.ed.umuc.edu/~jmatthew/naples/blog22.htm#jul30 article] on another website and has been placed here by the author and copyright owner of that article."
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