Knihobot

Pascal D'Angelo

    Pasquale D'Angelo was a voice from the immigrant experience, born into poverty in rural Italy and arriving in America with dreams of a better life. His early years in New York were marked by hardship, disillusionment, and the struggle for survival, but also by a profound discovery of literature that ignited his passion for writing. Fascinated by English Romantic poets, he began crafting his own verses, which eventually led to the publication of his acclaimed autobiography. Despite facing immense personal challenges and poverty throughout his life, D'Angelo continued to write prolifically, leaving behind a powerful testament to the resilience of the human spirit, though much of his later work was lost.

    Son of Italy
    • 2003

      Son of Italy

      • 180 stránek
      • 7 hodin čtení
      3,5(51)Ohodnotit

      In the original introduction to Pascal D'Angelo's Son of Italy, the renowned literary critic Carl Van Doren praised D'Angelo's autobiography as an impassioned story of his "enormous struggles against every disadvantage." In his narrative of his fruitless labor as a "pick and shovel" worker in America, D'Angelo, who immigrated from the Abruzzi region of Italy, describes the harsh, often inhumane working conditions that immigrants had to endure at the beginning of the twentieth century. However, interested in more than just material success in America, D'Angelo quit working as a laborer to become a poet. He began submitting his poetry to some of America's most prestigious literary and cultural journals until he finally succeeded. But in his quest for acceptance, D'Angelo unwittingly exposed the complexities of assimilation. Like the works of many other immigrant writers at the time, D'Angelo's autobiography is a criticism of some of the era's most important social themes. Kenneth Scambray's afterword is an analysis of the complexities of this multifaceted autobiographical voice, which has been read as a simplistic immigrant narrative of struggle and success. Guernica's edition of Son of Italy is its first English reprint since its original publication in 1924.

      Son of Italy