"These are powerful pieces, stripped of
sentimentalism, steeped in mud and ice and blood, cruelty and
hope. In sum, memorable!"—Margaret Sayers Peden
A generation of Italian authors dedicated their lives, their
works, and their voices to the primary driving force behind
twentieth-century narratives of World War II. Renata Viganò was
an active member of the Italian Resistance during World War
II, and, like many of her male counterparts, she depicted the
actions of the brave people who contributed to and
participated in the partisan movement. Unlike her
counterparts, however, Viganò vividly portrayed the
experiences of women, notably women on the front line, in her
posthumously published Matrimonio in brigata, here
translated for the first time in English as Partisan
Wedding.
"If it had not been for them, the women . . . who got used to
`men's business,' . . . the partisan army would have lost a
vital, necessary force." The women in Partisan Wedding
joined the struggle for many reasons; some for their husbands,
others for their fathers, brothers, or sons; some for a sense
of justice and the desire to do what was right. Whatever the
cause, Viganò demonstrates that women maintained the ability
to nurture and to care, to preserve their female qualities in
the face of war.
Because of her own role as a partisan, the stories in
Partisan Wedding are based on Viganò's personal
experiences. Two stories in the collection are specifically
autobiographical: "Acquitted" and "My Resistance." Relating
her own plight to find her husband, a partisan commander,
after his sudden arrest, "Acquitted" aptly conveys Viganò's
struggle to maintain her strength in the face of complete
helplessness. "My Resistance" is a personal account of her own
experiences during the war and the women she met along the
way.
Partisan Wedding is an invaluable contribution to the
literature of the Second World War, completing the picture of
those involved in the struggle for freedom. Viganò's
remarkable prose, equally beautiful and terrible in its
description of the minute details of human suffering and
sacrifice, opens a window to a world that has rarely been
seen, and a world not easily forgotten.
About the Author
Renata Viganò was the author of several books of poetry,
fiction, and nonfiction. She is best known for her novel
L'Agnese va a morire, which was adapted for cinema by
Giuliano Montaldo in the 1970s.
About the Translator
Suzanne Branciforte is a member of the Foreign Languages
Department at the University of Genoa in Italy. She is the
author of Parliamo italiano!