| Emilio Lussu |
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Information AboutEmilio Lussu |
| CATEGORIES ABOUT EMILIO LUSSU | |
| 1890 births | |
| lussu, emilio | |
| 1975 deaths | |
| people from the province of cagliari | |
| italian resistance members | |
| italian novelists | |
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THE SOLDIER Lussu was born in Armungia , Cagliari and graduated with a degree in Law in 1914 . Lussu married Joyce Salvatori , a notable Poet , and member of the noble family of Marches . Prior to the entry of Italy into WWI , Lussu joined the army and was involved in several skirmishes. As a complementary ( N.C.O ) officer of the Brigata Sassari in 1916 (the famous Sassari's Infantry Brigade of Italian Army ) he was stationed in Asiago . He was charged with the defense Verona against the Austrian Army. The defense was, at first, victorious but was soon followed by a counter attack (mainly on Monte Zebio and Castelgomberto ) that lasted until July 1917 . The WWI Trench Warfare that Lussu observed would serve as an Archetype for his later works. POLITICS AND EXILE After the war Lussu, together with Camillo Bellieni , organized the foundation of Partito Sardo d'Azione (The Sardinian Action Party), the nationalistic party of Sardinian people. The party took a formal position in 1921 , opposing the increasing power of the Fascist Movement . Lussu was elected to the Italian parliament in 1921 and, in 1929 was among the Aventine secessionists who retired after the murder of Giacomo Matteotti . Lussu's anti-Fascist position was, at the time, one of the most radical in Italy. Lussu was physically attacked and injured by unknown aggressors several times. In 1926, during one of these attacks (notably, the same day that Mussolini suffered an attack in Bologna ), Lussu shot one of the ''squadristi'', in self-defense. He was arrested and tried; and was acquitted. However, he was re-tried by an administrative Fascist commission and sentenced to 5 years of confinement on the island of Lipari , near Sicily . In 1929 Lussu escaped from his confinement and reached Paris . There, together with Gaetano Salvemini and Carlo Rosselli he formed ''Giustizia e Libertà'' (Justice and Freedom), an anti-Fascist movement that proposed revolutionary methods to upset the Italian Fascist Regime. While in exile came to be known as "Mister Mills". In 1938 Lussu's novel ''Un anno sull'Altipiano'' (A year on the plateau), was published in Paris. This thinly fictional account tells of the lives of soldiers during WWI and the trench warfare they encountered. ''Un anno sull'Altipiano'' underlines, with chill rationalism, how the irrationalities of warfare affect the common man. Gifted with icy cynicism, Lussu demonstrates how distantly the real life of soldiers is from everyday activities. In a notable passage, he describes the silent terror in the moments preceding an attack, as he is forced to abandon of the "safe" protective Trench for an external unknown, risky, undefined world: “All the machine-guns are waiting for us”. RETURN TO ITALY Lussu took part in the civil war in Spain and returned to Italy after the Armistice of 1943. Lussu joined the ''Resistenza'' and became the secretary of '' Partito D'Azione '' for southern Italy. He became the leader of the leftist wing of ''Partito d'Azione'' and later joined forces with the Italian Socialist Party . After WWII he served as a Minister of Aid in the government of Ferruccio Parri and later as a minor minister in Alcide De Gasperi's government. In 1964 he separated from the Socialist Party creating the PSIUP (Italian Socialist Party of Proletarian Unity). Polemic contrasts with the political line of ''Partito d'Azione'' deepened and Lussu left Sicily. Emilio Lussu died in Rome in 1975 . WORKS OF EMILIO LUSSU Many political meanings have been drawn from Lussu’s works, but his works are perhaps more important at a personal level. Morally and philosophically, Lussu books reflect his need to repent, previously an ''interventista'' (favorable to entrance in war) and a revolutionary (in ''Giustizia e Libertà''); his works soberly describe what war, in its most cruel moments, was like for him. The alteration of Lussu's opinion of war is quite apparent in the range of his works: first an ''interventista'', then the author of a manual for revolution, soon after the author of a pacifist book, again a revolutionary and a volunteer in the Spanish civil war. Lussu's consistency has been questioned and political discourse often invades evaluations of his works.
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