Grazia Deledda

@Nobel Laureate in Literature, Career and Family

Grazia Deledda was a Nobel Prize winning Italian novelist and short story writer

Sep 27, 1871

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Biography

Personal Details

  • Birthday: September 27, 1871
  • Died on: August 15, 1936
  • Nationality: Italian
  • Famous: Nobel Laureate in Literature, Nobel Laureates In Literature, Writers, Novelists, Short Story Writers
  • Spouses: Palmiro Madesani
  • Siblings: Andrea Deledda, Santus Deledda, Vincenza Deledda
  • Known as: Maria Grazia Cosima Deledda, Деледда, Грация

Grazia Deledda born at

Nuoro

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Birth Place

In 1899, Grazia Deledda went out of her village for the first time in her life and visited Cagliari, the capital of Sardinia. There she met Palmiro Madesani, a civil servant under the Ministry of War. They got married in 1900 and settled in Rome. The couple had two sons.

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Personal Life

In Rome, she led a quiet life attending to her family. At the same time, she wrote a lot and almost produced a novel a year. Towards the end of her life she developed breast cancer. Yet her writings remained optimistic and highlighted the beauty of life.

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Personal Life

Deledda died on August 15, 1936 at the age of 64 in Rome. Although she had spent major part of her life in Rome she was buried in her beloved Sardinia at the foot of Monte Ortobene. Much later, a memorial church was built at the site in her honor. It was named after her last novel ‘La Chiesa della Solitudine’.

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Personal Life

Grazia Deledda was born on September 27, 1871 at Nuoro, a small village in the island of Sardinia, in a comparatively prosperous family. Her father, Giovanni Antonio Deledda, was a small landowner and a miller. He was also a self-published poet and had a good collection of books. Her mother’s name was Francesca Cambosu Deledda.

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Childhood & Early Years

Grazia had several siblings. Her two sisters Govianna and Enza died early; one from cold and other from excessive blood loss during a miscarriage. Her brothers, Andrea and Santus, too had their own share of misfortunes. Therefore, after her father’s death it fell upon Grazia to look after the family interest.

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Childhood & Early Years

Grazia had very little formal education. She learned to read and write at home from her maternal uncle, a clergyman named Sebastiano Cambosu. Later she attended the elementary school for four years. By 1882, she was back at home trying to gather knowledge through extensive reading. .

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Childhood & Early Years

Her first language was sardo logudorese, the dialect used in Sardinia. Later she learned Italian under a private tutor, who gave her themes to write on. Some of them were so good that he encouraged her publish them. .

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Childhood & Early Years

In 1886, young Grazia made her literary debut with a short story involving a love triangle. Titled ‘Sangue Sardo’ (Sardinian Blood) the story was published in Ultima Moda, a fashion magazine published from Rome. However, instead of kudos she only got brickbats for it.

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Childhood & Early Years

‘Nell'azzuro’, published in 1890, is probably her first noteworthy writing. It was followed by ‘Stella d’Oriente’, which was her first novel; albeit a shallow armchair type. ‘Amore regale’ (1891) and ‘Amori fatali’ (1892) followed in quick succession. All these works were published under the pseudonym.

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Career

’Fior di Sardegna’ published in 1892, is actually her first serious work. Like most of her work this novel too was based on the life of her native village and its surrounding area. Although it sold well, the book was shunned by people of Sardinia, especially by the inhabitants of Nuoro.

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Career

After the initial success, she continued to live in Nuoro and write. Among those works ‘Anime oneste, romanzo famigliare’ (Honest Souls, 1895) and ‘La via del male’ (The Way of Evil, 1896), ‘Le giustizia’ (Justice, 1899) and ‘Le tentazioni’ (1899) are especially noteworthy.

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Career

In 1900, she got married and settled in Rome. Yet, Sardinia remained the main theme of her novels. From now on she became a prolific writer churning out novels like ‘l vecchio della montagna’ (The Old Man of the Mountai, 1900) and Dopo il divozio (After the Divorce, 1902) at regular intervals.

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Career

Deledda’s first internationally successful novel, ‘Elias Portolú’ was published in 1903. The book was first translated into French by Revue des deux Mondes, a Paris based literary magazine and then into all other European languages. Thanks to such translation she soon became a well-known name in European literary circle.

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Career

While she had published numerous novels and short stories prior to it, it was ‘Elias Portolú’, published in 1903, which established her as a writer in Italy and later made her well-known across Europe. The story revolves around Portolú family where the protagonist comes home from jail only to fall in love with his brother’s fiancé.

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Major Works

‘La madre’, also set in a remote Sardinian hilly village, is another of her major works. The real interest of this book lies in the psychological study of the main characters; a mother and her son. The later has become a priest to fulfill her mother’s wishes, but now has succumbed to the temptation of flesh.

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Major Works