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The World Machine: The Italian List

by Paolo Volponi , Richard Dixon
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Original price Rs. 699.00
Original price Rs. 699.00 - Original price Rs. 699.00
Original price Rs. 699.00
Current price Rs. 490.00
Rs. 490.00 - Rs. 490.00
Current price Rs. 490.00

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Book cover type: Hardcover
  • ISBN13: 9781803093765
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • Subject: N/A
  • Publisher: Seagull Books
  • Publisher Imprint: Seagull
  • Publication Date:
  • Pages: 312
  • Original Price: INR 699.0
  • Language: English
  • Edition: N/A
  • Item Weight: 520 grams

A vivid and unforgettable novelistic portrait of rural Italy, exploring the nature of reality and the human condition.
 
A small-time farmer living in central Italy in the 1960s is the keeper of a great truth: that people are machines built by other beings who are machines themselves. Our true destiny is to build ever better machines so that society can become a techno-utopia in which friendship can be established among all people on earth. These ideas bring him into conflict with everyone, especially his wife, against whom he is accused of ill-treatment. His quest takes him to Rome, where he presents his truth, hoping it will bring him worldwide recognition. Behind his poetical reveries and unfathomable scientific notions lies the disturbing fragility of a lone, paranoid, and deluded man in conflict with everyone, including himself.
 
Paolo Volponi’s unique novel The World Machine examines the relationship between rural life and the modern city, as well as the subversive idealism of a society still firmly anchored in the past, dominated by the Church, and unable to grasp the need for change.

Paolo Volponi (1924–94) was one of Italy’s leading novelists and poets during the second half of the twentieth century. He is the first author to have twice won Italy’s most prestigious literary award, the Strega Prize, including one for The World Machine. Richard Dixon is a translator, whose works include the final books of Umberto Eco, including his novels The Prague Cemetery and Numero Zero and books by Giacomo Leopardi, Carlo Emilio Gadda, Roberto Calasso, Stefano Massini, and Antonio Moresco.