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y separately published work icon Le Isole del Paradiso : romanzo single work   novel   historical fiction  
Issue Details: First known date: 1987... 1987 Le Isole del Paradiso : romanzo
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AbstractHistoryArchive Description

The first part relates the story of the founding of the New Italy colony in Northern New South Wales in the 1880s, from its disastrous beginning in New Ireland (now part of Papua New Guinea.) The second part of the story has a contemporary setting.

Notes

  • English translation of title : The Islands of Paradise.

Publication Details of Only Known VersionEarliest 2 Known Versions of

Language: Italian
Alternative title: Les Îles du paradis
Language: French

Works about this Work

Recent Perceptions of Rural Australia in Italian and Italian Australian Narrative Gaetano Rando , 2008 single work criticism
— Appears in: FULGOR , November vol. 3 no. 3 2008;
The publication in 2008 of the English translation of Emilio Gabbrielli's novel Polenta e Goanna based on Italian migrants in the West Australian goldfields brings into focus the themes of the bush, the outback and migration that since the mid 1850s (Raffaello Carboni, Rudesindo Salvado) have emerged as a constant thread in texts produced by Italian Australian writers. Italian settlement in rural and outback areas of Australia during the late 1800s and early 1900s has remained a largely unsung saga while most Italians migrating to Australia after 1947 ultimately settled in urban areas. Among the few who have written creatively about their experiences even fewer have engaged in themes related to the bush and the outback. Only four narrative writers - Giovanni Andreoni, Giuseppe Abiuso, Ennio Monese and Franko Leoni - have written about non-urban Australia in substantially social realist terms. More recently, this trend had taken a post-modern perspective in a few Italian Australian (Emilio Gabbrielli, Antonio Casella) and Italian writers (Stanislao Nievo, Dario Donati, Paolo Catalano) who depict the Australian outback as providing a solution to the protagonists' life quest and promote a discourse on nature as a dynamic, positive and vital element that contrasts with man's static negativism. This paper proposes to explore this latest trend and the resulting temporal and spatial dislocations that arise from the mapping of two overlapping cultural and geographical contexts. [Author's abstract]
The New Italy : Episode in Contemporary Italian Literature Gaetano Rando , 1991 single work criticism
— Appears in: Italians in Australia : The Literary Experience : Proceedings of the Conference on the Italians in Australia, the First 200 Years, held at the University of Wollongong and Macquarie University, 27-29 Aug. 1988 1991; (p. 48-60)
Gaetano Rando provides comment on Nievo's Le Isole del Paradiso, a novel which, in its first part, narrates the 'ill-fated atttempt to found the colony of Nouvelle France at Port Breton in New Ireland.' Rando draws our attention to the fact that Australia represents a significant thematic element in the novel, as the Italian emigrants from the failed colony settle eventually in New Italy in northern NSW (49).
The New Italy : Episode in Contemporary Italian Literature Gaetano Rando , 1991 single work criticism
— Appears in: Italians in Australia : The Literary Experience : Proceedings of the Conference on the Italians in Australia, the First 200 Years, held at the University of Wollongong and Macquarie University, 27-29 Aug. 1988 1991; (p. 48-60)
Gaetano Rando provides comment on Nievo's Le Isole del Paradiso, a novel which, in its first part, narrates the 'ill-fated atttempt to found the colony of Nouvelle France at Port Breton in New Ireland.' Rando draws our attention to the fact that Australia represents a significant thematic element in the novel, as the Italian emigrants from the failed colony settle eventually in New Italy in northern NSW (49).
Recent Perceptions of Rural Australia in Italian and Italian Australian Narrative Gaetano Rando , 2008 single work criticism
— Appears in: FULGOR , November vol. 3 no. 3 2008;
The publication in 2008 of the English translation of Emilio Gabbrielli's novel Polenta e Goanna based on Italian migrants in the West Australian goldfields brings into focus the themes of the bush, the outback and migration that since the mid 1850s (Raffaello Carboni, Rudesindo Salvado) have emerged as a constant thread in texts produced by Italian Australian writers. Italian settlement in rural and outback areas of Australia during the late 1800s and early 1900s has remained a largely unsung saga while most Italians migrating to Australia after 1947 ultimately settled in urban areas. Among the few who have written creatively about their experiences even fewer have engaged in themes related to the bush and the outback. Only four narrative writers - Giovanni Andreoni, Giuseppe Abiuso, Ennio Monese and Franko Leoni - have written about non-urban Australia in substantially social realist terms. More recently, this trend had taken a post-modern perspective in a few Italian Australian (Emilio Gabbrielli, Antonio Casella) and Italian writers (Stanislao Nievo, Dario Donati, Paolo Catalano) who depict the Australian outback as providing a solution to the protagonists' life quest and promote a discourse on nature as a dynamic, positive and vital element that contrasts with man's static negativism. This paper proposes to explore this latest trend and the resulting temporal and spatial dislocations that arise from the mapping of two overlapping cultural and geographical contexts. [Author's abstract]
Last amended 9 Nov 2006 14:45:10
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  • New Ireland,
    c
    Papua New Guinea,
    c
    Pacific Region,
  • Mid North Coast, New South Wales,
  • 1880s
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