Yahoo India Web Search

Search results

  1. Alberto Pincherle (Italian: [alˈbɛrto ˈpiŋkerle]; 28 November 1907 – 26 September 1990), known by his pseudonym Alberto Moravia (US: / m oʊ ˈ r ɑː v i ə,-ˈ r eɪ v-/ moh-RAH-vee-ə, -⁠ RAY-, Italian: [moˈraːvja]), was an Italian novelist and journalist.

  2. Alberto Moravia was an Italian journalist, short-story writer, and novelist known for his fictional portrayals of social alienation and loveless sexuality. He was a major figure in 20th-century Italian literature.

  3. Alberto Moravia’s role as a leading figure in twentieth century Italian literature resulted from his lifelong commitment to writing prose fiction in what he described as theatrical form. A ...

  4. Alberto Moravia has 475 books on Goodreads with 116289 ratings. Alberto Moravias most popular book is Gli indifferenti.

  5. Sep 26, 1990 · Novels, such as Time of Desecration (1978), of Italian writer Alberto Moravia, pen name of Alberto Pincherle, explore the alienation and ennui of the middle class.

  6. www.encyclopedia.com › italian-literature-biographies › alberto-moraviaAlberto Moravia | Encyclopedia.com

    Jun 8, 2018 · Alberto Moravia. Alberto Moravia (1907-1990) was one of the most important, and certainly the most prolific, of modern Italian authors. His keen moralistic approach focuses mainly on the iniquities of bourgeois society. Alberto Moravia was born Alberto Pincherle on November 28, 1907, in Rome, the son of a well-to-do architect.

  7. 1907–1990) Italian writer, whose novels and short stories display his narrative skill and psychological insight. Moravia was born of Jewish stock in Rome, the setting for most of his stories.

  8. For at least the last decade of his life, Alberto Moravia was the dean of Italian literaturea term he however claimed to detest. Today, as in 1929, it is impossible to remain indifferent to centennial Alberto Moravia, the forerunner of European existentialist writers.

  9. Sep 30, 2011 · The novelist Alberto Moravia, a 20th-century giant whose work is generally overlooked today, offers one key to unlocking the mystery of an Italy living under the shadow of Silvio Berlusconi.

  10. ALBERTO MORAVIA FRANK BALDANZA In several heated conversations from his recent novel, A Ghost at Noon, Alberto Moravia makes a series of observations about how Greek classical themes should be treated in modern literature. A script-writer who has been assigned the task of adapting Homer's