Rediscovered in Spain in recent decades, Amalia Domingo Soler (1835-1909) is still completely unknown in Italy. Almost exclusively associated with Spanish spiritualism, the vast production (she drafted over 2000 texts) left by the Sevillian writer offers in fact a variety of themes (such as socio-economic inequalities the libertarian education of men and women, anti-militarism, feminism, etc.) that place both the work and the writer beyond the dividing line of spiritist proselytism. The translations I propose in these pages (Due bambini and La seconda bambola) aim to capture this ‘other’ aspect of Soler’s writing.

Di cardi e balocchi: Amalia Domingo Soler

anita fabiani
2023-01-01

Abstract

Rediscovered in Spain in recent decades, Amalia Domingo Soler (1835-1909) is still completely unknown in Italy. Almost exclusively associated with Spanish spiritualism, the vast production (she drafted over 2000 texts) left by the Sevillian writer offers in fact a variety of themes (such as socio-economic inequalities the libertarian education of men and women, anti-militarism, feminism, etc.) that place both the work and the writer beyond the dividing line of spiritist proselytism. The translations I propose in these pages (Due bambini and La seconda bambola) aim to capture this ‘other’ aspect of Soler’s writing.
2023
978-88-99573-55-3
Amalia Domingo Soler
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11769/587340
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