Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio explained
Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio (Italian: Scontro di civiltà per un ascensore a Piazza Vittorio) is an Italian language novel by Amara Lakhous, published by . It was first published in 2006.[1] Its English translation, done by Ann Goldstein, was published in 2008 by Europa Editions.
The novel takes place in an apartment complex in the Piazza Vittorio Emanuele II area.
According to The New Yorker, the multicultural Rome of the 2000s is the "author’s real subject".[2]
There is a .
Plot
The novel uses the first person point of view.[1]
In the story, police question residents of various origins in a single apartment complex. According to John Powers of National Public Radio, even though the plot is driven by police looking for the person who committed a murder, "the mystery isn't really the point."[3] Publishers Weekly praised the "intriguing psychological and social insight".[4]
Characters
- Amedeo (originally named Ahmed) - From Algeria, he intentionally conceals his origins, leading to ambiguity about his origins among those who know him; based on his words, some think he is southern Italian instead of being of North African origins.[5] Sandro gave him the name "Amedeo".[6] In his past, he was to be married to a woman named Bàgia, but she died.[5]
- Abdallah Ben Kadour - He came from the same community Amedeo grew up in, and now lives in Rome.[7]
- Mauro Bettarini
- Sandro Dandini - A native of Rome, he owns a bar and lives in the same building as Amedeo.[6]
- Benedetta Esposito - The landlady, she is from Naples.[8] She uses Neapolitan as her primary language, which makes it difficult to find work.[9] She is oppressed by Italians from other parts of Italy, and she oppresses people of recent immigrant origins.[8]
- Elisabetta Fabiani - She is from Rome and lives with Valentino, her dog, until the dog is killed.[7]
- Maria Cristina Gonzalez - A caretaker of a senior citizen, she originates from Peru, and suffers from alcoholism. She meets other Peruvians at Roma Termini railway station.[10]
- Iqbal Amir Allah - He originates from Bangladesh.
- Antonio Marini - He originates from Milan, and is a university professor.[10] Graziella Parati of Dartmouth College describes him as "the outsider from the north who considers himself superior and therefore deserving of special treatment".[11]
- Johan Van Marten - Originating from the Netherlands, he is an expatriate and is not an immigrant to Italy. Parati stated that he is "privileged" in Italian society.[12]
- Stefania Massaro
- Parviz Mansoor Samadi - He is from Iran and had left that country due to political reasons.[13] He does not consider himself to be an immigrant. He uses French as his Italian is not fluent.[9]
According to Parati, an elevator used by many characters is rendered into being "a central character".[9]
Reception
It won the Flaiano Prize.[14]
References
Reference notes
External links
Notes and References
- Parati, p. 432.
- Web site: Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio. The New Yorker. 2008-11-30. 2023-04-06.
- Web site: Powers. John. Italian Crime Novels Make An International Splash. National Public Radio. 2008-11-12. 2023-04-06.
- Web site: Clash of Civilizations over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio. Publishers Weekly. 2008-08-11. 2023-04-06.
- Parati, p. 437 (PDF p. 438).
- Parati, p. 438 (PDF p. 439).
- Parati, p. 441.
- Parati, p. 435 (PDF p. 436).
- Parati, p. 436 (PDF p. 437).
- Parati, p. 442.
- Parati, p. 443.
- Parati, p. 433-434.
- Parati, p. 434.
- Web site: Clash of Civilizations Over an Elevator in Piazza Vittorio (Bilingual Edition). Europa Editions. 2023-04-07.