Birth Name: | Maddalena Melandri |
Birth Place: | Fusignano, Kingdom of Italy |
Workplaces: | Free University for Women |
Lea Melandri (born 1941) is an Italian feminist scholar, journalist and writer. She is one of the leading feminists in Italy and is part of the second-wave feminist movement.[1] She has established various magazines and published books on feminist theory.
Melandri was born in Fusignano in 1941.[2] She graduated from Scuola Normale Superiore di Pisa.[2] Following her graduation she worked as a teacher.[2] Next she obtained her master's degree in history from the University of Bologna.[2] Then she continued to teach at secondary schools until her retirement in 1986.[2]
Melandri and Elvio Fachinelli started a radical feminist journal L’erba voglio in 1971 and edited it until 1978 when it folded. Melandri established a feminist magazine, Lapis, in 1987 which existed until 1997.[2] She published articles in Noi donne, a feminist magazine.[3] She and other Milan-based Italian feminists, including Ciulia Alberti, Paola Melchiori and Adriana Monti, organized activities with housewives and factory workers between 1979 and 1983.[4]
Her book L’infamia originaria was published in 1977. Her another book was translated into English under the title of Love and Violence: The Vexatious Factors of Civilization in 2019.[5] She has also written poems.[6] She has contributed to the daily newspaper Il manifesto, and in one of her articles she bitterly criticized Pope Benedict XVI in 2004 due to his letter containing a conservative and traditionalist view about women.[7]
Melandri teaches at Free University for Women in Milan of which she has been the president since 2011.[8]
Melandri is a member of the Global Information Society Watch.[9]