Leonardo (Italian magazine) explained

Editor:Giovanni Papini
Frequency:Irregular
Founder:Giovanni Papini
Founded:1903
Firstdate:January 1903
Finaldate:1907
Country:Italy
Based:Florence
Language:Italian

Leonardo was a philosophy magazine published in the early twentieth century in Florence, Italy, between 1903 and 1907.[1] It was one of the publications started by Giovanni Papini and contributed by Giuseppe Prezzolini. The magazine is also one of the periodicals which contributed to the cultural basis of the early forms of Fascism.[2]

History and profile

Leonardo was started in Florence in January 1903.[3] [4] One of its founders was Giovanni Papini who also edited the magazine.[3] It came out irregularly.[3] Significant contributors included Giuseppe Prezzolini, Mario Calderoni, Giuseppe Antonio Borgese, Emilio Cecchi and Giovanni Amendola who also financed the magazine which featured articles on philosophical reviews and also, on literature and arts.[5] They were called the leonardiani.[6]

The front page of the first issue contained a synthetic program which indicated the stance of the contributors, namely personalism and idealism. They regarded themselves as being superior to any system and to every limit.[7] In addition, the magazine frequently covered articles attacking positivism, particularly during the early years.[4] Official philosophical stance of the magazine appeared to be pragmatism at the end of the first year of existence.[7]

Leonardo was closed by Giovanni Papini and Giuseppe Prezzolini in 1907 due to the fact that it was becoming a commercial and mainstream publication because of its popularity and success.[3] [4]

Notes and References

  1. Book: Mark Gilbert. Robert K. Nilsson. Historical Dictionary of Modern Italy. 2007. Scarecrow Press. 978-0-8108-6428-3. 356. Lanham, MD.
  2. Maciej Urbanowski. Stanisław Brzozowski and fascism. Studies in East European Thought. 2011. 63. 4 . 308. 10.1007/s11212-011-9152-0. 154920326 . free.
  3. Anna Baldini. Allies and Enemies: Periodicals as Instruments of Conflict in the Florentine Avant-garde (1903–15). Journal of European Periodical Studies. 2018. 3. 1. 10.21825/jeps.v3i1.8103. 7–11. 158629464. free.
  4. Carlo L. Golino. 1 . Giovanni Papini and American Pragmatism. Italica. March 1955. 35. 39–40,43. 10.2307/477175. 477175.
  5. William James. G. Papini and the Pragmatist Movement in Italy. The Journal of Philosophy, Psychology and Scientific Methods. June 1906. 3. 13. 337–341. 10.2307/2011869. 2011869.
  6. Book: Walter L. Adamson. Luca Somigli. Mario Moroni. Italian Modernism: Italian Culture between Decadentism and Avant-Garde. 2004. University of Toronto Press. Toronto; Buffalo, NY; London. 227. 9781442623385. https://muse.jhu.edu/book/107017. Modernism in Florence: The Politics of Avant-Garde Culture in the Early Twentieth Century.
  7. E. Paul Colella. Reflex Action and the Pragmatism of Giovanni Papini. The Journal of Speculative Philosophy. 2005. 19. 3. 191,195,211. 25670568. 10.1353/jsp.2005.0018. 170803393.