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The Leopard - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Leopard

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

For the film based on this novel, see The Leopard (film).

The Leopard
Signet paperback edition
Author Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
Original title (if not in English) Il Gattopardo
Country Italy
Language Italian
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Casa editrice Feltrinelli
Released 1958
Media Type Print (Hardcover, Paperback)
Pages 330 pp
ISBN ISBN 0-679-73121-0 (Pantheon edition)

Il Gattopardo (The Leopard) is a novel by Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa that chronicles the changes in Sicilian life and society during the Risorgimento. Published posthumously in 1958, it became the top-selling novel in Italian history and is considered one of the most important novels in Italian literature.

The novel was also made into an award-winning 1963 film of the same name, directed by Luchino Visconti and starring Burt Lancaster.

Contents

[edit] The author

Tomasi was the last in a line of minor princes in Sicily, and he had long contemplated writing a historical novel based on his grandfather, another Prince of Lampedusa. After the Lampedusa palace was bombed and pillaged by Allied forces in World War II, Tomasi sank into a lengthy depression, and began to write Il Gattopardo as a way to combat it.

[edit] The novel's title

Despite being universally known in English as The Leopard, the original title Il Gattopardo actually refers to a serval. Although uncommon north of the Sahara Desert, one of the serval's few North African ranges is quite near Lampedusa. This animal is in the coat of arms of Tomasi's family.[1]

[edit] Plot summary

Most of the novel is set during the time of the Risorgimento, specifically during the period when Giuseppe Garibaldi, the hero of Italian unification, swept through Sicily with his forces, known as The Thousand.

The story focuses on an aristocratic family headed by a charismatic Prince named Don Fabrizio, and the bulk of the novel is told from his individual perspective. As the novel opens in 1860, Garibaldi's Redshirts are about to topple the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, completing the unification of Italy. Don Fabrizio finds the corpse of a government soldier killed by the Redshirts on his property, forcing him to acknowledge the coming change in Sicilian society, even as his family continues its empty aristocratic life in blissful ignorance.

We meet Tancredi Falconeri, the son of Don Fabrizio's wastrel brother. Tancredi is handsome and witty, with grand ambitions but no fortune behind him to allow him to fulfill his goals. With the family at their summer retreat in Donnafugata, Tancredi appears set to wed his cousin (and Don Fabrizio's daughter), Concetta, when he sees Angelica Sedàra, a girl of seventeen who has just returned to Donnafugata after four years at a finishing school in Florence. Formerly awkward and unpolished, Angelica is now a stunning beauty and exhibits a formal if somewhat superficial polish that more than suffices to catch Tancredi's eye. The two immediately begin a courtship that includes several walks through the unused and decaying rooms of the Corbera family palace, providing the reader with a metaphorical rendering of the decline of the Italian aristocracy's importance and moral relevance.

As the novel progresses, Don Fabrizio finds himself in an existential crisis that none of his family members or confidants can understand; aristocracy was once its own reason for being, but with that gone, what is Don Fabrizio's purpose in life? Tancredi's marriage to Angelica serves as a symbol of the transfer of power from the patrician to the plebeian, from the privileged to the opportunistic. The text is littered with hints that Tancredi and Angelica's marriage was not altogether a happy one, but was a productive one for the ambitions of both of its participants.

As the novel winds to a close, we see Don Fabrizio in his death throes, contemplating not his own future but that of his family and his life. The novel ends in 1910 with the Corbera line reaching its end with Concetta, now a spinster in her 70s, conversing with the widowed Angelica and ultimately deciding to discard long-held material possessions that were reminders of her family's past, long since rendered irrelevant by history.

[edit] Characters in "The Leopard"

The central character in the novel is Don Fabrizio Corbera, the charismatic Prince of Salina, who dabbles in astronomy and mathematics. Fabrizio recognizes the tremendous changes coming to Italian society and what that means for himself, his family, and the aristocracy in general.

Don Fabrizio's nephew, Tancredi Falconeri, plays a supporting role as a new form of aristocrat, one who parlays the declining value of his family name into political power through his interpersonal skills and via marriage to the wealthy and beautiful but untitled Angelica Sedàra, daughter of the crude Don Calogero Sedàra, who has made his money by capitalizing on the chaos sown by the Redshirts.

Other characters include Father Pirrone, the Corbera family priest; Concetta Corbera, Don Fabrizio's daughter, who appears destined to marry her cousin Tancredi but who is spurned by him when Angelica arrives; Maria Stella, Don Fabrizio's wife; and Bendicò, Don Fabrizio's faithful dog, who serves a symbolic purpose throughout the book, even after his death.

[edit] Controversy

The novel was assailed from all sides upon its publication. Conservative elements criticized its unflattering portrayal of the Catholic Church and clergy as corrupt and concerned with earthly ideals. Liberal elements attacked the novel for its apparent opposition to Italian unification and the death of the aristocracy.

However, the novel was later to gain great critical acclaim, notably from English novelist E.M. Forster.

[edit] Film, TV or theatrical adaptations

Main article: The Leopard (film)

The novel served as the basis for a movie directed by Luchino Visconti. The film, starring Burt Lancaster, has been described as a fresco of Sicilian life because of its opulent recreation of life. The saturated colours, cinematography, and Visconti's renowned attention to detail all helped make it the winner of the Palme d'Or at the Cannes Film Festival.

A number of prints exist, and in the 1980s Visconti's vision was released in the English-speaking world for the first time - 20th Century Fox cut the film dramatically for its original 1963 release. The famous ballroom scene was restored to its full 45 minute running time.

[edit] Quotation

"If we want things to stay as they are, things will have to change." (spoken by Tancredi)[2]

"We were the Leopards, the Lions, those who'll take our place will be little jackals, hyenas; and the whole lot of us, Leopards, jackals, and sheep, we'll all go on thinking ourselves the salt of the earth." (spoken by Don Fabrizio)[3]

[edit] Current editions

  • An edition of Il gattopardo following the manuscript of 1957 is published by
  • Milano : Feltrinelli Editore, Universale Economica ISBN 88-07-81028-X
  • Archibald Colquhoun’s English translation, The Leopard, originally published in 1960 by Collins (in the UK) and Pantheon Books (in the US) is available from

[edit] Footnotes

  1. ^ Coat of arms of the Tomasi family, on estateinsicilia.it.
  2. ^ Colquhoun translation, Pantheon edition, p.40. According to Il romanzo e il film, the Italian original of this is "Se vogliamo che tutto rimanga com'è bisogna che tutto cambi."
  3. ^ Colquhoun translation, Pantheon edition, p.214. According to a page on the Figurella site, the Italian original is "Noi fummo i Gattopardi, i Leoni; quelli che ci sostituiranno saranno gli sciacalletti, le iene. E tutti quanti, Gattopardi, sciacalli e pecore, continueremo a crederci il sale della terra."

[edit] References

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