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Il Ponte

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Political and literary magazine in Italy

Il Ponte
Former editorsPiero Calamandrei
Categories
Frequency
  • Monthly
  • Bimonthly
FounderPiero Calamandrei
Founded1945
First issueApril 1945
CountryItaly
Based in
LanguageItalian
WebsiteIl Ponte
ISSN0032-423X
OCLC1641093

Il Ponte (Italian: The Bridge) is a political and literary magazine in Milan, Italy, which has been in circulation since April 1945.

History and profile

Il Ponte was started by Piero Calamandrei in Florence in April 1945. Calamandrei also edited the magazine until his death in 1956. The original subtitle of the magazine was Rivista mensile diretta da Piero Calamandrei (Italian: Monthly magazine directed by Piero Calamandrei). Later, its subtitle was redesigned as Rivista mensile di politica e letteratura (Italian: Monthly political and literary magazine). Le Monnier was the first publisher of the magazine. In its initial period it mostly covered articles on history, politics and science, and literary content was relatively infrequent.

Il Ponte came out monthly between its start in 1945 and 1989. It has been published on a bimonthly basis since then. Its headquarters moved from Florence to Milan.

From May to August 1946 Il Ponte featured articles by Umberto Zanotti Bianco about his stay in Africo, a small village near the Aspromonte, in December 1928. The magazine published an article on the views of the Italian educator and activist Augusto Monti in 1949. Antonio Spinosa was one of Il Ponte's contributors and analyzed the anti-Semitic content of the Italian fascism in his articles in 1951 and in 1952. Leo Valiani edited the special issue of Il Ponte on Yugoslavia in 1955. The 1955 visit of Piero Calamandrei and other Italian intellectuals to China was featured in a special issue of the magazine in 1956.

Il Ponte experienced frequent conflicts with Tempo Presente which was published by the Italian Association for Cultural Freedom between 1956 and 1967.

References

  1. "Storia". Il Ponte (in Italian). Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  2. ^ "Il ponte". biblio.liuc.it (in Italian). Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  3. Hanna Eklund (April 2016). "Judicial review and social progress in the work of Mauro Cappelletti and today". International Journal of Constitutional Law. 14 (2): 488. doi:10.1093/icon/mow026.
  4. ^ "Il Ponte: rivista mensile diretta da Piero Calamandrei". unifi.it (in Italian). Retrieved 18 January 2024.
  5. Karl Ludwig Selig (September 1956). "The Cultural Periodicals in Italy, 1945-1950". Italica. 33 (3): 217. JSTOR 477345.
  6. ^ Sergio J. Pacifici (Autumn 1955). "Current Italian Literary Periodicals: A Descriptive Checklist". Books Abroad. 29 (4): 409–412. doi:10.2307/40094752. JSTOR 40094752.
  7. Juri Meda (2019). "The "Agony of the School" in Southern Italy in the Images of Italian Photojournalists, 1940s– 1950s". In Karin Priem; Giovanna Hendel; Carole Naggar (eds.). They did not stop at Eboli. Vol. 1. Berlin: De Gruyter Oldenbourg. p. 199. doi:10.1515/9783110655599-011. ISBN 978-3-11-065175-1.
  8. Carla Cuomo; Sally Davies (2017). "Massimo Mila, The Prismatic Intellectual: An Archival Case Study". Fontes Artis Musicae. 64 (3): 281. JSTOR 26769846.
  9. Diego Guzzi (2012). "The myth of the "good italian", the anti-semitism and the colonial crimes". Constelaciones: Revista de Teoría Crítica. 4: 261.
  10. Vanni D'Alessio (2015). "Leo Weiczen Valiani and his Multilayered Identities: An Introduction". Časopis za povijest Zapadne Hrvatske. 10: 13.
  11. Laura De Giorgi (2022). "Between "Yellow" and "Red": Stereotypes and Racial Discourses in 1950s Italian Narratives of Communist China". In Marcella Simoni; Davide Lombardo (eds.). Languages of Discrimination and Racism in Twentieth-Century Italy. Histories, Legacies and Practices. Cham: Palgrave Macmillan. pp. 137–138. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-98657-5_6. ISBN 978-3-030-98657-5.
  12. Chiara Morbi; Paola Carlucci (2017). "Beyond the Cold War: Tempo Presente in Italy". In Giles Scott-Smith; Charlotte A. Lerg (eds.). Campaigning Culture and the Global Cold War. London: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 130. doi:10.1057/978-1-137-59867-7_7. ISBN 978-1-137-59866-0.

External links

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