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December 20, 2000
Contact: Alyssa D. Clagg (831) 459-2496; adclagg@cats.ucsc.edu
UC SANTA CRUZ PROFESSOR MARGARET BROSE AWARDED PRESTIGIOUS LITERATURE PRIZE
For Immediate Release
WASHINGTON, D.C.--The Modern Language Association of America will present its
16th annual Howard R. Marraro Prize to UC Santa Cruz literature professor Margaret
Brose for her book, Leopardi Sublime (Bologna, Italy; Re Enzo Editrice, 1998).
The Marraro Prize, which is jointly awarded with the Aldo and Jeanne Scaglione Prize
for Italian Literary Studies, is only given every other year. Books published in
1998 or 1999 competed for both prizes, which are awarded to an MLA member who has
written a book in the field of Italian literature or comparative literature involving
Italian.
"The MLA does not give many prizes, and very few books are chosen," Brose
said. "It is a great honor to be selected. In terms of literary studies, the
MLA is the largest and most prestigious professional organization."
Brose shared the award with Professor Nancy Canepa of Dartmouth College, who was
chosen for her book From Court to Forest: Giambattista Basileís Lo cunto de
li cunti and the Birth of the Literary Fairy Tale (Wayne State University
Press, 1999).
Professors Brose and Canepa will each be presented with an award certificate and
a $500 check December 28 during the associationís annual convention in Washington,
D.C.
"The MLA award indicates Professor Broseís exceptional distinction in her field,"
said Wlad Godzich, dean of the Humanities Division. "Especially because Leopardi
is considered a poet only native speakers of Italian understand and appreciate, this
recognition is a significant honor."
In choosing Brose as a prizewinner, the MLA selection committee said her book "is
a compelling reminder of how poetry--both as philosophy and as techne--should
continue to matter to us."
In Leopardi Sublime, Brose analyzes the poetry of the famous Italian Romantic
poet Giacomo Leopardi (1798-1837), who was both a brilliant poet and a brilliant
theorist of language. The book examines how Leopardiís poetry creates the experience
of the sublime in the poetís encounter with Nature, memory, and temporality--both
the rhetorical sublime, characterized by fullness and presence, and the ironic sublime,
characterized by absence and loss. Brose demonstrates how Leopardi anticipated many
20th century theories of semiotics and poetics.
"I wanted to show that Leopardi had an original and modern theory both of the
Sublime as a philosophical category and of how poetry can produce it," Brose
said of her book. "I feel that my critical approach, which perhaps stems from
Anglo-American textual criticism more than from the European philological tradition,
represents a contribution to the field of Leopardi studies and to discussions of
the European Romantic Sublime."
While working on Leopardi for many years, Brose also coedited (with UCSC professor
emeritus Hayden White) Representing Kenneth Burke: Selected Papers from the English
Institute (John Hopkins University Press, 1982) and authored numerous articles
on Italian poets, from the Middle Ages to the present: Petrarch, Foscolo, Leopardi,
Ungaretti, and Montale. She is currently working on her next book, entitled "The
Body of Italy: Female Figures in Italian Lyric Poetry," which she expects to
finish next year.
A member of the Department of Literature at UCSC since 1979, Brose previously taught
at the University of Colorado at Boulder and at Yale University. She received her
B.A. from Wayne State University, and her M.A. and Ph.D. from Harvard University.
Among her honors and awards are the University of California EAP Visiting Professor
Award to the University of Padova (2001), a National Endowment Research Fellowship
for University Scholars (1990), an American Council of Learned Societies Fellowship
(1981), and a Fulbright Fellowship to Rome, Italy (1967-68). She was twice a recipient
of the Visiting Scholar Award at the American Academy in Rome (1995, 1999).
Brose has also won two Teaching Awards (University of Colorado and UCSC). She has
lectured at the universities of Rome, Bologna, Venice, Padova, and Trieste, as well
as at UC Berkeley, Northwestern, Harvard, and Stanford universities. Brose is currently
the director of the Italian studies major at UCSC and is the past director of the
University of California Education Abroad Programs in Italy (1996-1998). Brose is
also an elected member of Phi Beta Kappa.
In addition to the Marraro and Scaglione Italian Literary prizes, the MLA will present
thirteen other awards during the convention.
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