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  1. Aldo Giurlani (Italian pronunciation: [ˈaldo dʒurˈlaːni]; 2 February 1885 – 17 August 1974), known by the pen name Aldo Palazzeschi (pronounced [ˈaldo palatˈtseski]), was an Italian novelist, poet, journalist and essayist.

  2. Palazzeschi's prose instead, although not without qualities, appears immovable. Deaf to discursive narrative, as it is understood in the contemporary schools, Palazzeschi writes his novels as they might have been written in the last century by a D'Azeglio. Giuseppe Parini, whose prose is of value for what he says and

  3. Palazzeschi has an especially clear memory of the various "nonne" of his early years; perhaps he already sensed in their melange of tacit prejudice and all but cynical toler- ance a certain affinity with his own temperament.

  4. Aldo Palazzeschi, pseudonimo di Aldo Pietro Vincenzo Giurlani, è stato uno scrittore e poeta italiano, uno dei padri delle avanguardie storiche. Inizialmente firmò le sue opere con il suo vero nome, e dal 1905 adottò come pseudonimo il cognome della nonna materna, appunto Palazzeschi. Dalla seconda attività conseguì una ricca produzione ...

  5. Quick Reference. (1885–1974). Florentine poet and novelist who made distinctively whimsical and ironic contributions to crepuscolarismo and Futurism. His privately published early poetry reworks symbolist and Crepuscular motifs, often in apparently childlike ...

  6. Palazzeschi's theatrical representation of a mini city-world connects "La passeggiata" to the contemporary imagery of urban miniaturizations in European Modernist literature (as charted in Andreas Huyssen's Modern Metropolis. Literature in an Age of Photography and Film). At the same time, his childish urban

  7. Dec 15, 2005 · Through clear and fluid translations, Nicolas J. Perella demonstrates Palazzeschi?s use of laughter to debunk social and literary myths.

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