Abstract

This essay reaffirms the question of the polemic between Manzoni and Sismondi in regard to the negative effects of the Catholic religion of the Counter-Reformation on the character of the Italians. As compared with the existing studies, the author inserts that polemic within the living fabric of Manzonian opus, also availing himself of numerous and little known archival sources. The outcome is a relationship of communication and confrontation between the two great intellectuals that is far more elaborate and fruitful that what might have been thought. Even Manzoni nurtured reservations as to Counter-Reformation culture, and if in the Osservazioni written against Chapter CXXVII of the Histoire des Republiques italiennes he had put forward an almost integral confutation of the Genevan’s thesis, in other works he supposedly showed a far more complex thinking on the matter. The author also shows how the reading of Sismondi’s work (not only the Republiques , but also the Tableau de l’agriculture toscane and even the Histoire des Francais ) turned out to be decisive for the founder of the Italian historical novel.

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