Giuseppina Martinuzzi (Albona, 14 February 1844 – Albona, 25 November 1925) was an Italian pedagogue, journalist, socialist, and feminist.[1][2][3]

Biography

Personal life

She lived a long time in Trieste, where she taught in the poor neighborhoods of the city, helping with the integration of the Slovenians and fighting against narrow nationalistic municipalism. She was a leading light in the Women's Socialist Circle and wrote numerous political tracts for the emancipation of women.[2] In her last prose work, Fra italiani e slavi, she expresses her ideal of pacifism and ethnic integration.[2]

Works

  • Manuale mnemonico, Trieste, 1886
  • I semprevivi. In memoria de' miei cari ed amati genitori Giovanni ed Antonia Martinuzzi, Rovereto 1896
  • Nelle caverne di S. Canziano, Udine, 1897
  • Albona. 20 genn. 1599 – 20 genn. 1899, Trieste, 1899
  • Libertà e schiavitù, Trieste, 1899
  • Patria e socialismo, Trieste, 1899
  • Presente e avvenire, Firenze, 1900
  • Edmondo De Amicis e la questione sociale, Trieste, 1900
  • Ingiustizia, Trieste, 1907
  • Nazionalismo morboso e internazionalismo affarista, Trieste, 1911
  • Maternità dolorosa, Trieste, 1911
  • Invito alla luce, Trieste, 1912
  • Ai giovani socialisti, Trieste, 1912
  • Amilcare Cipriani, Trieste, 1913.

References

  1. Pizzi, Katia (2002). A City in Search of an Author. A&C Black. pp. 154–157.
  2. 1 2 3 Camboni, Marina (2004). Networking Women: Subjects, Places, Links Europe-America : Towards a Re-writing of Cultural History, 1890–1939 : Proceedings of the International Conference, Macerata, March 25–27, 2002. Ed. di Storia e Letteratura. pp. 149–151.
  3. de Vries, Boudien (2016). Civil Society, Associations and Urban Places: Class, Nation and Culture in Nineteenth-Century Europe. Routledge. p. 97.
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