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Mar 2009
Giustino Fortunato
In 1861, the Kingdom of the Two
Sicilies—i.e. the entire
southern half of the Italian peninsula plus the island of Sicily—was joined by
force to the north, thus creating the modern nation state of Italy.
There arose
immediately a species of socio-political thinker called the “meridionalista”
(precisely: “southernist”), someone concerned with what
was
called “the problem of the south.” That
problem, briefly expressed in the northern cliché of the
day—many of which
still persist (as does the phrase “problem of the south)—was that the
liberal
industrializing north had inherited a backward, feudal state and had
taken on
the task of trying to fix what was wrong with it. The southern cliché
was that the south was not that backward to begin with and had simply
lost a
war and was paying the price exacted by the victors, less interested in
pan-Italian equality than in using the newly conquered provinces as a
colony. Somewhere in between
these extremes, perhaps, was Giustino Fortunato, a southerner and a
political
moderate, which meant that he accepted the irrevocable unity of the new
nation
and dedicated himself to creating the conditions by which the south
could play
an equal role in that nation. In his 84 years as a writer,
historian, and
politician, he lived through the entire risorgimento
(the movement to unite Italy); he saw the new nation’s colonial
expansion into
Africa, her involvement in WWI and the rise to power of Benito
Mussolini (whom
he opposed). Fortunato was witness to all the difficulties of being a
southerner in the new nation; indeed, he saw his own home area near Fortunato studied at the Fortunato and
others made the strong claim
that the economic
policies of the central government of the new state discriminated
against the
interests of the south while favoring those of north. Fortunato put his
money
where his mouth was by buying and distributing quinine at his own
expense in
order to combat malaria in his region of There is, indeed, a
small square named after Giustino Fortunato in Naples. (It is as
obscure as he is. A woman told me, "I was born and raised in this house"—about
two blocks from where I eventually found the square—"and I have never
heard of it." There is a medium-sized hotel and a post-office in
the square.)
So he is not particularly well-remembered; maybe
this is because he was a reformer in an age of revolutionaries. He
lived through the invasion and conquest of his nation, the fall of the
thousand-year- old Papal States, The
Communist Manifesto, the demise of absolutism, the birth of
modern European liberal democracies, and the deaths of a
number of
European monarchs and politicians by anarchist assassination. Oh, and a
World War ("The war to end all wars," as they said at the time). It was
an
age of great passion in Europe, and Fortunato was not a passionate man.
He was, thus, anathema to revolutionaries such as Italian Communist,
Antonio Gramsci, who called him and Croce "the most
active reactionaries of the entire peninsula." So, Fortunato was not a philosopher of sweeping change, but he was concerned with the nuts and bolts of how to bring well-being to the masses. He was in the Italian Chamber of Deputies for many years and spoke out for things such as agrarian reform and universal suffrage. His Il Mezzogiorno e lo Stato Italiano was published for the fiftieth anniversary of the unification of Italy. In the introduction, he recalls the French ditty from the age of Charles VIII that sang of "conquering the Italies" and how uncomfortable that plural reference—"Italies"—was for modern united Italians. Yet, he said, 50 years after unification, "there are still two Italies." He realized, he said, that he was "by now obscure" and just a "modest scholar." It was typically moderate and self-effacing—an apology for pointing out that there was much work yet to be done.
One of the erroneous northern
assumptions was that the south was some sort of a giant, fertile
bread-basket. (Even Cavour, the first prime minister of united Italy,
said that "within 20 years," the south would be the most productive
part of Italy.) Except for the two large centers of population, Naples
and Palermo, the south was, at the time of unification, largely rural;
that much is true, but, beyond Campania, much of the land was not
particularly
well-suited to farming. Even where it was, land-management
policies in the south were medieval hold-overs —absentee
tenancy and management were the rule and in no way easy to incorporate
into the new nation. The new national government started publishing
studies in the 1870s on the true nature of the agrarian situation in
the south; Fortunato was one of those who helped reveal to the rest
of the nation just how different the south really was. note 2: There is a great deal of picking and choosing in supporting one's point of view. There are "nostalgic" Bourbon sources that—while ignoring the disastrous agrarian situation—take pains to point out that by the standards of early industrialization, the south was at least on a par with the combined states of the northern part of the peninsula: larger navy and mercantile fleet, comparable gross national product, similar per capita number of hospitals and doctors, etc. So pick and choose away! (^ to text) bibliography: — —Fortunato, Giustino.
(1911) Il
Mezzogiorno e lo Stato Italiano
[The South and the
—Gramsci, Antonio
(1926). "Some Aspects of the Southern Question" in Antonio Gramsci: pre-prison writings. Cambridge
University Press, 1994. Edited
by Richard Bellamy, translator: Virginia Cox. —Kogan, Norman. (1968) Review of Italy from Liberalism to Fascism, 1870-1925 by Christopher Seton-Watson (London: Methuen, 1967), in the Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science, Vol. 378; —Reece, Jack E. (1992) Review of La
Questione Meridionale Prima Dell'Intervento Straordinario by
Amedeo Lepore (in Uomini e cose della
nuova Italia, number 40. back to alphabetical index to history portal |