“Who, or more precisely, what is an Italian American? To some self-appointed arbiters of italianità, the answer is: Roman Catholic, conservative, and indisputably heterosexual.”
If we have learned anything from the ongoing scrutiny of the Italian-American “experience” it is that said experience is any thing but singular.
Italian-American histories and cultures are diverse, multifaceted, and ever open to new interpretations and revisions.
Author George De Stefano began a 2001 book review in the John D. Calandra Italian American Institute’s social-science journal, the Italian American Review (vol. 8, no.2), with a rhetorical question: “Who, or more precisely, what is an Italian American? To some self-appointed arbiters of italianità, the answer is: Roman Catholic, conservative, and indisputably heterosexual.” If we have learned anything from the ongoing scrutiny of the Italian-American “experience” it is that said experience is any thing but singular. Italian-American histories and cultures are diverse, multifaceted, and ever open to new interpretations and revisions. The Calandra Institute’s public programs offer an opportunity to recognize and represent the diverse expressions of an italianità alternativa.
On October 6, 2009, John Giorno read from his selected works Subduing Demons in America(Soft Skull Press, 2008) as part of the Institute’s Writers Read series. Giorno founded the artist collective Giorno Poetry Systems in 1968, which used technology to make poetry accessible to new audiences and influenced spoken word and slam poetry. He helped pioneer the exploration of “queer” sexuality in poetry during the 1960s. His AIDS Treatment Project, begun in 1984, set the bar for direct, compassionate action in the AIDS crisis. A practicing Buddhist since the early 1970s, Giorno has been instrumental in advancing Buddhism in North America, and in the cross-fertilization of Buddhist and poetic practice.
Among the many poems Giorno performed at the Institute was “La Saggezza Delle Streghe (Wisdom of the Witches),” set in Castelmezzano, a town in Basilicata with mountain peaks resembling “big, broken, splintered teeth spiked into the sky.”