Vincenzo Cardarelli, pseudonym ofNazareno Caldarelli (1 May 1887 – 18 June 1959) was an Italian poet and a journalist.
Cardarelli was born inCorneto,Lazio, in a family ofMarche origin. His father was Antonio Romagnoli. His studies were irregular and he applied to different jobs. In 1906, when he had moved to Rome, he began his career as a journalist.
Cardarelli published articles in the Bologna-based literary magazineLa Raccolta between 1918 and 1919.[1] He created, in 1919 with Riccardo Bacchelli and Emilio Cecchi, the prestigious reviewLa Ronda (1919-1922). He was one of the contributors of the Fascist dailyIl Tevere.[2]
Carderelli won two literary awards, including the 1929 Premio Bagutta forIl Sole a picco and the 1948 Premio Strega forVilla Tarantola.
^Meir Michaelis (1998). "Mussolini's unofficial mouthpiece: Telesio Interlandi: Il Tevere and the evolution of Mussolini's anti-Semitism".Journal of Modern Italian Studies.3 (3):217–240.doi:10.1080/13545719808454979.
Alessandro Baruffi:Vincenzo Cardarelli: The Forgotten amongst the Great: A Collection of the Best Poems Translated in English, LiteraryJoint Press, Philadelphia, PA, 2016
Daniele D'Alterio:Vincenzo Cardarelli sindacalista rivoluzionario : politica e letteratura in Italia nel primo Novecento, Bulzoni : Rom 2005
Carmine Di Biase: Invito alla lettura di Vincenzo Cardarelli, 1986
Charles Burdett:Vincenzo Cardarelli and His Contemporaries: Fascist Politics and Literary Culture (Oxford Modern Languages and Literature Monographs), Oxford University Press 1999,ISBN0-19-815978-1
Giuseppe Savoca:Concordanza delle poesie di Vincenzo Cardarelli, Olschki : Florenz 1987,ISBN88-222-3540-1
Pia-Elisabeth Leuschner,Vincenzo Cardarelli: „Settembre a Venezia / September in Venedig, in: Italienisch. Zeitschrift für italienische Sprache und Literatur, Bd. 48, November 2002, S. 66ff.
H. Meter:Vincenzo Cardarelli: 'Autunno veneziano', in: Manfred Lentzen (Hg.), Italienische. Lyrik in Einzelinterpretationen, Berlin (E. Schmidt) 1999, S. 79 – 87