Livia De Stefani (23 June 1913 – 28 March 1991) was an Italian writer.
Early life
Livia De Stefani was born into a wealthy landowning family in Palermo, and educated at a convent.[1][2]
Career
In midlife, De Stefani began writing fiction, and published her novel La vigna di uve nere (1953, published in English as Black Grapes).[3] She went on to write a collection of three short stories, Gli affatturati (1955),[4] another collection of short stories, Viaggio di una sconosciuta (1963, Journey of an Unknown Woman), several more novels, Passione di Rosa (1958, The Passion of Rosa), La signora di Cariddi (1971, The Lady of Cariddi), and La Stella Assenzio (1975, The Star Absinthe),[5] and a memoir, La mafia alle mie (1991, The Mafia Behind Me).[2][6]
De Stefani's writing is known for its dark psychological themes[3][4][5] and its Sicilian cultural context, or sicilianità, including her descriptions of the 1968 Belice earthquake. She is sometimes described as "the first woman to write about the Mafia."[7]
In 1930, De Stefani married sculptor Renato Signorini, and moved to Rome. They had three children; their daughter Maria Stella Signorini married actor Jacques Sernas.[9] Renato Signorini died in 1966.[2] De Stefani died in 1991.[10]
References
^ abRizzo, Ester (2016). "Livia De Stefani". Enciclopedia delle donne (in Italian). Retrieved 2022-04-17.