In the 1963 novel Lessico Famigliare (known in English-speaking countries as What we Used to Say or Family Sayings, but more readily translatable as Family Talk) Natalia Ginzburg uses her apparently detached and ironically humorous family memoir as a device to highlight the ritualistic importance of words and constructed behavior as driving forces behind familiar unity. By the end of Ginzburg’s dry and discreet autobiography, now unanimously considered a masterpiece of post-war Italian literature, the reader is completely immersed in her family’s recurring jokes, ritual exclamations and ordinary nonsense, a repertoire of assorted little obsessions that stands out as an independent “character” in the novel.

artistsCuenca Rasmussen Lilibeth, Nico Vascellari, Kristyna Milde, Eva Seufert, Jiří Skála, Irgin Sena, Bryan Zanisnik, Marek Milde, Jiří Thýn, Ettore Favini, Moira Ricci, Guy Ben-Ner, Patrick Tuttofuoco, Aaron Gilbert, Petra Feriancová
curatorsMarco Antonini
placeFUTURA
castMarco Antonini
cameraNekane Sandoval, Giulio Zannol
soundNekane Sandoval, Giulio Zannol
editingGiulio Zannol
interviewNekane Sandoval, Giulio Zannol
published26. 6. 2012
languageČesky / English
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