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Loading... Il visconte dimezzato (original 1952; edition 1959)by Italo Calvino
Work InformationThe Cloven Viscount by Italo Calvino (1952)
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. A modern Jekyll/Hyde fable about the good and evil within everyone but that has surprises on the theme, and is amusingly told. The Viscount goes off to the Crusades and, not having a clue what he's doing, promptly jumps in front of a cannon and gets his body split vertically in half. One side is found and restored to life, returns home, and proceeds to rule over his subjects cruelly and selfishly. A while later the other half of the Viscount also returns home, having been found under a pile of corpses and likewise restored to life; but this half is the Viscount's good half, performing good deeds and acting utterly selflessly in all circumstances. As predictably intolerable as the bad half of the Viscount is, his good half is perhaps surprisingly found less than tolerable itself. For instance, farmers don't appreciate being told they should sell their crops for a smaller price because there's a famine and people are starving. Others don't appreciate their personal moral conduct being called into question. "Lucky that cannonball only split him in two. If it had done it in three, who knows what we'd have to put up with!", say the Viscount's put upon subjects. Turns out that goodness without a healthy dose of self-interest to temper it is difficult to accept, as a little reflection will prove the point of. Also brought into the spotlight is the average person's accommodation of the world's evil, as everyone of course accommodates to some degree (what, you donate every cent you don't need for food and shelter to the poor? No?). This is done through the character of the Viscount's carpenter, Pietrochiodo, who takes pride in his work and is paid well, but the bad Viscount keeps having him create torture and execution devices. "Just forget the purpose for which they're used, and look at them as pieces of mechanism. You see how fine they are?", he says. He justifies himself: "he was beginning to doubt whether building good machines was not beyond human possibility when the only mechanism which could function really practically and exactly seemed to be gibbets and racks." His conscience does bother him sometimes: "Can it be in my soul, this evil which makes only my cruel machines work?" Nevertheless, "he went on inventing other tortures with great zeal and ability." There are plenty of funny moments in the story. The bad Viscount decides to marry a peasant lass, and, only having badness in him, comes up with a unique way to approach her parents: "That night the haystack where the mother slept caught fire and the barrel where the father slept came apart. In the morning the two old folk were staring at the remains when the Viscount appeared. 'I must apologize for alarming you last night,' said he, 'but I didn't quite know how to approach the subject.'" In the end, the two halves of the Viscount fight a Monty Python-esque duel, exactly reopen each other's vertical scars, and the doctor stitches them back together, restoring wholeness. Having experienced both halves of what humanity is capable of, unrestrained, he ruled wisely, but limitedly: "Some might expect that with the Viscount entire again a period of marvelous happiness would open; but obviously a whole Viscount is not enough to make all the world whole." A viscount gets blown in two by cannon fire during battle but miraculously survives and returns home as literally half a man. This half is all evil, though, and spends his days terrorizing the countryside. One day his other half, which also survived the battle, arrives home and travels round to the local residents doing as much good as he possibly can, even if the results are sometimes not exactly wanted. So one is too evil and the other too good, until they finally battle one another and rediscover an equilibrium. Meh. I've loved the other Calvino stuff I've read, but this one fell flat for me. A little too heavy handed with the parable feel, maybe, and also maybe a little too silly. no reviews | add a review
Belongs to SeriesOur Ancestors (1) Belongs to Publisher SeriesEl balancí [Edicions 62] (258) Gallimard, Folio (5457) Keltainen kirjasto (96) Libro amigo [Bruguera] (644) De twintigste eeuw (73) Is contained inHas as a reference guide/companion
"In this fantastically macabre tale, the separate halves of a nobleman split in two by a cannonball go on to pursue their own independent adventures. In a battle against the Turks, Viscount Medardo of Terralba is bissected lengthwise by a cannonball. One half of him returns to his feudal estate and takes up a lavishly evil life. Soon the other, virtuous half appears. The two halves become rivals for the love of the same woman, fight a bloody duel, and achieve a miraculous resolution. Now available in an independent volume for the first time, this deliciously bizarre novella is Calvino at his most devious and winning"-- No library descriptions found.
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)853.914Literature Italian and related languages Italian fiction 1900- 20th Century 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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Italo Calvino
Publicado: 1952 | 85 páginas
Novela Fantástico Sátira
«El vizconde demediado» es la primera incursión de Italo Calvino en lo fabuloso y lo fantástico. Cuenta Calvino la historia del vizconde de Terralba, quien fue partido en dos por un cañonazo de los turcos y cuyas dos mitades continuaron viviendo por separado. Símbolo de la condición humana dividida, Medardo de Terralba sale a caminar por sus tierras. A su paso, las peras que colgaban de los árboles aparecen todas partidas por la mitad. Cada encuentro de dos seres en el mundo es un desgarrarse, le dice la mitad mala del vizconde a la mujer de quien se ha enamorado. Pero ¿es seguro que se trate de la mitad mala?
Esta magnífica fábula plantea la búsqueda del ser humano en su totalidad, quien suele estar hecho de algo más que de la suma de sus mitades.