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Giovanni Bottiroli teaches Literary Theory and Aesthetics at the University of Bergamo.
His publications include

He also contributed to the Enciclopedia Einaudi and to the Enciclopedia Treccani (with an essay on “Literature and Psychoanalysis”).

Author’s note

I have been thinking for a long time about writing a text, not a long one indeed, to summarize the main points of my research, thus showing its consistency and its potentials. For a number of reasons this idea was delayed until this very day; and even now I have just a part of it to offer, just a fragment.

This fragment is about the theory of literature. It originated from a few conversations with Richard Ambrosini on the book I published with Einaudi in 2006. I wrote the following text in the form of a self-presentation; I guess it can be seen as a ‘manifesto’, a concise manifesto on what the theory of literature is and on its ever growing importance in our times, ruled by anti-theory and retro-studiesas they are.

I hope that others will have a chance to share and build on the vision and the techniques that can be learnt from 20th-century classics; I simply tried to make those elements more accessible.

I dedicate these pages to Richard for triggering me to write them, and for being so generous to translate them into English for me.

Turin, October 15th 2009

*translation by Anna Belladelli

What the theory of Literature is. Grounds and problems (2006)