(La) Nina Siciliana was the composer of one Italiansonnet, and a candidate to be the first Italian woman poet. She only came to light in 1780, along with 74 other poets, in the Étrennes du Parnasse (or Choix de Poësies).[1] She is now considered legendary by most scholars.[2]
Adolfo Borgognoni first proposed that Nina was a fictional construct of male poets in 1891 and was soon followed by Giulio Bertoni.[3] Specifically Borgognoni thought she was invented by the successors of printer Filippo Giunti: essa [Nina] nacque in Firenze, nella officina degli Eredi di Filippo Giunti, l'anno del Signore 1527 ("this one [Nina] was born in Florence, in the office of the heirs of Filippo Giunti, the year of the Lord 1527").[4] The historicity of Nina—and tangentially the sex of the author of the poem traditionally assigned to her—has been debated ever since.[5] Liborio Azzolina tried to resuscitate her and also Compiuta Donzella, whom Borgognoni, with less supporters, also ascribed to later male poets' imaginations.[6] More recently the Italian scholar Lino Pertile has called her fantomatica (phantomlike) and Paolo Cherchi dismissed her as "mythical", to be followed by Anne Klinck.[7]
Francesco Trucchi was the first to assign a poem to Nina: the sonnet Tapina in me, c'amava uno sparvero ("Alas for me, I loved a sparrowhawk"), probably composed in the late thirteenth or early fourteenth century.[8] Nina was apparently inspired to write by the poems Dante da Maiano addressed "To his Lady Nina, of Sicily".[9]Francesco de Sanctis, the foremost Italian literary critic of his day, praised la perfetta semplicità of Nina and Compiuta.[4] One recent scholar who accepts Nina's existence and derides doubters has noted similarities between Nina and Alamanda de Castelnau.[10]
^Chandler B. Beall, "Un Recueil italianisant du XVIIIe siècle français", Modern Language Notes, 55:7 (Nov., 1940), 531.
^Karin Pendle, Women and Music: A History (Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 2001), 35.
^A Borgognoni, "La condanna capitale di una bella signora", Studi di letteratura storica (Bologna, 1891); G. Bertoni, Il Duecento (Milan: 1910), 78.
^Once upon a time her birthplace—Palermo or Messina—was debated.
^L. Azzolina, La compiuta donzella di Firenze (Palermo: Lo Casto, 1902).
^L. Perile, "Il nodo di Bonagiunta, le penne di Dante e il Dolce Stil Novo", Lettere italiane, 46:1 (1994:Jan./Mar.), 56. P. Cherchi, "The Troubled Existence of Three Women Poets", Voice of the Trobairitz, William D. Paden, ed. (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1989), is devoted to Nina, Compiuta, and Gaia da Camino. A. L. Klinck, "Poetic Markers of Gender in Medieval "Woman's Song": Was Anonymous a Woman?" Neophilologus, 87 (2003), 346 and 356 n26.
^Price, 3, cites Francesco Trucchi, Poesie italiane di dugento autori dall'origine della lingua infino al secolo decimosettino, vol. 1 (Prato: R. Guati, 1846).