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Italian-born academic and writer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
William Anselmi (born 1958) is an Italian-born academic and writer. His work has focused on Italian poetry (neoavanguardia, sperimentalismo); Italian Canadian literature and culture; narratives of displacement; the body organic/technological; the Image vs. the Word; media: television, cinema, Italian alternative music; environments of technological communication.
Dr. Anselmi received an MA from Carleton University in 1983 and a PhD in Comparative Literature in 1992 from l'Université de Montréal, with a dissertation entitled Sperimentalismo e/o avanguardia poetiche pratiche del Gruppo 63. He then returned to Carleton University as an assistant professor, before coming to the University of Alberta, serving first as Associate Professor and then Professor of Italian and Italian-Canadian Literature and Culture.
Dr. Anselmi received national attention in the mid-2000s for a series of televised lectures he gave on The Sopranos as a cultural representation of Italian heritage in North America. The lectures aired after episodes of the series on Telelatino.[1] In an interview for the National Post Anselmi states that:
The Sopranos uses the Mafia as a metaphor to really talk about the American dream, and take it apart episode by episode. ... In the negative space of this Mafia family you actually find those values that are not present any more in the American dream. So the shadow, the negative side of the American dream, has those values, and those values are very ancient values such as trust, respect—very biblical, you know, sort of old Bible, Old Testament values, friendship.[2]
Dr. Anselmi's first story, 'The Joke of Eternal Returns', was published in the 1989 anthology, Ricordi: Things Remembered.[3] His most recent work is a travel narrative of the Italian city of Orvieto, Orvieto: Urbs Vetus, which appeared in 2009.
He has also served as the president of the Association of Italian Canadian Writers from 1998 to 2000 and is currently the Canadian correspondent for Hebenon, an Italian language international journal of literature.[4][5]
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