Left-leaning authors Roberto Saviano
and Antonio Scurati, victims of alleged government censorship on
state TV recently, are not on the list of 100 Italian authors
attending October's Frankfurt Book Fair where Italy is special
guest this year, the government's pointman for the event,
conservative journalist Mauro Mazza, said Tuesday.
Gomorrah author Saviano had a show on the mafia pulled by state
broadcaster Rai after the rightwing government took over in
autumn 2022 and Scurati had a monologue on Premier Giorgia
Meloni's alleged failure to reckon with her neofascist past
pulled on Liberation Day recently.
Mazza said, however, that it was not a question of
discrimination but a desire to "give space to authors who have
not had it in the past".
He suggested that both authors might be invited by German
publishers to the October 16-20 fair.
Saviano has had to go into police protection after Camorra death
threats after his 2006 bestseller Gomorra, which later spawned a
Cannes award winning film and a hit TV series.
He was successfully sued by Meloni for calling her a "bastard"
over migrant children's deaths amid her fierce anti-migrant
rhetoric while in opposition in 2020.
Scurati, the author of an acclaimed biography of Mussolini, was
set to deliver a monologue on Rai marking the day Italy
celebrates its liberation from Fascism and Nazism on April 25,
but the monologue was pulled after he tacked on an analysis of
Meloni's "post-Fascist" party and its alleged inability to come
to terms with its neo-Fascist predecessors, having failed to
remove the Mussolini flame from its logo.
Rai denied censorship and said the last-minute decision was due
to Scurati's overly steep fee.
Meloni published the monologue, in its entirety, on her social
media platforms.
photo: Saviano
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