Il Corriere del Popolo

From Wikipedia the free encyclopedia

Carmelo Zito took over the San Francisco newspaper Il Corriere del Popolo in 1935. Under Zito, it became one of the fiercest foes of Benito Mussolini's fascism on the West Coast. It vigorously attacked Italy's 1935 invasion of Ethiopia and its intervention in the Spanish Civil War. Zito helped form the Italian-American Anti-Fascist League and often attacked certain Italian prominenti like Ettore Patrizi, publisher of L'Italia and La Voce del Popolo. Zito's paper campaigned against the Italian pro-fascist language schools of San Francisco.[1]

The University of Minnesota has some copies of Il Corriere del Popolo on microfilm. Newspaper, 1916–1962. 8 reels. Published weekly in San Francisco, California by C. Zito, 1911–1968. In English and Italian. Il Corriere del Popolo (The People's Messenger; absorbed L'Unione, Pueblo, CO), San Francisco, CA. Monthly (semi-weekly, weekly): 1935–1936, 1938–1940, 1942–1945, 1947–1954, 1957–1959, 1961–1962, 1965. (Microfilm: 1916–1962).

Book writing in Italian "Socialismo italiano esule negli" discusses Il Corriere del Popolo[2]

(online site in which a copy of the Il Corriere del Popolo may be requested for research and study)[3][4]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Bénédicte Deschamps, "Opposing Fascism in the West: The Experience of 'Il Corriere Del Popolo' in San Francisco in the Late 1930s," Proceedings of the American Italian Historical Association 2001 34: 109–123
  2. ^ "Italian American Collection – Newspapers · University of Minnesota Libraries". www.lib.umn.edu. Archived from the original on 2018-09-12.
  3. ^ "Il corriere del popolo. [volume]".
  4. ^ Facondo, Gabriella. Socialismo italiano esule negli (1930–1942). Quaderni della FIAP, Italy, 1993.