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Petrolio

Petrolio

by Pier Paolo Pasolini, translated from the Italian by Ann Goldstein

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Seventeen years after Pier Paolo Pasolini’s brutal death, his sprawling, unfinished magnum opus was published in Italy. Petrolio is an extraordinary display of Pasolini’s powers of language and invention. Long suppressed by Pasolini’s family, it received the highest critical acclaim while causing public outrage and political scandal—proving the author’s enduring power to provoke, astonish, and inspire awe.

A work in progress at the time of Pasolini’s murder, Petrolio is made up of a series of notes—some extended and polished narrative passages, others cryptic messages from the author to himself that consist of no more than a few words. At the novel’s center is Carlo, an oil executive who undergoes a profound personality split: Carlo 1 is a super-Machiavellian power monger; Carlo 2 lives only to satisfy his perverse and insatiable sexual desires. Carlo also experiences a sexual metamorphosis in which he becomes, at will, female. The story of Carlo is interspersed with revisions of myth—Oedipus, Medea, the Argonauts—and of Dante’s hell.

The teller of this story is also dual in nature. There is the author—the external shaper of the novel—who interrupts the text to comment on its mechanics and its meaning. And there is the narrator, whose cynical and seductive perspective comes from within Petrolio’s fictional world.

Fragmentary, deliberately self-referential, meta-literary, a devotional exploration of the male libido, an ode to the lust for power and the power of lust and, above all, a wrenching attempt to define the intellectual and his responsibilities, Petrolio is a postmodern masterpiece.

Additional Book Information

Series: NYRB Classics
ISBN: 9798896230304
Pages: 496
Publication Date:

Praise

With shifts from social realism to wild fabulation, sustained allusions to a half-dozen works of literature, and the numerous short essays scattered throughout the text, Petrolio is the work of a writer confident he can turn his manuscript into a kind of encyclopedic novel. All he needed was time. The surviving cluster of sketches and fragments is, by turns, brilliant and almost unreadable.
—Scott McLemee, Salon

A trove of searingly beautiful apercus and images, a caustic compendium of this modern-day Jeremiah's last thoughts on class, anthropology, sex, psychoanalysis and male hairstyles. Petrolio reveals its author as the grateful possessor of a Mediterranean culture stretching from Homer through Apollonius of Tyana and Petronius, and on to Dante and Leopardi — a salty humanistic tradition to which Pasolini, chaser of slum boys, lover of flashy sports cars, castigator of the powerful, was the fitting heir.
—Fernanda Eberstadt, The New York Times

Translator Ann Goldstein was heroic in her herculean undertaking
—George Armstrong, The Los Angeles Times

Petrolio recoils from the linearity of a text written "a schidionata," like the meat speared and cooked on a skewer… Instead, the novel is composed "a brulichio" as it strives to attain the churning and amorphous configuration of a teeming mass.
—Deborah Amberson, Quaderni d'italianistica

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