Rassegnazione: Romanzo by Luigi Capuana

(10 User reviews)   1386
By Grayson Williams Posted on Mar 30, 2026
In Category - Foundation
Capuana, Luigi, 1839-1915 Capuana, Luigi, 1839-1915
Italian
Okay, so picture this: Sicily in the late 1800s. A young woman, Luigia, is stuck. Her family is broke, her prospects are zero, and the only way out seems to be marrying a much older, boring, but wealthy man. It's not a choice, really. It's a surrender. That's 'Rassegnazione' – the Italian word for 'resignation.' This book isn't about a big, dramatic rebellion. It's about the quiet, everyday tragedy of giving up on your own life because society leaves you no other path. Capuana paints this world with such sharp, honest detail that you can feel the dust of the Sicilian countryside and the weight of Luigia's silent despair. If you've ever felt trapped by circumstances, this story will hit you right in the gut. It’s a slow burn, but it asks a huge question: what happens to a person when hope is no longer an option?
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Luigi Capuana’s Rassegnazione is a quiet novel about a loud kind of pain: the kind that comes from accepting a life you never wanted.

The Story

We follow Luigia, a young woman from a once-respectable family that has fallen on hard times. In her small Sicilian town, a woman’s value and security are tied entirely to marriage. With no dowry and fading youth, Luigia’s options vanish. The ‘solution’ arrives in the form of Don Paolo, a kind but elderly and uninspiring landowner. Marrying him means financial salvation for her family and a stable, if loveless, future for herself. The whole plot revolves around this crushing decision. There’s no secret lover, no last-minute escape. The drama is internal, watching Luigia systematically smother her own dreams and personality to fit into the narrow role society has carved out for her. Her ‘rassegnazione’ is the real protagonist.

Why You Should Read It

This book stuck with me because of its brutal honesty. Capuana doesn’t give us a fiery heroine. He gives us a real person, worn down by expectation and economic reality. You keep waiting for her to snap, to run away, to do something. But that’s the point—sometimes people don’t. Sometimes they just fold. Reading it feels like witnessing a slow-motion collapse. Capuana’s genius is in the details: the stifling family discussions about money, the way neighbors gossip, the sheer boredom of Luigia’s future. It’s a masterclass in showing how big social forces (poverty, patriarchy) crush individual spirits in small, incremental ways.

Final Verdict

This isn’t a light, escapist read. It’s for you if you love character-driven stories that explore social history without feeling like a textbook. Perfect for readers of classic European realism (think a less satirical version of Flaubert’s Madame Bovary), or anyone interested in the quiet, often overlooked histories of women’s lives. If you enjoy novels where the setting is a character itself—the heat, the traditions, the rigid social codes of rural Sicily—you’ll be completely absorbed. Just be prepared to sit with a profound sense of melancholy afterward.



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