Emilia Errera


Emilia Errera was an Italian teacher and writer who specialized in historical and literary essays and critiques, notably about Charles Dickens.

Biography

Emilia, was born on 15 May 1866 in Trieste, Italy to a Jewish family. Her parents were Cesare, a Venetian, and mother Luigia Fano from Mantua. Her siblings included writer Rosa Errera, brother Carlo Errera, and sister Anna Errera.
Emilia graduated teacher training in Venice and attended the Institute of Magisterium in Florence, where her instructors included P. Villari and Enrico Nencioni, who had taught Italian literature there since 1884 and who passed on to her a love of history and literature.
Much later, in 1900, Emilia credited Nencioni, who was regarded as a connoisseur and interpreter of English writers, with fostering her lifelong interest in writers such as Charles Dickens. She dedicated a commemorative article to Nencioni in the Florentine magazine Il Marzocco full of gratitude and giving him credit for passing along his teachings.

Teacher

In 1887, she qualified with honors to teach in secondary schools. Beginning her teaching career as an assistant to the professor of Italian language in normal school, she soon qualified to teach history and geography. She moved to the commercial technical school, refusing better assignments outside of Florence so as not to leave her mother alone. After her mother died, Errera moved to Milan to join her sisters and teach at the normal school. Two years later, in 1892, she started teaching history and geography at the "GB Piatti" technical school, and then Italian language in the women's technical school. Finally, she returned to the Piatti school.

Writer

In 1887, Errera's original work began appearing in Italian magazines, including the National Review, the Magazine for Young Ladies, Cordelia, Albo per la Giovinezza, Readings for Young Girls, Library for Children, and more.
In the National Review of Florence, she published an essay about the historical-literary character of Alessandro Tassoni's Filippiche, an incendiary pamphlet in which Tassoni attacked the then Spanish domination of Italy. The work by Errera begins with a broad examination of the environment and the facts around the story, in particular the author's relations with the Savoy house. Her sympathy for the author seems based on shared feelings of homeland and freedom, together with the hope for a united Italy.
In her next essay, The Stone of Political Comparison by Traiano Boccalini, Errera showed greater detachment.
Her essays about Charles Dickens became a notable contribution to the language, and her biographical-critical essays on the writer were published widely. According to Paesano,
"Appearing in the Magazine for Young Ladies and in Il Marzocco, she provides indications on the distinctly moral point of view with which E. looked at literature. She found it reassuring that the author of Oliver Twist had no hesitation in drawing a clear line between 'good and evil,' between completely positive characters and exclusively negative characters; and she appreciated his humor and a feeling of hope."
Errera wrote about a contemporary Italian writer, E. De Marchi, espousing similar arguments. She worked with her sister Rosa Errera on Voices and incorrect ways: Essay on the correction of idiots and other errors of the Milanese use, Milan 1898, and the article, On the teaching of history in secondary schools, which appeared in Il Marzocco. In her published opinions, Errera hoped that history teachers and publishers would pay more attention to the times and products of peace, rather than to the military view of history. Her 1895 Carlo Dickens was the first full-length study of Dickens in Italian.

Death

Emilia Errera died of pneumonia on 12 December 1901 in Milan at the age of 35. She was buried in the Jewish cemetery in Milan.
Posthumously, Emilia's writings were collected by brother Carlo Errera and his sisters in a volume titled, Carlo Dickens..., with a preface by writer Angiolo Orvieto, Bologna, 1903. According to Paesano, in that preface, Orvieto noted that "her ideas were 'the most minute and faithful that one has.'" A review in the London Saturday Review commented "Emilia Errera led a busy life and wrote little, but that little is well written and makes us regret that she did not live to write more."

Selected works

According to worldcat.org, these are the most widely held works by Emilia Errera in libraries: