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‘Silent loyalty’: armistice and Italian memory in the work of Agostino degli Espinosa

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 November 2025

Charles L. Leavitt IV*
Affiliation:
Department of Romance Languages and Literatures, University of Notre Dame, Notre Dame, USA
*
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Abstract

Author of Il Regno del Sud (1946), an influential first-hand history of the Kingdom of Italy that was set up in Allied territory after the 1943 armistice, Agostino degli Espinosa did much to shape Italian memory of the Allied occupation of Italy. In this article I examine for the first time degli Espinosa’s doubts about Italy’s postwar future, which appear in the margins of his history, and which come to the fore in his fiction. I argue that the critical re-evaluation of the work of this emblematic but understudied figure can shed light on Italy’s divided memories of the Second World War and the Allied occupation.

Italian summary

Italian summary

Agostino degli Espinosa, autore de Il Regno del Sud (1946) – un’influente opera sul Regno d’Italia istituito nei territori che saranno occupati dagli Alleati dopo l’armistizio del 1943 – svolse un ruolo cruciale nella costruzione della memoria italiana dell’occupazione Alleata. In questo articolo analizzo le riflessioni di degli Espinosa riguardo al futuro dell’Italia nel secondo dopoguerra, che si manifestano nella sua narrazione storica e trovano piena espressione nella sua produzione letteraria. Una rilettura critica dell’opera di questa figura emblematica, ma ancora poco studiata, contribuisce a offrire nuove chiavi di lettura per comprendere le memorie divise dell’Italia relative alla Seconda guerra mondiale e all’occupazione Alleata.

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Introduction

The announcement of Italy’s armistice with the Allies on 8 September 1943 left the Italian government with authority over an exceedingly small territory, consisting only of those lands not under German occupation or Allied rule. Having abandoned Rome to set up a government in exile under Allied protection in the South, King Victor Emmanuel III and his prime minister, Pietro Badoglio, oversaw a government that initially controlled little more than Brindisi and Bari. Even there, they proved heavily reliant on the Allies, who disparaged the provisional Italian government as ‘little more than a name’, while nevertheless recognising its strategic significance in exercising an ‘unchallenged claim to legality’ (Macmillan Reference Macmillan1984, 222). The government of the Kingdom of Italy may have been feeble, its dominion meagre – nothing more than a ‘Kingdom of the South’, as it came to be known – but it provided the Allies a legitimate authority with whom to negotiate (Di Nolfo and Serra Reference Di Nolfo and Serra2010, 59–60). In recent years, however, historical revisionists in Italy have questioned its authority, challenged its legality, and dismissed its legitimacy.

In their efforts to undermine the ‘resistance vulgate’, as Renzo De Felice (Reference De Felice1995, 14) nicknamed the narrative of national uprising against Benito Mussolini’s Fascist regime, the bedrock belief on which the postwar Italian state was founded, revisionist historians have sought simultaneously to delegitimise the Italian government that opposed the Fascists after 1943. For the revisionists, the ‘values of the Resistance’ are not, as more celebratory accounts suggest, the patriotic principles enshrined in the constitution and enacted in the establishment of the postwar republic, but instead the divisive and sectarian – in a word, the partisan – beliefs of a presumptuous minority (Duggan Reference Duggan2008, 538–547; Focardi Reference Focardi2005). Likewise, the Allied landing in Italy, which divided the country in half, precipitating the civil war in which the partisans fought against the Fascists, represents for many revisionists not an act of national liberation but instead a foreign invasion (Vivarelli Reference Vivarelli2000, 104–105). They grant no more legitimacy to the Allied-backed Kingdom of Italy in the South, therefore, than to the German-backed Italian Social Republic in the North, rejecting both sides’ claims to represent the true Italy and adopting instead a facially neutral account of a divided nation caught between warring factions. As Pasquale Chessa puts it:

On both sides, in the civil war of words, fought with the weapons of ideology and propaganda, the absolute enemy is denied its claim to have defended the fatherland and is instead accused of having served the relative enemy: the Anglo-Americans, in the case of the partisans, and the Germans, in the case of Salò. Considerations of legitimacy are based, therefore, on weakness rather than on strength. The legitimacy of the Italy of Salò is weak … The legitimacy of the Kingdom of the South is weak. (Chessa Reference Chessa2005, xvii–xviii)

The failure of the ‘resistance vulgate’ to achieve consensus, the persistence of counternarratives from the Fascists and their ideological heirs, inspires revisionist historians like Chessa to abjure historical judgement in favour of alleged impartiality. Faced with seemingly intractable divisions in Italian historical memory, whose competing claims they refuse to adjudicate, they declare a pox on both houses. As Chessa’s example reveals, that pox invariably spreads to the memory of Allied rule.

Indeed, the revisionists have repeatedly blamed Italy’s 8 September armistice with the Allies for causing the collapse of the nation, ‘la morte della patria’. Taking that portentous phrase as the title for a 1996 polemic, Ernesto Galli della Loggia argued that the armistice and occupation represented an insurmountable challenge to post-Fascist Italian identity. The Italian monarchy, which had aligned itself with the Allies, was not credibly antifascist, he maintained, while the antifascists were not credibly patriotic, resulting in an unbridgeable gulf into which fell Italy, undone by the impossibility of fostering a new Italian identity that could unite the oppositional spirit of the Resistance with loyalty to the nation. In Galli della Loggia’s words, ‘8 September was the event that ratified and sealed this dual impossibility’ (Galli della Loggia Reference Galli della Loggia1996, 24–25). In reaching this conclusion, he acknowledged his debt to De Felice, who had argued in the same volume in which he attacked the ‘resistance vulgate’ – a volume, it bears noting, edited by Pasquale Chessa – that ‘the emptying out of the sense of nationhood began on 8 September 1943, making that date symbolic of Italian evil’ (31). Galli della Loggia’s argument is thus best understood as a well-aimed shot in an almost continual volley from right-wing and revisionist critics of the post-Fascist state.

Indro Montanelli, for instance, infamous for his defence of Fascist war crimes and colonial conquest, condemned what he called ‘the Italy of defeat’ that emerged from the armistice with the Allies; on 8 September, he argued, Italy’s ‘disintegration was total’ (Montanelli and Cervi Reference Montanelli and Cervi1982, 12). Likewise, Ruggero Zangrandi, best known for his suspiciously exculpatory 1948 account of what he termed ‘the long voyage through Fascism’ – the long voyage, that is to say, from Fascist adherent to antifascist opponent – proved far less forgiving of those who signed the armistice agreement than he was of those who had enthusiastically supported Mussolini’s regime, lamenting ‘the disaster of 8 September’, which he called ‘a black betrayal’ (Zangrandi Reference Zangrandi1974, 9, 11). And the military historian Nino Arena, an unapologetic champion of Italian Fascism, portrayed the armistice as ‘a huge disaster at every level’, arguing that abandoning the Axis in favour of the Allies had stained Italian identity with the ‘humiliating sign of betrayal, disloyalty, dishonour, international unreliability’ (Arena Reference Arena1999, 37). Like De Felice and Galli della Loggia, these right-wing critics cast doubt on the armistice with the Allies as part of a larger revisionist project, calling into question Italy’s redemptive postwar narrative of national liberation achieved through antifascist struggle, and with it the very legitimacy of the Italian state.

To shed light on how the revisionist narrative has managed to take hold in the cultural memory not only of the Resistance but also of Allied rule, I propose in this article to return to one of the foundational histories of the events that followed the 8 September armistice, in search of the internal conflicts and contradictions that critics continue to exploit. Agostino degli Espinosa’s eye-witness history of the Allied-backed Kingdom of Italy, Il Regno del Sud, remains a touchstone in the field nearly 80 years after it initially appeared (Gallerano Reference Gallerano1994, 91). The same cannot be said, unfortunately, for any of degli Espinosa’s other works, despite his once formidable reputation across a variety of intellectual fields.Footnote 1 An economist and novelist as well as a historian, and a prolific contributor to some of the leading journals of the postwar period, degli Espinosa authored not only Il Regno del Sud (Reference degli Espinosa1946a), but also an idiosyncratic work of social theory, La rivoluzione umana (Reference degli Espinosa1946); an intriguing study of the rise of Fascism, Una crisi e due guerre (Reference degli Espinosa1948a); and two positively reviewed novels, L’assente (Reference degli Espinosa1945a) and Ognuno con la sua miseria (Reference degli Espinosa1950). What is more, he co-wrote and co-produced, with Alba de Céspedes, a well-received postwar play (Cavallaro Reference Cavallaro2022), and collaborated with Cesare Zavattini on the screenplay for an innovative but unmade film. On the occasion of his untimely death in 1952, degli Espinosa received obituary notices in leading newspapers throughout Europe, which commemorated his demise as a great loss to Italian culture (Pellicani Reference Pellicani1952; ‘Nécrologie’ 1953).

Agostino degli Espinosa was not just an influential figure throughout the first half of the twentieth century in Italy; he was, I argue, emblematic of that era, embodying the contradictions of what has been called Italy’s ‘difficult modernity’ (Gordon Reference Gordon2006, 8–9). Passing rapidly from Fascism to monarchism to liberalism to communism, degli Espinosa underwent a series of political transformations that exemplified the ‘long voyage’ that Zangrandi (Reference Zangrandi1948) traced in the biographies of so many mid-century Italian intellectuals. For this reason, despite the undeserved obscurity into which most of his work has fallen and the almost complete absence of scholarship on his work, I claim that renewed attention to degli Espinosa can illuminate some of the recesses of Italian cultural memory. Reading Il Regno del Sud for clues to the eventual challenge to the national narrative that it sought to inculcate, and reading his two novels, L’assente and Ognuno con la sua miseria, for glimpses of degli Espinosa’s own doubts about that narrative even as he proposed it, illustrates some of the difficulties faced by those who seek to legitimise the postwar state. The critical analysis of his history, his novels, and most of all his political travels can thus help us to understand better Italy’s political travails as they continue to trouble the memories of the Second World War and the Allied occupation of Italy.

‘Italian history made its presence felt’: degli Espinosa and the Kingdom of Italy

Agostino degli Espinosa’s ‘long voyage’ was literal as well as figurative. After the announcement of Italy’s armistice with the Allies, he undertook the dangerous journey from Rome to Bari to reach the king and Badoglio and to enlist in the fight for Italian liberation, crossing German lines at significant personal peril in ‘a gesture of silent loyalty to a principle of honour’, as he subsequently detailed in the serially published diary ‘La marcia segreta’ (Reference degli Espinosa1945b, 131). For degli Espinosa, this was above all an act of loyalty to the monarchy, and indeed Il Regno del Sud is introduced explicitly as an expression of that same loyalty, with the intention of encouraging Italians to vote against the republic in the 2 June 1946 referendum (Reference degli Espinosa1946a, xii, 446). To this end, the book offers a stirring defence of the king and the provisional Italian government, marshalling historical evidence to argue that the decision to relocate the capital from Rome to Allied-occupied territory saved the state and preserved the nation. While critics of the king’s expedition south contemptuously considered ‘the “flight to Pescara” … the main indictment against the monarchy’, as De Felice (Reference De Felice1995, 39) puts it, degli Espinosa (Reference degli Espinosa1946a, 29) defended the decision not only as prudent but also as emancipatory, expressing his belief that ‘the “flight to Pescara” saved Italy and the Anglo-American efforts’. Only this supposed flight, he argued, could have aligned the Italian state with the Allies, legitimising their landing – and, subsequently, their occupation of the country – as a liberation and a necessary step in the restoration of a lawful Italian state authority. For the same reason, he argued, the voyage to Allied-controlled territory served to expose the Germans as illegitimate invaders, since this judgement was freely decreed by the king and Badoglio, who ‘represented and guaranteed the continuity of the Italian state’ (1946a, 11). As recounted in Il Regno del Sud, then, theirs was not an act of self-preservation, as their critics would assert, but instead a heroic gesture to preserve and protect the Italian state.

The struggle for state preservation, for institutional continuity in the face of chaos, provides the central narrative of degli Espinosa’s history, which recounts how those responsible for maintaining the social order confronted the confusion of combat and administered, amidst the wilderness of war-torn Italy, a makeshift government able to persevere while they pursued national liberation and reunification. The book’s emplotment, Hayden White’s (Reference White1987, 24) term for the historian’s effort to impose narrative order on the events of the past, thus conveys suggestive ideological connotations. White (Reference White1978, 106) alerts us to how narrative histories, with their trajectories of rise and fall, their orientations to goals and attendant obstacles, their fortuitous or ill-fated resolutions, are fundamentally literary: ‘[A] given set of events, arranged more or less chronologically but encoded so as to appear as phases of a process with a discernible beginning, middle, and end, may be emplotted as a Romance, Comedy, Tragedy, Epic, or what have you.’ Taking some advantage of the leeway allowed by White’s inclusive phrasing, I would propose that Agostino degli Espinosa’s history belongs to a narrative genre not enumerated among the standard four. Il Regno del Sud, I claim, can be categorised as a ‘Robinsonade’. Like Daniel Defoe’s 1719 novel Robinson Crusoe, degli Espinosa’s 1946 history recounts the arduous but ultimately triumphant efforts of an exile to establish dominion over an inhospitable territory.Footnote 2 Marooned in their makeshift southern capital, the king and Badoglio must conserve the rudiments of the Italian state, in degli Espinosa’s account, just as Crusoe, on his island, must conserve the rudiments of bourgeois civilisation, fostering the conditions that will facilitate an eventual return home.

Il Regno del Sud begins, tellingly, with a ship at sea – ‘On Friday, 10 September 1943, in the early afternoon, the Royal Cruiser Scipione l’Africano appeared on patrol in front of the port of Brindisi’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1946a, 1) – before announcing, with its landfall, the arrival of the king who, reaching southern shores, ‘set foot as sovereign on a land that the flag of the ancient Swabian castle, overlooking the sea, testified as free’ (7). If the ship’s hazardous voyage proved successful, however, the dangers by no means abated once it anchored in port, since its passengers disembarked in a land that, while free, was no longer recognisably Italian. Here, one may be tempted to recall an earlier southern voyage, that of Garibaldi and his Mille, who landed in Marsala in May 1860, and thus to associate degli Espinosa’s Robinsonade with the Southern Question that has often served to divide Italy. Yet Il Regno del Sud by no means identifies the Italian South with ‘the barbarous, the primitive, the violent, the irrational, the feminine, the African’, the stereotypes that have so often underwritten the invidious distinctions between southern and northern Italy (Dickie Reference Dickie1999, 1). Instead, degli Espinosa argues that, with Italian authority having withered away as a result of Fascism’s failures, the South had been unjustly deserted and thus needed to be reclaimed before legitimate rule could be restored throughout the country. The inhabitants of these southern territories, he reports, had abandoned ‘any political ideal … any concept of national society’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1946a, 14). ‘Italy, the will of the Italian people, honour, freedom were meaningless words in the world in which we had arrived’ (149). The Italian state had to be carefully cultivated, therefore, by developing the rudimentary tools of governance. The territory initially proved resistant to these efforts at organisation, however, and the functionaries tasked with imposing state authority struggled to overcome the entropy in which they were compelled to work. Yet through their intensive efforts they managed to create the connections and to establish the fledgling institutions that made possible a stable social order. For degli Espinosa, ‘in those gestures of stark humanity, Italian history made its presence felt’ (120). Imposing order on the chaos, the administration thus managed to safeguard not just the fundamentals of the Italian state but also the commitment to Italian national identity.

In this way, the narrative structure of the Robinsonade makes degli Espinosa’s history of Italy’s military defeat, armistice and acquiescence to Allied authority into a victorious account of heroic endurance, of hard-won survival, of resolute fidelity to civic ideals. While at the moment of the ship’s arrival in port in September 1943 ‘there was nothing but a defeated state’, argued degli Espinosa, by the time of the return to Rome ‘the Italian state had a solid and vital international legal status’, and, more importantly, ‘was certain of the best method to use to proceed along the long road back. Such knowledge was in fact the greatest gain obtained by the government of the Kingdom of the South’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1946a, 345). The voyage south, however fraught, thus revealed itself to have been edifying, insofar as it ensured the continuity of the state until the journey home could be undertaken. Indeed, degli Espinosa described the impending journey not so much as a return to but a renewal of civil society. Maintaining his dominion even in flight, the king, in degli Espinosa’s account, vouchsafed an Italian future in careful continuity with Italian history, proving his and his country’s allegiance to the occupying Allies while providing for his people an Italian identity – an Italian ideal – to which they could remain loyal.

‘Faithful to the dictates of my conscience’: degli Espinosa’s political metamorphoses

The word loyalty, fedeltà, and its cognates recur throughout degli Espinosa’s oeuvre. At the conclusion of Il Regno del Sud, for instance, he described how the continuity of the Italian state had resulted from having demonstrated the ‘efficient and faithful [fedele] collaboration that Italy could offer to British and American politics’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1946a, 342). This status marked a clear step forward from the country’s condition at the time of the armistice, when the Allies distrusted Italy, which degli Espinosa established by quoting a British critic who insisted that the Italians lacked ‘the virtuous loyalty [fedeltà] to their cause’ (45). Italy nonetheless managed to build trust, degli Espinosa argued, thanks to the efforts of Badoglio, whose ‘faithfulness [fedeltà] to a principle’ (55), ‘to his own conscience as a faithful [fedele] soldier’ (62), allowed him to convince the Allies of his and his nation’s merit. It was not just Badoglio, however, but the entire government in exile, and especially the king, who deserved credit for saving Italy: ‘[T]hey must have felt their conscience being purified in a renewed oath of allegiance [fedeltà] to the symbol … that unites them in the shared history of the Italy born of the Risorgimento’ (89). It hardly needs to be stated that degli Espinosa numbered himself among those who had sworn this oath, having declared himself ready to sacrifice his life in an attempt to join the king out of a sense of ‘silent loyalty [fedeltà]’, the phrase that identifies, in my analysis, the lifelong ethical and political ideal to which he aspired.

Well before the publication of Il Regno del Sud, however, degli Espinosa had already begun to question, if not yet entirely to reject, his loyalty to the king. In his September 1944 ‘Confessions of a Royalist’, he wondered whether the Second World War had not in fact exposed the king’s significant shortcomings. He feared that the spirit of the Italian people had been so badly violated – so many sacrifices had been made, so much suffering had been endured, so many lives had been lost – that it had tested and perhaps surpassed the powers of the monarch to embody the nation, to represent a unifying and ennobling ideal. Even so, degli Espinosa continued passionately to advocate for the monarchy until well past the 1946 referendum that transformed Italy into a republic. Espousing political loyalty even as he elucidated his apparent political transformation, degli Espinosa evinced a tension – perhaps a contradiction – that would become all the more palpable in the years that followed.

That this tension was central to his personal as well as his political identity is suggested by the memorable analogy that he elaborated at the conclusion of his confessions. Having been found wanting in Italy’s moment of need, he explained, the monarchy was like a beloved ancestral home that was no longer fit for purpose and had to be replaced.

It is like discovering that a supporting wall of the family home no longer holds, and the house is in danger … but it would be futile to linger in sad contemplation of the impending loss. What is needed, instead, is to begin building a new house with a resolute spirit … so that our children and our children’s children may receive in it the silent and fruitful teaching of a new living tradition. (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1944)

This analogy proves particularly striking when read alongside the author’s recollections of his own ancestral home, which were published two years later. His family’s estate, he recalled, ‘was just an average house’, but it nevertheless played a crucial role in his ethical and sentimental education: ‘No teacher ever spoke to me about honour, civic duty, keeping one’s word, or controlling one’s noble sentiments with such a persuasive tone as that old house’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1946c, 3). With the house having been destroyed by a bomb during the Second World War, reducing it to ‘a pile of stones and mortar’, degli Espinosa worried about how his family’s future generations would learn the values on which his life was founded. ‘And who will remain faithful to himself if his lineage is nothing but stones and mortar’ (3)? It is difficult not to hear in this question doubts about his nation’s as well as his family’s values, fears about whether the national as well as the familial loyalty by which he claimed to live could survive in a world transformed by war. Yet it is also difficult not to notice that his own loyalties had shifted more than he cared to admit.

Agostino degli Espinosa’s claim to constancy invites comparison to the position staked out by many of his fellow Italian intellectuals after the war, of whom it is often argued that they professed to political transformations far greater and far quicker than the facts would warrant. As the Second World War waged on, much of the Italian intelligentsia abandoned Fascism for antifascism, renouncing long-professed loyalties to Mussolini’s regime and adopting an openly oppositional stance against the movement they had formerly supported. Yet these conversions were often so quick as to arouse scepticism, and a substantial and growing body of critical scholarship convincingly questions the intellectual turn away from Fascism, aspects of which are said to be insincere, opportunistic, fraudulent. A great many derogatory epithets have therefore attached themselves to those who suddenly switched their political allegiances in the midst of the war. They have been called ‘the redeemed’ (Serri Reference Serri2005), ‘the phantoms’ (Levis Sullam Reference Levis Sullam2021), ‘bad teachers’ (Forlenza Reference Forlenza1993), and their claims to conversion have been dismissed as mere prevarications, surreptitious attempts to ‘cover their tracks’ (Battista Reference Battista2007). Overwhelming evidence has established that many remained loyal to Fascism far longer than they would later claim, while others, despite having broken officially with Fascism, distanced themselves from the movement far less than they wished to suggest. The question of political loyalty thus proved exceedingly complex, or more accurately contradictory, after the Second World War.

Few if any Italian intellectuals evinced political loyalties more complex or contradictory than Agostino degli Espinosa’s. Throughout the ventennio he was among the most influential of Fascist economists, playing a leading role in the efforts to define and to promote Fascist theories of corporatism and autarchy, which he envisioned instituting throughout Europe after Fascism’s triumph, arguing that ‘from the victorious conclusion of the war, [autarchy] will undoubtedly derive greater power and the potential for broader implementation’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1941, 1). After Italy’s armistice with the Allies, he abandoned his earlier positions, arguing that it was necessary to ‘strictly prohibit any desire for autarchy’ (degli Espinosa [Reference degli Espinosa and Terra1947] Reference degli Espinosa and Terra2014, 227) in favour of the free-market liberalism he now advocated as a self-described ‘reactionary defender of capitalist interests’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945c, 13). This position did not last, however, and by 1948, degli Espinosa publicly and vociferously rejected his postwar economic liberalism for communism, becoming an outspoken critic of what he now understood to be capitalism’s ‘inequality’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa and D’Alfonso1953, 147). The one-time Fascist corporatist, later a free-market capitalist, had become a committed Marxist (‘Gli intellettuali’ 1948, 3).

Having undergone a road to Damascus moment, as he outlined in an April 1948 article in the communist daily L’Unità, degli Espinosa had come to believe that only communism could guarantee the ideals to which humanity should aspire. ‘Today we either choose or renounce the ethical value of life’, he declared (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1995b, 456). As a Fascist, he had argued that the nation constituted such an ethical ideal, and had for this reason advocated not only corporatism but also colonialism (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1938, 86–87). Promoting, on these same imperialist grounds, Fascist Italy’s alliance with Nazi Germany, he insisted not just on the necessity but also the ‘morality’ of the efforts to impose Italy’s national ideals on the international stage (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1941, 1). Just a few years later, now seeking to fight on behalf of Italy’s liberation from Fascism, he supported King Victor Emmanuel III, believing that monarchs serve as the embodiment of the nation and as such are the guarantors of the values and ideals for which the populace is prepared to sacrifice itself (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1995a, 447). Not long after the war, however, he rejected entirely any belief in national prestige and national duty, arguing that the nation had no destiny, no spiritual mission, no meaning (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945d, 14). Now he insisted that Italy’s saving grace was to be found in the refusal of the Italian people to uphold abstract ideals of any kind: ‘[I]n that refusal I find Italy,’ he wrote (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945f, 3). Indeed, he expressed his hope that Italians would refuse to sacrifice themselves for any cause, not only for Fascism but also for the communism promoted by many antifascist partisans (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945e, 15–16). By Reference degli Espinosa1950, having become a communist himself, he rejected his former hope in an end to ideology and invested himself in the ideals of the Italian Communist Party. In less than a decade, he had been carried from corporatism to capitalism to communism; from Fascism’s nationalist ideals, to national ideals embodied in the monarch, to a liberal critique of national ideals as such, to Marxism as the transnational ideal to which all people should strive.

Yet degli Espinosa downplayed – indeed denied – the evident shifts in his political loyalties, portraying his repeated ideological metamorphoses as an expression of unchanging faith. Responding to his liberal critics, who accused him of betrayal as he abandoned their ranks and began to advocate communism, he argued that he was in fact steadfastly true to his principles: ‘I remain faithful to the dictates of my conscience, only following the party which, in my opinion, best serves it when I have to vote’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1948b). What might appear to be disloyalty, degli Espinosa thus insisted, was in fact the opposite. As in the case of his move away from monarchism, moreover, degli Espinosa illustrated his political position with a revealing personal analogy. ‘I became a communist,’ he reported, and a friend and former ally ‘insulted me as if he were a betrayed lover. I replied that joining a party is more like buying a useful object than a promise of love’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1948b). While he had previously compared the collapse of the monarchy to the destruction of his ancestral home, in the case of his move from liberalism to communism he rejected the comparison to marital infidelity. Politics, he maintained, was pragmatic, not romantic. One cannot help but notice, however, that his two postwar novels both take romantic infidelity as their subject, portraying domestic conflict and extramarital affairs against the resolutely political backdrop of postwar Italy. Indeed, I claim that the novels reveal profound and momentous political doubts and disloyalties that the histories conceal.

‘A strange conflict raging within me’: degli Espinosa’s novels as national allegories

While critics tend to adopt straightforwardly autobiographical interpretations of degli Espinosa’s two novels (Santarelli Reference Santarelli1973, xv–xvi), L’assente and Ognuno con la sua miseria, I believe that it is more productive to approach the texts as versions of what Fredric Jameson (Reference Jameson2019, 194) calls ‘national allegory’, interpreting the narrative development of their protagonists symptomatically, as personifications of the political situation in which they were imagined. Reading the two novels in this way exposes a stark and significant contrast between their portrayal of marital infidelity and degli Espinosa’s emphasis on loyalty as a personal and political virtue. I do not mean by this the banal accusation that with his novels the author confesses to a hypocritical failure in his private life to live up to his publicly declared values. I mean instead that his fiction divulges ideological conflicts and contradictions denied or disguised in his political writing. Put simply, my reading foregoes any speculation about degli Espinosa’s marital fidelity, focusing instead on the question of how his ideal of political fidelity fluctuated as a result of the upheavals of the Second World War and its aftermath. Il Regno del Sud recounts the Robinsonade of King Victor Emmanuel III, whose loyalty to the nation and to the Allied occupiers guaranteed the continuity of the Italian state. Likewise, degli Espinosa described his own political transformations as evidence of his loyalty to principle, his ethical continuity even on shifting ideological terrain. Yet L’assente and Ognuno con la sua miseria both reveal uncertainty, scepticism, even despair about the prospect that loyalties could survive the war and occupation intact. Interpreted allegorically, in fact, these two elegiac postwar novels disclose the tragic vision of an author unable to reconcile himself to his protean political loyalties, and of an Italy divided by competing and ultimately irreconcilable allegiances. It is as if degli Espinosa, incapable of accepting the hopeful resolution that he had envisioned in Il Regno del Sud, felt compelled to confront in his fiction the personal and political consequences of conflicts that challenged the historical narrative he himself had promoted.

L’assente, published in 1945, is the story of a prisoner of war who returns home hoping to rediscover the domestic peace that he left behind four years earlier, only to conclude that this hope is illusory. Both he and his family have changed too much to allow for any meaningful renewal of their life together. Unable to reconnect with his wife, to readapt to the rhythms of domestic life, or to reconcile himself with an identity transformed by the experience of war, he rejects the possibility of restoration, undone by ‘the time that divided us’: the years of separation that estranged him irreversibly from his family and his past self (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945a, 110). Rather than admit the real reasons for the dissolution of his marriage, however, he accuses his wife of infidelity, coercing her to confess falsely to a non-existent affair. Yet he reacts with indifference to her perceived indiscretion, and it is his genuine apathy, rather than her invented affair, that marks the definitive break in their relationship. While a prisoner of war, the protagonist was tormented by ‘the problem of loyalty’, the thought that his wife would be unfaithful; upon his return, he scrutinises her for ‘the trace of an infidelity’, a sign that she has strayed (56). However, even as he finds her to be as devoted as ever, the same ‘faithful companion with whom he confidently journeyed through life’, he realises that his love for her has been lost, and as a result he cannot recommit to his marriage (54).

While a friend attempts to explain this difficult return with reference to the events of the war – ‘perhaps it wouldn’t have been like this if we hadn’t had these damn months of occupation’ – he rejects this externalised account, insisting on the internal and affective transformation that has alienated him from his loved ones and himself: ‘[M]y return is tormented by a strange conflict raging within me … a radical change’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945a, 69). Just as it is not the war and occupation that have isolated him, he insists, so too it is not his wife’s alleged infidelity, as he attempts to convey to her at the novel’s conclusion:

I have to leave, but I’m not leaving because you took a lover … In fact, that has nothing to do with it. Your confession made me realise how disconnected our lives have become. You see, I should’ve suffered, suffered horribly from your infidelity, which took place while I was away and unable to defend myself, but instead I don’t suffer. Even if, absurdly, I were to find out now that you made up your affair, it would be the same. By now, I know that there’s no longer any affection between us, only the memory of affection. (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945a, 110)

Consigning their marital bonds to an irrecuperable past, he marks a definitive break not only with his wife but also with the man he once was. There can be no return, he declares: ‘[I]t’s not possible … you can’t begin the same life a second time’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945a, 110–111). With these resonant words he abandons his former home, forsaking his family and setting off to lead a new life alone.

L’assente’s narrative of invented infidelity and unattainable reconciliation, I argue, represents a confession of despair that, despite the protestations of the protagonist, cannot be separated from the history of the Second World War and the Allied occupation. This novel of alleged infidelity, written by an author whose ethical and political ideal was fidelity, and whose influential history of the armistice with the Allies depicted a government legitimated by its loyalty, speaks to its postwar context in a significant but not entirely straightforward manner. L’assente, I argue, stages Italy’s ongoing national reconstruction and reconciliation, in allegorical guise, as a series of domestic conflicts. Il Regno del Sud concludes with an expression of hope for postwar Italy’s return to its historical foundations – ‘everything would be rediscovered’ – but also with some trepidation about the difficult task at hand: ‘[T]hose who returned, despite the joy of homecoming, could not help thinking that some things would be difficult to rediscover, because not only was Italy’s body deeply wounded, but so was its soul’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1946a, 349). Published just one year earlier, L’assente suggests that such fears were unfortunately well founded, that Italy had been radically and irrevocably transformed, that fidelity alone was not enough, that nothing could restore the bonds of the nation after Fascism, resistance and occupation.

By 1950, the year in which he published his second novel, Ognuno con la sua miseria, degli Espinosa’s appraisal of the national situation had declined still further. Finalist for the Viareggio Prize and winner of the Valdagno Prize for literature, Ognuno con la sua miseria tells the story of Ruggero d’Ursone, a decorated cavalry officer from a noble family who is left destitute after being dishonourably discharged from the military because he refused to abandon his oath to the king and swear allegiance to the newly formed Italian Social Republic. This was not a political decision, d’Ursone insists; it was only a matter of duty, of honour, of loyalty. ‘I find myself in this miserable situation because I wanted to remain faithful to an ideal principle’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1950, 151–152). Such fidelity feels increasingly out of place in the postwar context, however, as virtually all Italians, even those who formerly fought alongside d’Ursone, now question the cause for which they served. Bewildered by the new political context, embarrassed by unemployment and poverty, and desperate in his lonely desires, d’Ursone finds it increasingly difficult to uphold the ideals that previously guided his conduct. After a particularly humiliating breech, in fact,

he recognised that he had violated all the rules of his code of honour and … accepted this fact, his total defeat, without dwelling on the outcome: he knew that he had lost on all fronts and in a disgraceful manner, and he measured with impassive clarity how far his life had strayed from the honourable path that he had never imagined abandoning. (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1950, 368)

Revealingly, d’Ursone’s recognition is occasioned by a personal rather than a political crisis.

Indeed, while the novel turns, in part, on his reflections regarding his role in military and civic affairs, much of the drama stems from private concerns, such as d’Ursone’s embarrassment at having to rely on the financial support of Emanuele, a man who formerly served under his command in the military, and his covetous relationship with Emanuele’s wife, Cristina, with whom he becomes obsessed for reasons that are as much vindictive as they are erotic. Even more acutely than in L’assente, Ognuno con la sua miseria combines a story of fidelity to the nation with infidelity in love. Here, the infidelities multiply: Cristina is having an affair, but not with d’Ursone; Emanuele is having an affair with Ludovica, who falls for d’Ursone; d’Ursone reveals Cristina’s affair to Emanuele, who misunderstands and believes he is referring to Ludovica; d’Ursone steals a ring from his Aunt Beatrice and sells it to Emanuele, who gives it to Ludovica, who gives it in turn to d’Ursone; Aunt Beatrice, whose love for d’Ursone is never entirely materteral, comes eventually to kiss him, only to be disillusioned when she discovers evidence of his affair, while nevertheless confusing which of the two women has been his lover and which he truly loves. It is remorse for having revealed Cristina’s infidelity, rather than regret for having maintained his own fidelity to the king, that sparks d’Ursone’s realisation that he has violated his code of honour. Yet the two ultimately prove inseparable, blurring the lines between the personal betrayal that inspires his dejection at the novel’s end and the political reversal that began his demise at its start. In an early chapter, he claims that things would have been better had he never made it home from the war, better if he had been killed in battle, rather than returning to the diminished status – and, he might be understood to suggest, to the diminished Italy – in which he now finds himself (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1950, 27). And, in fact, Ognuno con la sua miseria ends with the protagonist’s tragic death, possibly – although the text leaves this deliberately unclear – at his own hand, a fulfilment of the suicidal ideation that permeates the novel (396). With nowhere left to place his trust – no person, no institution, no nation worthy of his loyalty – he becomes desperate enough to take his own life.

Two years after the novel was published, Agostino degli Espinosa took his own life, succumbing to suicide in 1952 (Pellicani Reference Pellicani1952). He had spent his final years searching for an ideal to which to aspire, a code of honour to uphold, a ‘standard to which to remain faithful’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1945g, 3). Looking back on his past selves, he admitted, he was filled with ‘bitter sadness’ even as he sought not to ‘give in to the weight of regret’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1995b, 456). In the end, however, like the protagonists of his novels, he was left personally hopeless and ideologically homeless, unable any longer to maintain his faith in the shifting principles with which he had sought to govern his private and public conduct on the long voyage from Fascism to monarchism to liberalism to communism. Dedicating his fiction to the conflict between fidelity and betrayal, which plays out in the domestic sphere but always with explicit as well as implicit reference to the political context, Agostino degli Espinosa confronted the central conflicts of the war, the resistance, the occupation, and the postwar reconstruction in Italy. He did so, moreover, with greater doubt and greater anxiety than in his influential historical account of Il Regno del Sud, which projects a faith, a ‘silent loyalty’, that, as his fiction reveals, he struggled and ultimately failed to maintain.

Conclusion: degli Espinosa and Italy’s divided memory

In recent decades, revisionist historians have repeatedly argued that, in light of the king’s ‘betrayal’, Italians could not possibly maintain an undivided sense of national loyalty after 8 September 1943. That impossibility underlies what Ernesto Galli della Loggia calls ‘the death of the fatherland’: divided in half, separated by ‘the occupation of opposing armies’, Italians on both sides could believe that they had remained loyal and both could be derided as ‘traitors to their country’, with the result that ‘the idea of nation in Italy became the subject and theatre of a bitter dispute whose stakes were national legitimacy’ (Galli della Loggia Reference Galli della Loggia1996, 40).

While the loyalty of the antifascist forces and those who fought alongside the Allies was granted legitimacy by the postwar state, the competing claims of the Fascists have received an increasingly sympathetic hearing in subsequent accounts. After all, as Pasquale Chessa (Reference Chessa2005, 6) emphasises, they, too, had fought for their country inspired by their loyalty, adhering to what they understood to be their duty as it was articulated in Fascist propaganda after the king and Badoglio’s flight south:

By betraying his country and the constitution and defecting to the enemy, Victor Emmanuel III has forfeited the right to call himself king of the Italians because he has broken the most sacred of oaths. Consequently, you, officers and soldiers, are automatically released from your oath of allegiance to the king. However, the word given to the country and to the Duce remains sacred and inviolable. (Patricelli Reference Patricelli2014, 182–183)

Fighting on behalf of one occupier and against another, the soldiers of the Italian Social Republic swore ‘to take up arms against the enemies of the … fatherland and to fight with loyalty and courage in the formation under German direction’ (Ganapini Reference Ganapini1999, 333). Little wonder, therefore, that the word fedeltà recurs throughout the testimony of those who swore this oath (Borghi Reference Borghi and Corni2007, 12; Parlato Reference Parlato2012, 15). Little wonder, too, that they echo Mussolini’s accusation against the king, whose 8 September 1943 armistice with the Allies he called ‘an unprecedented betrayal’ (Graziani Reference Graziani1986, 192). In short, they believed themselves to have remained loyal and they fought against those they believed to have betrayed the nation. From the perspective of the Kingdom of the South in Allied-occupied territory, however, they were themselves accused of betrayal by the provisional Italian government:

Anyone who, after 8 September 1943, has committed or commits crimes against the loyalty and military defence of the state, through any form of intelligence or correspondence or collaboration with the German invader, or by providing aid or assistance to the latter, shall be punished in accordance with the provisions of the Military Penal Code. (Patricelli Reference Patricelli2014, 249–250)

Loyalty, in short, was a characteristic prized by both of the competing camps in Italy’s civil war, and both camps accused their enemies of betrayal. Loyalty alone could not define Italy’s political divisions.

Agostino degli Espinosa long argued otherwise. In Il Regno del Sud, he made the case for the validity of the Italy of King Victor Emmanuel III and the illegitimacy of the Italy of Mussolini, insisting that the continuity of the state, embodied in the faithful figure of the monarch, made the Kingdom of Italy in Allied-occupied territory the true and only Italy. His carefully documented narrative, filled with first-hand testimony and enlivened with eye-witness accounts of important events, has shaped our understanding of this fraught moment in Italian history. Between the lines, however, it betrays some of the same doubts that revisionist critics of the official narrative continue to exploit. Agostino degli Espinosa did not share their conclusions, but he was troubled – and perhaps at times even convinced – by some of the challenges to his own. Those troubles come to the fore in his fiction, which gives voice to the apparent fear that the ‘silent loyalty’ which had led him to risk his life for the Italy of the king was not enough to restore the collapsed home, the shattered family, the divided nation that he encountered upon his return to Rome.

Yet degli Espinosa, despite his growing despair, never descended to the kinds of equivocations that characterise the revisionist histories. Even as he worried that something had been lost, even as he appears to have concluded that it could not be regained, he never conceded that the armistice with the Allies had marked ‘the death of the fatherland’. This was not because he denied the reality before him. This was not, in other words, because of any ‘truth hidden, denied, not to be written’, as the revisionists so often charge (Pansa Reference Pansa2006, 200). Instead, as he announced in the closing lines of Il Regno del Sud, degli Espinosa, despite his doubts, sought fervently to maintain faith not only in the history but also in the soul of the nation, ‘the spirit forged by all those men who … united to create the honest and honourable Kingdom of Italy’ (degli Espinosa Reference degli Espinosa1946a, 349). Nevertheless, his faith was badly shaken, a fact that emerges at the margins of his history and at the centre of his fiction. In his shaken faith, I have sought to show, degli Espinosa embodies the crises of the modern Italian state, in which, as John Foot (Reference Foot2009, 14) convincingly argues, ‘“mass loyalty” has never been achieved’. This situation makes degli Espinosa’s reverence for loyalty all the more poignant, and his struggle to preserve loyalty in the tumultuous months and years that followed the armistice with the Allies all the more emblematic of ‘Italy’s divided memory’ (Foot Reference Foot2009). What it does not do, however, is lend credence to the corrosive claims of the revisionists, who seek to exploit those divisions and to obfuscate Italian history. Despite – or, better still, because of – the conflicts and contradictions that his work confronts and ultimately fails to resolve, degli Espinosa points the way towards a more honest, a more enduring, a more faithful construction of Italian cultural memory.

Acknowledgements

I would like to thank Notre Dame’s Center for Italian Studies, the Nanovic Institute for European Studies, the Kellogg Institute for International Studies, and the Franco Family Institute for Liberal Arts and the Public Good for the generous support that allowed me to research and write this article.

Competing interests

The author declares none.

Charles L. Leavitt IV is William Payden Associate Professor of Romance Languages and Literatures at the University of Notre Dame. A Fellow of the American Academy in Rome, Leavitt studies modern and contemporary Italian literature and cinema in a comparative context. He is the author of Italian Neorealism: A Cultural History (University of Toronto Press, 2020), which was awarded the 2021 Book Prize in Visual Studies, Film, and Media from the American Association for Italian Studies and was shortlisted for the Bridge Literary Prize in North American non-fiction.

Footnotes

1. After years of unwarranted neglect, degli Espinosa appears finally to have become the subject of renewed interest, as evidenced by a recent conference, Il valore storico dell’opera di Agostino degli Espinosa (1904–1952), which took place in Rome on 25 October 2024, just over two years after I first presented my initial research on his work (see https://www.youtube.com/live/TZKI-WkyK7A?si=PD3F9zaDmFvMyjvW).

2. Intriguingly, Italo Calvino (Reference Calvino1949) recounted how Elio Vittorini had told him, in the wake of the Second World War, that ‘now, after the literature of Resistance, we need to write the literature of reconstruction. Robinson Crusoe, we need to write Robinson Crusoe.’ In a sense, that is what I take degli Espinosa to have done.

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