About This Book
The study recounts the founding and evolution of a Florentine literary review and its founder Gian Pietro Vieusseux, situating the enterprise within the political and literary climate of its era. It examines early contributors, editorial practices, and the salonlike conversations held at the founder's reading room, and surveys the journal's thematic range—language debates, romanticism, art, science, education, and politics. The account follows struggles with contributors and censorship, efforts to revive the periodical after suppression, and concludes with documentary materials, annotations, and an index.