Rimljanka

Rimljanka

Alberto Moravia

Adriana, a beautiful Roman girl from a poor background, wants a normal life, but her mother pushes her into posing for painters and prostitution. Her love affairs lead her through betrayal, violence and corruption to her final resignation.

The Roman Woman is one of Alberto Moravia's most famous novels, published in 1947, with the protagonist Adriana narrating in the first person. The story takes place in Rome in the 1930s, during Mussolini's fascist regime, but politics are mostly in the background – serving as a corrupt, violent context that shapes the characters' destinies.

Adriana, a young, beautiful girl from the people, lives with her mother Margherita, a poor seamstress who is bitter about her own past (she was abandoned while pregnant). Her mother sees Adriana's beauty as capital: she forces her to pose naked for painters for money, hoping that this will lead to a better life. Adriana dreams of a simple, honest marriage and family, but she falls in love with Gino, a charming but deceitful driver. He exploits and cheats on her, and the marriage falls apart.

Adriana then enters the world of prostitution. Her mother introduces her to Gisella, who introduces her to paid relationships. Here appears Astarita, a powerful fascist police official – obsessed with Adriana, who uses his power to force her to have sex and become his lover. Adriana hates him, but agrees out of money and fear.

The key man becomes Mino (Giacomo), a student anti-fascist and idealist who distributes leaflets against the regime. Adriana falls sincerely in love with him – he represents something pure and honest to her. But Mino is arrested; under torture he betrays his comrades, becomes indifferent and broken. Adriana, pregnant by the bully Sonzogno (a criminal and murderer), tries to save Mino, but he refuses her help and love.

The novel ends with Adriana's complete resignation: she gives birth to a child, lives with her mother in poverty, accepts her fate without illusions. Through her, Moravia depicts the fate of women in a patriarchal, corrupt society – where beauty becomes a curse and honesty impossible. The themes are existential alienation, the impossibility of authentic love, erotic obsession, moral breakdown under totalitarianism, and passivity in the face of fate.

The style is realistic, detailed, with a focus on psychology and physicality. Adriana is a strong, passive heroine – she does not rebel, but swims through life, which allowed Moravia to criticize society through individual destiny. The novel caused a scandal in conservative circles (the church put it on the Index in 1952 for "obscenity"), but also praised – it received the Premio Strega the same year. It influenced neorealism and film – the famous adaptation with Gina Lollobrigida in 1954.

Original title
La Romana
Translation
Marija Ilić Agapov
Dimensions
20 x 13 cm
Pages
373
Publisher
Otokar Keršovani, Rijeka, 1979.
 
Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
Language: Croatian.

No copies available

The last copy was sold recently.

 

Are you interested in another book? You can search the offer using our search engine or browse books by category.

You may also be interested in these titles

Čovek koji gleda

Čovek koji gleda

Alberto Moravia
Minerva, 1988.
Serbian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover with dust jacket.
6.63
Automat

Automat

Alberto Moravia
Otokar Keršovani, 1966.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
3.99
Pažnja

Pažnja

Alberto Moravia
Otokar Keršovani, 1966.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
3.99
Dosada

Dosada

Alberto Moravia

Dino, a wealthy Roman painter, suffers from a deep existential boredom - an inability to feel reality. He leaves his mother's villa, moves into a studio and enters into an obsessive relationship with the young Cecilia, which brings him jealousy and crisis

Otokar Keršovani, 1966.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
3.98
Ravnodušni ljudi

Ravnodušni ljudi

Alberto Moravia

The novel follows the declining Roman bourgeois family of Ardengo over the course of several days: widow Mariagrazia, lover Leo, son Michele, and daughter Carla – all trapped in apathy, lies, sexual manipulation, and moral indifference.

Otokar Keršovani, 1966.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Hardcover.
3.86
Konformist

Konformist

Alberto Moravia

Marcello Clerici, obsessed with normality after a traumatic childhood and a homosexual attack, becomes a fascist bureaucrat. He marries the average Giulia, and on their "honeymoon" in Paris, he is assigned to kill a former professor, anti-fascist Quadri.

Otokar Keršovani, 1966.
Croatian. Latin alphabet. Paperback.
4.96