Francesca Sensini

Così ride Demetra

afterword by Dario Voltolini
pages: 152
format: 12 x 18 cm
publication date: February 2026
binding: paperback
language: Italian

ISBN: 9788877573384



€12,00

It all began in September 364 AD, with what the Greek governess Baubo dared to tell the Roman emperor Flavius Valentinianus before going to sleep. Between imperial Milan and the mysteries of Eleusis, while the Germans were being fought off at the border, in the feverish emperor's room, stories dedicated to the mysteries of the goddess Demeter and Persephone, Mother and Daughter, stories that are still unknown, were whispered. Francesca Sensini, opting for the ancestral tone that moves the act of laughter, brings its resonances to deeply sabotage our vision of the Western epochal transition from paganism to Christianity, helping us to see our cultural and anthropological continuity with the primordial world of myths from a different perspective. The combination of the feminine generative principle, universal fertility, and the tension that emerges between the darkness of power and the brightness of laughter are actions that the author performs with skilful simplicity and lightness, masterfully suggesting a fundamental and very complex shift with far-reaching emotional and cultural effects.

 

Francesca Sensini, writer, lecturer and researcher, is currently an associate professor of Italian Studies at the Université Côte d'Azur in Nice. Trained as a classicist, she devotes most of her research to Italian literature between the 19th and 20th centuries, studies of classical reception and gender studies in literature. Born in Genoa in 1974, after graduating in Classical Literature, she moved to France, where she continued her studies, obtaining a PhD in Italian Studies at the Paris-Sorbonne University and teaching at various universities, living first in Paris for ten years and then in Nice. Her publications include La guerra è stupida (Gammarò, 2020), Pascoli maledetto (Il Nuovo Melangolo, 2020), La lingua degli dei. L'amore per il greco antico e moderno (Il Nuovo Melangolo, 2021), La Trama di Elena (Ponte alle Grazie, 2023) and Afrodite viaggia leggera (Ponte alle Grazie, 2024).