Six Memos for the Next Millennium
Six Memos for the Next Millennium
The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures 1985-86


Italo Calvino cast his lofty thoughts toward the pending millennium long before the rest of us. Now that the zeitgeist has caught up with him, it seems a good time to revisit his Six Memos for the Next Millennium, an investigation into the literary values that he wished to bequeath to future generations. Calvino, the author of Invisible Cities, If on a Winter's Night a Traveler, and other postmodern fictional works, was to deliver these five "memos" (there was to be a sixth) as Harvard's Charles Eliot Norton Lectures in 1985-86, but he died before doing so. These lectures are dense, rigorous, and seemingly full of contradiction. The first is a paean to lightness (though "light like a bird," as Paul Valéry wrote, "and not like a feather"). Lightness is followed by quickness (without "presum[ing] to deny the pleasures of lingering"), exactitude, visibility, and multiplicity. The perfect antidote to writerly laziness.

Title Six Memos for the Next Millennium
Subtitle The Charles Eliot Norton Lectures 1985-86
Author Italo Calvino
Publisher Vintage
Title First Published 31 August 1993
Format Paperback
Nb of pages 144 p.
ISBN-10 0679742379
ISBN-13 9780679742371
Publication Date 31 August 1993
Nb of pages 144
Weight 16 oz.
List Price $13.95
 


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