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Story of My People: Essays and Social Criticism on Italy's Economy Hardcover – May 7, 2013

3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 34 ratings

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Winner of the 2011 Strega Prize, this blend of essay, social criticism, and memoir is a striking portrait of the effects of globalization on Italy’s declining economy.
 
Starting from his family’s textile factory in Prato, Tuscany, Edoardo Nesi examines the recent shifts in Italy’s manufacturing industry. Only one generation ago, Prato was a thriving industrial center that prided itself on craftsmanship and quality. But during the last decade, cheaply made goods—produced overseas or in Italy by poorly paid immigrants—saturated the market, making it impossible for Italian companies to keep up. In 2004 his family was forced to sell the textile factory. How this could have happened? Nesi asks, and what are the wider repercussions of losing businesses like his family’s, especially for Italian culture?
 
Story of My People is a denouncement of big business, corrupt politicians, the arrogance of economists, and cheap manufacturing. It’s a must-read for anyone seeking insight into the financial crisis that’s striking Europe today.
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Editorial Reviews

Review

"Edoardo Nesi has written a short memoir of great charm, for all its sadness a pleasure to read…  Mr. Nesi’s sense of loss will touch hearts much farther afield, wherever the West’s world-class industries have fallen to free trade and the Internet.”—The New York Times

“This unique book—part memoir, part argument for the reformation of the global financial system—tumbles out of itself on the page, and reading it was an equally propulsive experience. It rhapsodizes and slaps its chest in true Italian style, makes frequent allusions with a disarming bluntness (to Machiavelli, to Richard Ford, to Paul Newman movies), and always has something to say. I finished and instantly went back to re-read certain pages.”John Jeremiah Sullivan, author of Pulphead and writer for the New York Times Magazine

Who would have thought that memoir and polemic could work together so well? A totally absorbing story, and a portrait of modern Italy.” —Sarah Bakewell, author of How to Live

"A searing indictment of globalization’s failures, and the inability of politicians and pundits to consider its impact on real lives...much of the book is sad, honest, and biting; overall it is an important work." —
Publishers Weekly

"We all know that globalization has disrupted industries around the world, but we don’t always connect disruption to the destruction of ways of life—the social fabric that globalization can rend and tear. Story of My People, by Edoardo Nesi, a polemic fueled by grief and rage at
the devastating effect of globalization on the Italian textile industry, makes that connection tangible." —
Strategy+Business

"At once a memoir, a requiem, and a work of social and literary criticism about the toll this shift took on his city and psyche...fiercely angry, conflicted, and often beautifully written." —
Bookforum

Story of My People is one of those knockout punches that literature throws at the world every now and then” —Sandro Veronesi
 
Story of My People is a well-told story but also an eloquent and pained wail about loss. Globalization has swallowed up the artisans, the families and the beautiful fabrics at the heart of Prato’s weaving industry, and a world has unraveled like a skein of yarn. While Nesi clearly understands the economics and even the inevitability of this transition for Italy’s family manufacturers, he will not let this world disappear without describing it for the rest of us. A business and family can do everything right and still have everything go wrong. This is an important, poetic, and personal work of industrial history.” —Pietra Rivoli, author of The Travels of a T-shirt in the Global Economy

“A remarkable evocation of the vanished world of artisan capitalism in Tuscany, swept away by hurricane globalization. ‘Why should this destruction be?’ asks the author and former owner of a small family textile business, in a mingled cry of pain and anger.” —Robert Skidelsky, author of
How Much is Enough?: Money and the Good Life

“Nesi is one of the few writers that have succeeded in depicting the dark underbelly of globalism.” —Luciano Lanna,
Secolo d’Italia
 
“A beautiful and touching book … Whether or not you agree with its message, it has one undeniable virtue: it makes you think.” —Giorgio Marabini,
Sabato Sera
 
Story of My People is a transcendent song, both epic and lyrical, on industrial and human labor.” —Antonio Pennacchi
 
“Do you know what I would do if I became leader of the Democratic Party? I would take this courageous book and turn it into a chapter of my political project.
Story of My People is about the love of a people for its roots, a community for its land, and a city for its industry.” —Massimo Giannini

"A tour de force that spares no one."—
Kirkus

"...few have produced an account of globalization’s effects as personal, poignant, and beautifully written as Edoardo Nesi’s Story of My People."—New York Journal of Books

"...
thought provoking and beautifully written, and also heartbreaking..."—Hudson Valley News

"...
now we have another classic by someone on the wrong end of history..."
Finance & Development

"
The story of Prato's demise is lyrically written and deeply moving."—Finance & Development

"...
an eloquent, emotion-laden, and, I think, essential addition to the globalization bookshelf....If I was a publisher, this is a book I’d be proud to put out."
—S
trategy+Business

"From the 1950s to the 1980s, much of Italy was a charmed place, its beauty wreathed in wealth. Edoardo Nesi’s gracefully nostalgic memoir, 
Story of My People, is of that time…You feel saddened for the narrator and his family, and what they have lost. You feel saddened with him too, as you recognise in yourself something of the same regret for a world – not just an Italian one – that is passing. The fact that this regret is thickly gilded with sentiment makes it no less poignant. Edoardo Nesi has mined his own memories, and thus touches ours...”—The Financial Times

"The brilliance of this depressing story (winner of Italy’s Strega Prize) is Edoardo Nesi’s imaginative fusion of history and autobiography, infused with vignettes of the lives of individual workers who have suffered. Yes, this is also the author’s account of how he became a successful writer. But most of all it is the depiction of an era that is just about over, at the end of its collapse."—
Counterpunch

“...an eloquent, angry, exquisitely written little book. A combination of memoir and cultural commentary.”—Emily St. John Mandel, author of
The Lola Quartet and Last Night in Montreal

"
Story of My People is an angry, eloquent, and beautifully written book..."—The Millions

"[
Story of My People] has the driving force of a polemic but the wisdom of a novel, and is the only book about the global recession I’d recommend to anybody, though you need have no interest in the economy to pick it up. It is one of the best books I’ve read all year without question."—Library Reads

"...Nesi forms a sharp and timely indictment of runaway globalization, fast fashion, and big business."—
Blouin Artinfo

"[Nesi's] heartbreaking narrative describes a struggling country that is just as fascinating and rich as the Italy advertised through the tourism industry, and much more real."
—Triquarterly

"[T]he single best book about globalization…in long time. [
Story of my People]  takes the abstract implications of globalization and reduces it to a very personal level." —Publishing Perspectives

[A]n unfamiliar mix of memoir and the politics of business...worth reading for anyone who likes good writing and wants a deeper understanding of either contemporary Europe or global business. —
Book News

About the Author

Edoardo Nesi is an Italian writer, filmmaker, and translator. He began his career translating the work of such authors as Bruce Chatwin, Malcolm Lowry, Stephen King, and Quentin Tarantino. He has written six novels, one of which, L'età dell'oro, was a finalist for the 2005 Strega Prize and a winner of the Bruno Cavallini Prize. He wrote and directed the film Fughe da fermo (Fandango, 2001), based on his novel of the same name, and has translated David Foster Wallace’s Infinite Jest.
 
Antony Shugaar is an author and translator. His most recent publication, written with the International Spy Museum in Washington DC, is I Lie for a Living, and he is the coauthor of Latitude Zero. His most recent translations include I Hadn’t Understood by Diego De Silva, The Nun by Simonetta Agnello Hornby, and The Path to Hope by Stéphane Hessel and Edgar Morin (Other Press, 2012). He is also a freelance journalist who reviews for the Boston Globe and the Washington Post.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ Other Press (May 7, 2013)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Hardcover ‏ : ‎ 163 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 1590515544
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1590515549
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 10.4 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 5.6 x 0.73 x 8.51 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.8 3.8 out of 5 stars 34 ratings

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Customer reviews

3.8 out of 5 stars
3.8 out of 5
34 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on August 26, 2013
This spectacular gem of a book is one of the best nonfiction books I have read.
As a writer who included a segment on Prato's textile machinery manufacturers in my book, Life with an Accent, I am in awe at the prose and the way Nesi handles serious political and current events that impact ordinary citizens. I plan to buy a dozen copies to give as gifts to all those who ask my husband to explain his business relationship with machine manufacturers in Tuscany and why the textile industry has changed in America as well as Italy. It is both an important story that must be told and a damn good read. Marilyn Gottlieb, author, Life with an Accent.
Life with an Accent: One Immigrant's Quest to Belong
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Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2013
I enjoyed this even though it is the story of a business being destroyed and a country being harmed by 'free trade'.

I have been to Italy and loved it. It's a shame to see this type of thing happening. It tells of a factory being bought out by Chinese companies and then they send in workers to run the machinery and sleep on the factory floor. They do this so they can still say the products are made in Italy.

There was an article in the news this past week about a fire in a factory in Italy in which some workers died. They were some of twelve Chinese workers living in a room in the factory where they worked. Exactly the type of thing this book covers.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 26, 2013
I just read "Story of My People," by Edoardo Nesi. This is the first non-fiction title to ever win Italy's Strega prize. This short, smart, angry, and sad book documents the hollowing-out of Prato's centuries-old fabric industry in the face of globalization. (Another fabulous book, Iris Origo's "The Merchant of Prato," documents, among other things, Prato's fabric industry - in the 1300s!)

Nesi's book is also a compelling intellectual autobiography, of a sort. He somehow managed to translate "Infinite Jest" into Italian, a thankless task. His writing reminds me of Roberto Saviano's "Gomorrah," with a shared sense of moral outrage.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 20, 2014
Very sad story of how globalization destroyed textile industry in one region of Italy. That had happened to so many other industries and communities throughout the developed world. The gains of many in China, India, Bangladesh or Cambodia meant serious losses for people in Italy, France, United States et al. Everytime when one buys a Chinese-made T-shirt or Bangladesh-made jacket it would be wise to think a while about the consequences of offshoring and outsourcing that are hailed as a great successes of globalization.
Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2016
This is a very well written and enjoyable book to read. The tone and subject of the book may be very dark and sad but the authors writing style makes this digestable. It was very quick read only taking half a day but it seems even shorter cause the book just draws and keeps you drawn in. On top of the great book you can't even tell it has been translated from Italian, which was something I was worried about when I first got the book. Overall this is a great read!
Reviewed in the United States on August 13, 2013
I thought it would be an interesting book but it seemed to have little relevance to my experience and I found it boring so I gave it to my sister-in-law who lives in Italy and she enjoyed it very much. She said that she now understands better why her husband was forced to go out of business several years ago. My niece in Italy, a businesswoman, also read the book I sent and loved it. She was so impressed that she found some copies written in Italian to give to her friends.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 4, 2013
Soe good analysis of current economic problems in Italy. Writing is somewhat amateurish. No solutions are suggested bythe author and the book ends. Up in the air.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 6, 2013
Edoardo Nesi paints a picture of a hardworking family and community who were one of the most sought out creators and manufacturers of high fashion textiles who have been forced out of business as a result of the globalization of the industry. The book is heartfelt and personal. I would recommend this book as a compelling story that provides insight to the plight of companies that are unable to compete in the global market.
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Top reviews from other countries

Natalie A Kouzeleas
4.0 out of 5 stars A Sad Tale of the End of an Era
Reviewed in Italy on September 1, 2014
Living in Italy and specifically in Varese where the textile industry has been so strong I see the reality of this story. Family businesses which were small empires in the '60's and '70's crumbling day to day. A harsh and sad reality of Italy today, past glories and depressing futures...
2 people found this helpful
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Rabbit
5.0 out of 5 stars Great read
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on July 20, 2013
Anyone interested in business/economics should read this book. An easy going style, very sad concerning the plight of small textile firms in Italy. It was a pleasure to read.
2 people found this helpful
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