Lombard line (
Italian: Linea lombarda) is the name of an artistic movement that developed in
Northern Italy, particularly in the region of
Lombardy, at the end of the 19th century and flourished during the first three quarters of the 20th century.
This literary movement was named by
Luciano Anceschi in his anthology Linea lombarda (1952), which included published and unpublished works by several authors.
During the 1950s a group of writers, poets and critics (who were linked to the definition of the Lombard line) was formed. The group met at the Blue Bar in
Milan, in Filippo Meda square. Among them were
Luciano Erba,[1]Vittorio Sereni and
Piero Chiara.[2]
Luciano Anceschi, Linea lombarda: Sei poeti, Magenta, Varese 1952.
Dante Isella, I lombardi in rivolta: da Carlo Maria Maggi a Carlo Emilio Gadda, Einaudi, Torino 1984.
Giorgio Luzzi, Poeti della Linea Lombarda 1952-1985, CENS, Liscate Milano 1987.
Giorgio Luzzi, Poesia italiana 1941-1988: la via lombarda. Diciannove poeti contemporanei (I: Vittorio Sereni, Roberto Rebora, Renzo Modesti, Nelo Risi, Giorgio Orelli, Luciano Erba, Giorgio Simonotti Manacorda, Sandro Boccardi, Grytzko Mascioni; II: Giovanni Raboni, Giorgio Cesarano, Giancarlo Majorino, Lento Goffi, Tiziano Rossi, Angelo Fiocchi, Maurizio Cucchi; III: Guido Oldani, Franco Buffoni, Fabio Pusterla), Marcos y Marcos, Milano 1989. Anche in tiratura riservata a Giampiero Casagrande Editore, Lugano 1989, ISBN 88-7795-031-5.
Victoria Surliuga, Figure della seconda linea lombarda: l'opera poetica di Franco Loi, Giancarlo Majorino e Giampiero Neri, Diss.
Rutgers University, 2003.