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In [[1880]] His family left [[Cosenza]] in Sothern [[Italy]] and immigrated to [[New York]].
In [[1880]] His family left [[Cosenza]] in Sothern [[Italy]] and immigrated to [[New York]].
He was the oldest of seven children of [[Giovanni Fucilla]] and [[Maria Carmelo De Marco]].
He was the oldest of seven children of [[Giovanni Fucilla]] and [[Maria Carmelo De Marco]].
He studied at the [[University of Wisconsin]] and taught at the [[Iowa State College of Mes]] (1921-23), and at the [[Butler University of Indianapolis]] (1923-1928). He received a doctoral degree from the [[University of Chicago]] in [[1928]] and worked as a professor of the Department of Romanic Languages of Northwestern University in which he became a full professor in [[1936]], ([[emeritus]] professor from [[1948]]) until his retirement in [[1966]]. He was a visiting professor at the [[University of Wisconsin]] in [[Madison]], [[California]] ([[Santa Barbara]]) and [[Colorado]] ([[Boulder]]).
He studied at the [[University of Wisconsin]] and taught at the [[Iowa State College of Mes]] (1921-23), and at the Butler [[University of Indianapolis]] (1923-1928). He received a doctoral degree from the [[University of Chicago]] in [[1928]] and worked as a professor of the Department of Romanic Languages of Northwestern University in which he became a full professor in [[1936]], ([[emeritus]] professor from [[1948]]) until his retirement in [[1966]]. He was a visiting professor at the [[University of Wisconsin]] in [[Madison]], [[California]] ([[Santa Barbara]]) and [[Colorado]] ([[Boulder]]).





Revision as of 10:28, 27 April 2009

Joseph Guerin Fucilla, born in Chicago, December 14, 1897, deceased in Evanston, Illinois, March 22, 1951, was a Hispanist and an American lexicographer.


Biography

In 1880 His family left Cosenza in Sothern Italy and immigrated to New York. He was the oldest of seven children of Giovanni Fucilla and Maria Carmelo De Marco. He studied at the University of Wisconsin and taught at the Iowa State College of Mes (1921-23), and at the Butler University of Indianapolis (1923-1928). He received a doctoral degree from the University of Chicago in 1928 and worked as a professor of the Department of Romanic Languages of Northwestern University in which he became a full professor in 1936, (emeritus professor from 1948) until his retirement in 1966. He was a visiting professor at the University of Wisconsin in Madison, California (Santa Barbara) and Colorado (Boulder).


Works

One of his first works was ¨Our Italian surnames¨, published in Evanston in 1949, in which his knowledge of onomastics and genealogy are evidenced. He elaborated a much celebrated Fucilla’s Spanish Dictionary (New York, 1961) which was reprinted several times and prepared and corrected several anthologies for students of several main literary works of Spanish writers. As a translator of Italian to English he showed a particular interest in the eighteenth century dramaturgist Pietro Metastasio. He mainly studied the Italian imprint in Hispanic and Portuguese literatures. In 1953 he published a series of studies in Madrid, entitled ¨Hispano-Italian Relations¨ and in the same year a more comprehensive work, ¨Studies and Notes (Literary and Historical) published in Rome and Naples. In 1960 he achieved his works on the scholar works on the petrarchists with his famous ¨Studies on petrarchism in Spain (Madrid; C.S.I.C., 1960). He still published ¨Superbi colli e altri saggi (Rome, Carucci, 1963). He was the editor of Vicente García de la Huerta’s novel ¨The Rachel¨, (Madrid, Anaya, 1965, republished by Catedra, 1981). He is among the most credited scholar on history of Romanic literatures.