ADRIÁN N. BRAVI was born in Buenos Aires, has lived in Italy since the late 1980s, and is a librarian. He published his first novel in Spanish in 1999 and after a few years started writing in Italian. He has written a number of books, including L’idioma di Casilda Moreira and Quattro novelle sui rattristamenti. His books have been translated into several languages.
VICTORIA OFFREDI POLETTO (Senior Lecturer Emerita) and GIOVANNA BELLESIA CONTUZZI (Professor and Chair) have taught and collaborated together in the Department of Italian Studies at Smith College since 1990. They are committed to bringing the voices of migrant and second-generation writers-in particular women writers-to the English-speaking world. Their many translations include Genevieve Makaping’s Reversing the Gaze:What if the Other Were You?, Gabriella Ghermandi’s Queen of Flowers and Pearls, and Cristina Ali Farah’s Little Mother.
SHIRIN RAMZANALI FAZEL is a novelist and poet. She was born in Mogadishu to a Somali mother and Pakistani father in 1953, and moved to Novara, Italy, in 1971. Among the first voices of so-called "migration literature" in Italy, Fazel writes in different languages and across different genres, gracefully narrating the benefits and challenges of our transnational reality. She is the author of Far From Mogadishu and Clouds over the Equator. The Forgotten Italians.
SHIRIN RAMZANALI FAZEL is an Italian writer of Somali origins. She has published two collections of poetry, Wings and I Suckled Sweetness, as well as two novels, Far from Mogadishu and Clouds over the Equator, that deal with the effects of Italian colonialism in Somalia and her experience of migration to Italy.
SIMONE BRIONI is an associate professor in the Department of English at Stony Brook University in New York and an affiliated faculty member in the Departments of Africana Studies and Women's, Gender, and Sexuality Studies.