French and Italian and Comparative Literature,Indiana University,
Bloomington
In the early 1970s, shortly after his arrival at Indiana University, Peter Bondanella became interested in Italian cinema. Bondanella worked for a decade to produce Italian Cinema: From Neorealism to the Present (1983). This book immediately placed American scholarship on Italian cinema upon solid foundations. It won the President's Award of the American Association for Italian Studies in 1984. With three editions and many printings, it remains the standard work in the field. A subsequent publication, The Eternal City: Roman Images in the Modern World (1987) became the Winter 1987 Selection of the History Book Club and was nominated for a Pulitzer Prize that same year.
Bondanella's work in Renaissance studies has also brought him scholarly acclaim. Through his monographs on Machiavelli and Guicciardini and his translations of texts by Boccaccio, Machiavelli, Cellini, and Vasari, he stands out as one of this country's most accomplished Renaissance specialists. Bondanella has also made a crucial contribution to the general field of Italian studies with his Dictionary of Italian Literature, now in its second edition.
Bondanella has been published by such widely distributed presses as Princeton, Oxford, Cambridge, Norton, New American Library, Viking Penguin, MacMillan, and Continuum. He has received major fellowships from the National Endowment for the Humanities, the American Council of Learned Societies, the Lilly Foundation, and the Center for Advanced Study in the Visual Arts at the National Gallery. His status as a scholar has not been achieved at the expense of his teaching. Bondanella is committed to mentoring students closely. Besides regularly teaching undergraduate students at all levels (topic courses, language, literature, film), he has written three books with IU graduate students to help start them on a scholarly career. A tribute to Bondanella's leadership is his appointment as chairperson of the IU Department of West European Studies and director of the West European Studies National Resource Center from 1992-2001. He has also served as the Bloomington co-chair of the Alliance.
Bondanella has made decisive contributions to international scholarship
with his studies of individual Italian film directors. His critical work, The Cinema of Federico Fellini (1992, Princeton
University Press) was awarded the CONGRIPS Book Prize
in Italian Studies. Much of the research for this book was based
on more than 30 original manuscripts that Bondanella brought from
Italy to Indiana University's Lilly Library. His most recent books
include The Films of Federico Fellini (2002, Cambridge University
Press), The Cambridge Companion to the Italian Novel (2003,
Cambridge
University Press), Hollywood Italians: Dagos, Palookas, Romeos, Wise
Guys, and Sopranos (2004, Continuum International). In addition, he
has done a number of recent translations or critical editions of
Italian classics: Benvenuto Cellini's My Life (2002, Oxford
University Press), Dante's Inferno (2003, Barnes & Noble), and
Machiavelli's The Prince (2005, Oxford University Press).
Home: (812) 332-9979; Office: (812) 855-33127; Fax: (812) 855-8877;
E-mail: bondanel@indiana.edu
WWW:
http://www.indiana.edu/~weur/_faculty/_bondanel/Bondanel.html