Access the Online Archive
Search the Historical Archive of the Pirelli Foundation for sources and materials. Select the type of support you are interested in and write the keywords of your research.
    Select one of the following categories
  • Documents
  • Photographs
  • Drawings and posters
  • Audio-visuals
  • Publications and magazines
  • All
Help with your research
To request to view the materials in the Historical Archive and in the libraries of the Pirelli Foundation for study and research purposes and/or to find out how to request the use of materials for loans and exhibitions, please fill in the form below. You will receive an email confirming receipt of the request and you will be contacted.
Pirelli Foundation Educational Courses

Select the education level of the school
Back
Primary schools
Pirelli Foundation Educational Courses
Please fill in your details and the staff of Pirelli Foundation Educational will contact you to arrange the dates of the course.

I declare I have read  the privacy policy, and authorise the Pirelli Foundation to process my personal data in order to send communications, also by email, about initiatives/conferences organised by the Pirelli Foundation.

Back
Lower secondary school
Pirelli Foundation Educational Courses
Please fill in your details and the staff of Pirelli Foundation Educational will contact you to arrange the dates of the course.
Back
Upper secondary school
Pirelli Foundation Educational Courses
Please fill in your details and the staff of Pirelli Foundation Educational will contact you to arrange the dates of the course.
Back
University
Pirelli Foundation Educational Courses

Do you want to organize a training programme with your students? For information and reservations, write to universita@fondazionepirelli.org

Visit the Foundation
For information about the Foundation’s activities, guided tours and accessibility,
please call +39 0264423971 or fill in the form below, providing details of your request in the notes field.

Stories of work, factories and offices

When literature does the talking for the culture of production

Human beings and work, offices and factories. Communities made of common labours and dreams, conflicts and hopes. A culture of production that becomes industrious reality, and a desire for well-being, and a rich subject matter. This has often, very often, been the case in the history of literature, as well as in literature today. It is important to occasionally visit (or revisit) some of the countless examples of stories of work and enterprise that literature is full of, perhaps to read them again or for the first time.

Thus, it is possible to read The Government Clerks (written by Honoré de Balzac in 1844, but still relevant and worth reading in some respects), which describes the office world of the time with merciless wit (a world that, in many respects, resembles that of today). Xavier Rabourdin, the protagonist, works in a ‘big room’, which could be referred to as an open-plan office today. Like the protagonists in Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, he fights every day to build a career, albeit in a very different environment. Hard Times describes factories and labour relations in the early days of the English Industrial Revolution in no uncertain terms. Dickens had experienced factory life, albeit briefly, and later became a parliamentary journalist.  He combined the ability to tell with the ability to see, in no uncertain terms.  Starting with the places and characters. ‘In Coketown,’ writes Dickens, ‘the piston of the steam-engine worked monotonously up and down (…). It contained several large streets all very like one another, and many small streets still more like one another, inhabited by people equally like one another, who all went in and out at the same hours, with the same sound upon the same pavements, to do the same work, and to whom every day was the same as yesterday and to-morrow, and every year the counterpart of the last and the next’.

The factory is depicted as a place of conflict (and possibly redemption), confrontation, as well as alienation. This is what happens to the protagonist of the 1925 novella The Train Has Whistled by Luigi Pirandello. The protagonist, Belluca, is an office worker who is mistreated by his colleagues and has a family that he feels he cannot connect with. Belluca eventually goes mad.

But are work and enterprise exclusively areas of drudgery and alienation? Clearly not, although these aspects have often been the focus of literature. One example is enough to refute the rule: Primo Levi, who, in his The Monkey Wrench, speaks of the toil of work and the factory, but also of its beauty. Levi — writer, chemist, man of letters and science, and witness to both the Holocaust and corporate work — tells of a particular aspect of human happiness in one of his most well-known passages. He writes, ‘If we can except those isolated and miraculous moments fate can bestow on a man, loving your work (unfortunately, the privilege of a few) represents the best, most concrete approximation of happiness on earth. But this is a truth that not many know’.

 

The Government Clerks

Honoré de Balzac

Garzanti, 1996

Hard Times

Charles Dickens

Feltrinelli, 2015

The train has whistled…

in, ‘Novella for a year. The lonely man’

Luigi Pirandello

Mondadori (various editions)

The Monkey Wrench

Primo Levi

Einaudi (various editions)

When literature does the talking for the culture of production

Human beings and work, offices and factories. Communities made of common labours and dreams, conflicts and hopes. A culture of production that becomes industrious reality, and a desire for well-being, and a rich subject matter. This has often, very often, been the case in the history of literature, as well as in literature today. It is important to occasionally visit (or revisit) some of the countless examples of stories of work and enterprise that literature is full of, perhaps to read them again or for the first time.

Thus, it is possible to read The Government Clerks (written by Honoré de Balzac in 1844, but still relevant and worth reading in some respects), which describes the office world of the time with merciless wit (a world that, in many respects, resembles that of today). Xavier Rabourdin, the protagonist, works in a ‘big room’, which could be referred to as an open-plan office today. Like the protagonists in Charles Dickens’ Hard Times, he fights every day to build a career, albeit in a very different environment. Hard Times describes factories and labour relations in the early days of the English Industrial Revolution in no uncertain terms. Dickens had experienced factory life, albeit briefly, and later became a parliamentary journalist.  He combined the ability to tell with the ability to see, in no uncertain terms.  Starting with the places and characters. ‘In Coketown,’ writes Dickens, ‘the piston of the steam-engine worked monotonously up and down (…). It contained several large streets all very like one another, and many small streets still more like one another, inhabited by people equally like one another, who all went in and out at the same hours, with the same sound upon the same pavements, to do the same work, and to whom every day was the same as yesterday and to-morrow, and every year the counterpart of the last and the next’.

The factory is depicted as a place of conflict (and possibly redemption), confrontation, as well as alienation. This is what happens to the protagonist of the 1925 novella The Train Has Whistled by Luigi Pirandello. The protagonist, Belluca, is an office worker who is mistreated by his colleagues and has a family that he feels he cannot connect with. Belluca eventually goes mad.

But are work and enterprise exclusively areas of drudgery and alienation? Clearly not, although these aspects have often been the focus of literature. One example is enough to refute the rule: Primo Levi, who, in his The Monkey Wrench, speaks of the toil of work and the factory, but also of its beauty. Levi — writer, chemist, man of letters and science, and witness to both the Holocaust and corporate work — tells of a particular aspect of human happiness in one of his most well-known passages. He writes, ‘If we can except those isolated and miraculous moments fate can bestow on a man, loving your work (unfortunately, the privilege of a few) represents the best, most concrete approximation of happiness on earth. But this is a truth that not many know’.

 

The Government Clerks

Honoré de Balzac

Garzanti, 1996

Hard Times

Charles Dickens

Feltrinelli, 2015

The train has whistled…

in, ‘Novella for a year. The lonely man’

Luigi Pirandello

Mondadori (various editions)

The Monkey Wrench

Primo Levi

Einaudi (various editions)

Multimedia

Images