Elvira was born in Italy in 1867. She was born into a wealthy family; her father was a noted
criminal defense lawyer. Elvira began studying literature as part of her traditional, upper-class education; one of her major inspirations was
realist writer
Giovanni Verga. The semi-autobiographical novel concerned the lives of married women in Sicilian society at the turn of the 20th century. The work was deeply critical of the gender inequality present within Sicilian culture, especially when pertaining to the stigmas surrounding women who chose a career (the protagonist of the novel, much like Mancuso herself, decides to forgo a traditional marriage and become a teacher) over marriage and motherhood. Upon its release, the article was well-received, though it would remain relatively obscure until the late 20th century. Mancuso continued to write after
Annuzza, producing several essays related to gender inequality in Italian society. Much of this later criticism was also personally inflected, as it concerned the forced domesticity and rigid lifestyle upper class Sicilian woman were coerced to practice. Following the rise of
Fascism and the accompanying
censorship in Italy, Elvira pursued a career as a schoolteacher. She died in 1958.
Legacy Much of Mancuso's work, though well-received by coeval critics, was not widely read. In the 1980s, her work accrued additional interest after several prominent Italian authors praised her work. Notably, Sicilian playwright and politician
Leonardo Sciascia wrote in a preface to the 1981 reprint of
Annuzza la maestrina that "There are many truths in this book that do not age". == References ==