The Periodic Table (short story collection)

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The Periodic Table
Periodic table.jpg
First edition
AuthorPrimo Levi
Original titleIl sistema periodico
TranslatorRaymond Rosenthal
Cover artistM. C. Escher
CountryItaly
LanguageItalian
PublisherEinaudi (Italian)
Schocken Books (English)
Publication date
1975
Published in English
1984
Media typePrint (hardback & paperback)
Pages233
ISBN0-8052-3929-4
OCLC16468959
The elements that are titles of the stories.

The Periodic Table (Italian: Il sistema periodico) is a collection of short stories by Primo Levi, published in 1975, named after the periodic table in chemistry. In 2006, the Royal Institution of Great Britain named it the best science book ever.[1]

Content[]

The stories are autobiographical episodes of the author's experiences as a Jewish-Italian doctoral-level chemist under the Fascist regime and afterwards. They include various themes that follow a chronological sequence: his ancestry, his study of chemistry and practising the profession in wartime Italy, a pair of imaginative tales he wrote at that time,[2] and his subsequent experiences as an anti-Fascist partisan, his arrest and imprisonment, interrogation, and internment in the Fossoli di Carpi and Auschwitz camps, and postwar life as an industrial chemist. Every story, 21 in total, has the name of a chemical element and is connected to it in some way.

Chapters[]

  1. "Argon" – The infancy of the author, the community of Piedmontese Jews and their language
  2. "Hydrogen" – Two children experiment with electrolysis
  3. "Zinc" – Laboratory experiments in a university
  4. "Iron" – The adolescence of the author, between the racial laws and the Alps
  5. "Potassium" – An experience in the laboratory with unexpected results
  6. "Nickel" – In the chemical laboratories of a mine
  7. "Lead" – The narrative of a primitive metallurgist (fiction)[3]
  8. "Mercury" – A tale of populating a remote and desolate island (fiction)[4]
  9. "Phosphorus" – An experience on a job in the chemical industry
  10. "Gold" – A story of imprisonment
  11. "Cerium" – Survival in the Lager
  12. "Chromium" – The recovery of livered varnishes
  13. "Sulfur" – An experience on a job in the chemical industry (apparently fiction)
  14. "Titanium" – A scene of daily life (apparently fiction)
  15. "Arsenic" – Consultation about a sugar sample
  16. "Nitrogen" – Trying to manufacture cosmetics by scratching the floor of a hen-house
  17. "Tin" – A domestic chemical laboratory
  18. "Uranium" – Consultation about a piece of metal
  19. "Silver" – The story of some unsuitable photographic plates
  20. "Vanadium" – Finding a German chemist after the war
  21. "Carbon" – The history of a carbon atom

Bibliography[]

  • First American edition, New York, Schocken Books, 1984
    • ISBN 0-8052-3929-4 (hardcover)
    • ISBN 0-8052-0811-9 (trade paperback)
  • Reissues
    • Random House hardcover edition, September 1996 ISBN 0-679-44722-9 (ISBN 978-0-679-44722-1)
    • Knopf Publishing Group paperback edition, April 1995 ISBN 0-8052-1041-5 (ISBN 9780805210415)

Adaptations[]

The book was dramatised for radio by BBC Radio 4 in 2016.[5] The dramatisation was broadcast in 12 episodes, with Henry Goodman and as Primo Levi.

Notes and references[]

  1. ^ Randerson, James (21 October 2006). "Levi's memoir beats Darwin to win science book title". The Guardian. Retrieved 3 March 2017.
  2. ^ In the chapter, Nickel, "...on some other of those long nights were born two stories of islands and freedom, the first I felt inclined to write after...liceo..."(1984 paperback, p. 73), and "Nor have the two mineral tales which I wrote then disappeared.... The reader will find them here in the succeeding pages, inserted, like a prisoner's dream of escape, between these tales of militant chemistry." (1984 paperback, p. 78)
  3. ^ "One story fantasize[s] about a remote precursor of mine, a hunter of lead instead of nickel...." 1984 paperback, p. 73
  4. ^ "...the other [story], ambiguous and mercurial, I had taken from a reference to the island of Tristan da Cunha that I happened to see during that period." 1984 paperback, p. 73
  5. ^ "Primo Levi's The Periodic Table". www.bbc.co.uk. Retrieved 5 August 2016.

See also[]

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