Dygot. Jakub Małecki

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the literary imagination should be taken into account when assessing even self-claimed scientific or at least realistic representations – the kind of representations the social sciences aim to provide. Indeed, the circular relationship between literary imagination and sociological imagination is far from exceptional, and, as Wolfgang Lepenies (1988) has brilliantly shown, sociology has been, since its inception, suspended between ‘literature and science’. What mafia offers is just another case in point, an especially enlightening one as the diffusion of the words ‘mafia’ and ‘mafiosi’ to identify what had until then been called ‘camorra’ and ‘camorristi’ is a consequence of a literary creation and its apparent success in the decades after unification.

      How much literary imagination and how much empirical social observation generated the first true classic in mafia studies is not easy to assess. Surely, the two volumes comprising La Sicilia nel 1876 are the fruit of several months of travelling across Sicily looking for witnesses to and evidence of the social and economic conditions of the island. Not surprisingly, the ‘mafia’ looms large in these pages, written by a then young Jewish intellectual, Baron Leopoldo Franchetti, who arrived from Tuscany with the specific objective of documenting and establishing some firm bases upon which to build efficacious policies for helping the southern regions of Italy to meet the standards of social and civic life of the northern regions. Franchetti was born in 1847 in Livorno into a family of good social standing – who had come to Italy from Tunisia in the final decades of the eighteenth century to engage in trade, eventually becoming one of the most important families of the local Jewish community. The young Franchetti was strongly influenced by the ideas of John Stuart Mill, which made him a convinced liberal. This was the mind set with which he observed and then wrote his influential book on public life in Sicily, published in 1877, together with the book of his friend and co-researcher Sidney Sonnino (a future Prime Minister of Italy), on the working conditions of Sicilian peasants. Franchetti’s half of the report, Condizioni politiche e amministrative della Sicilia, was an analysis of the mafia in the nineteenth century that is still considered authoritative today, much quoted and utilized by contemporary scholars. As historian John Dickie says, Franchetti would ultimately influence thinking about the mafia more than anyone else more than a century later, and Le condizioni is the first convincing explanation of how the mafia came to be (see Dickie 2004, 43–54). Most influential nowadays is Franchetti’s suggestion that we see in the mafia something like an ‘industry of violence’, a suggestion that would become the cornerstone of the economic theory of the mafia – the subject of my next chapter.

      Given its impact on current research, it is worth noting here how Franchetti arrives at this suggestion and how he elaborates on this conceptualization. The following quotation is helpful in this endeavour:

      As this quotation makes clear, Franchetti’s vision of the mafia was much wider and deeper than the one for which he is nowadays recalled – the ‘industry of violence’ may be just one aspect of the ‘complete fact’ that manifests itself in the ‘way of being of a given society and the individuals comprising it’. In addition, industry was used by Franchetti not as the name for a sector in the production of goods or related services within an economy (as in the modern English use), but in the old Italian sense of operosità and attività, i.e. industriousness and productivity. We will elaborate on this point in the next chapter. What has to be emphasized at this point is that Franchetti’s analysis is only apparently focused exclusively on Sicily and the mafia. Indeed, what he is continually doing while describing and making sense of social and cultural features is a comparison between what he observes, what he listens to, what he reads (in local newspapers, for example) and what he considers the model of modern political and social organization, i.e. the rule of law, as he could see – along with many of his contemporaries with liberal attitudes and beliefs – in the British constitutional system. The image of mafia we find in Franchetti’s pages is an image depicted in contrast with the image of a liberal, market-oriented society based on the rule of law.

      The parameters of the debate on mafia, camorra and the like in the last decades of the nineteenth century were, however, less a legacy of Franchetti than of an eclectic scientist, one of the most influential scholars of the time, indeed – whose scientific standards, according to the current vision, were so flexible as to make his work more interesting nowadays as evidence of human fantasy than for its research results. It is difficult to imagine today just how influential Cesare Lombroso, the author of scientific bestsellers such as L’uomo delinquente (1876) and L’uomo di genio (1893), could have been in those decades, in Italy and elsewhere. The number of pages Lombroso devoted to southern peculiarities and mafias in his numerous publications is not that large (even though he started

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