At age eight, Tina watches as her father, a small-time mafia boss, is gunned down in the family’s home. Angry and desperate to take back control of her suddenly-upended life, Tina begins training to make her own entry into the mafia. But she’s not interested in quietly working in the background: She wants to be one of the soldiers.
That’s the premise of the novel Tina, Mafia Soldier, written by Italian author Maria Rosa Cutrufelli and newly translated by a UW-Milwaukee professor.
Robin Pickering-Iazzi is a faculty member in UWM’s Global Studies Department, where she teaches in the Italian Studies program. Her research focuses on Italian literature and culture, including organized crime. Though Tina, Mafia Soldier was originally published in 1994, Pickering-Iazzi’s translation has breathed new life into the work, and new interest in how young women are rebelling against social norms in violent ways.
Here are three things you need to know about Tina, Mafia Soldier.
1. The story and its backstory are violent.
Tina, Mafia Soldier is written from the perspective of a former teacher who is an author. When newspaper articles about Tina’s bloody rise to gang leadership capture her attention, the narrator is compelled to write a book about this masculidda, or “tomboy.” Told through a series of interviews with Tina’s lawyer; her family; a carabiniere, or police officer; and others, the book ends when the narrator and Tina finally come face-to-face for an explosive meeting of their own.
It’s unusual for novels about the Mafia to focus on women characters, much less women who undertake violent roles in it. But then, the book’s inspiration was anything but typical. The work is based in part on the life of Emanuela Azzarelli, who has made waves in her hometown of Gela in Sicily. Her father was a Mafia boss who, like the character Tina’s father, was murdered when Azzarelli was a child.
“So, she decides to take up a gun,” Pickering-Iazzi said. “This is the difference between her and so many other women (in the Mafia) who are the accountants, or who gather extortion money. She wanted to be a part of the armed wing of Cosa Nostra, be a soldier doing the killing and the fighting.”
And she did. Pickering-Iazzi points to newspaper articles from the 1980s detailing the exploits of the young woman who was dubbed the “Bonnie of Gela,” as in “Bonnie and Clyde.” Cutrufelli drew inspiration from those clippings and even visited Azzarelli in jail to interview her – with interesting consequences.
When the book was published, the mayor of Gela invited Cutrufelli for a celebration event to mark the book’s debut and revive cultural life in Gela.
“Before the event started, Emanuela came up in her steel-toed boots and camouflage, grabbed Maria Rosa (Cutrufelli), and threw her to the ground, kicking and punching her,” Pickering-Iazzi said. “The carabinieri came to grab Emanuela and take her away. Maria Rosa, who is incredible – nothing will stop her – perched her broken glasses on her face and the event went on.”
In fact, Cutrufelli declined to press charges. When a mafioso is imprisoned, Pickering-Iazzi explained, they gain more credit in the eyes of their compatriots, in essence moving up the rungs of the Mob’s ladder. Instead of adding to Azzarelli’s clout, Cutrufelli and the mayor of Gela took her to dinner and thoroughly explained the difference between the fictional character of Tina and the real Azzarelli.
“Later, Maria Rosa found out that one of the reasons that Emanuela beat her up so badly … was that she wanted to regain part of her reputation that she lost by giving that interview to Maria Rosa when she was in prison,” Pickering-Iazzi added.
Azzarelli continued to contact Cutrufelli for years afterward until Cutrufelli was forced to change her phone number.
2. When young women are denied power, sometimes they take it by force.
Women have played an integral, if quiet, part of organized crime for centuries, Pickering-Iazzi said. They have often been accountants and loan sharks. They run prostitution and gambling rings. But they do not join the Mafia’s armed ranks, which is what makes Azzarelli – and the character of Tina – stand out.
“Gela was very interesting for this, because there were several (women) who started out as young teenagers in these roles, wanting to be the soldiers with that violence,” Pickering-Iazzi said. She speculates that the girls were frustrated with social mores and a culture that disregards women – among the Mafia, domestic abuse is rampant.
“(In this book), you see the elements in society, politics, and culture that contribute to a growing phenomenon of young girls who, because they can’t express themselves in other ways to get respect, see that the only way to do so is through violence, to gain respect by creating fear in others, sometimes by wielding a gun,” Pickering-Iazzi said.
It’s a theme that rings true even today, throughout the world. Pickering-Iazzi recalls stories of American teenage girls who have driven their classmates to suicide through vicious bullying campaigns – a different sort of violence, but no less deadly.
3. Translation is difficult but rewarding work.
Pickering-Iazzi has been met with plenty of interest in Tina, Mafia Soldier, but she admits she decided to take on the job of translating the novel for selfish reasons: “I’d love to teach it in class,” she joked.
“Whether it’s in a course on the Italian mafias, or on Italian women writers, or the Italian diaspora,” she added. “It’s not a story that focuses solely on the Mafia. … Instead, you have these wonderful passages about Sicily, the land, the people from different socio-economic classes, the food.”
The tricky part of translating such a rich text is conveying all of the meaning, nuance, and even idioms of Italian in a way that English-reading audiences will understand and appreciate. To that end, Pickering-Iazzi said she tries to stay faithful to the text. For phrases or passages that don’t directly translate, she’ll try to find an English image or metaphor close to the original Italian.
She also had help: Pickering-Iazzi has been friends with Maria Rosa Cutrufelli since the two met at a conference on Italian feminism in the 1980s. Cutrufelli gave her blessing when Pickering-Iazzi asked if she could translate Tina, Mafia Soldier. That meant the pair could work together when it came to some of the trickier aspects of translation.
“There were certain historical events that were alluded to in the novel that Italian readers would have known … and American readers would have thought, ‘What’s going on here?’” Pickering-Iazzi recalled. “In those cases, Maria Rosa was in agreement that I would add in some context within the narrative. … I mimicked the style of Maria Rosa and inserted a bit of new text.”
It worked; the book has generated plenty of media buzz and was included on CrimeReads’ “Most Anticipated Crime Fiction of 2023” and Crime Fiction Lover’s “Most Wanted Crime Novels of 2023” lists.
Tina, Mafia Soldier is available from retailers like Amazon, Penguin Random House, and Barnes and Noble.
By Sarah Vickery, College of Letters & Science