: A radical insistence on individual needs and collective liberation against institutional control.
: Fachinelli explored how the "I want" is a mythical representation of crisis , where the individual seeks a new way of communicating that the "judicial mausoleum" of society often rejects. Cultural and Literary Contexts of "Voglio"
: In Italian culture, "voglio" is often contrasted with "ti voglio bene" (I wish you well/I love you). Essays on modern Italian identity often dissect these terms to explain the boundaries between friendship, romantic love, and the raw assertion of "want."
Beyond Fachinelli, the concept of "voglio" appears in several other notable Italian contexts that delve into personal and cultural identity:
: His essays, such as those in the 1971 anthology that birthed the journal, recount experiments in anti-fascist schooling and the chaotic, sometimes violent, reality of total freedom.
The title L'erba voglio stems from the Italian proverb "L’erba voglio non cresce neanche nel giardino del re" (The grass called 'I want' doesn't even grow in the king's garden). Historically used to discipline children into suppressing their whims, Fachinelli and his collaborators reclaimed the phrase to champion:
: Even in religious contexts, the term is used to frame a divine desire for human fulfillment, as seen in Pope Francis’s writings titled Ti voglio felice (I want you to be happy).
: Enrico Franceschini's Voglio l'America tells the story of a journalist's relentless drive to conquer the U.S. and find his voice in global storytelling.