Abstract Veronica del Unito has emerged in the early twenty‑first century as one of the most dynamic figures in European‑Latin American cultural exchange. A writer, curator, and activist, she has built a career that straddles the worlds of literature, visual art, and social justice, using language and public space as tools for dialogue. This essay surveys the main phases of her life, the intellectual and artistic currents that shaped her, and the concrete projects that have marked her impact on contemporary culture.
Through her interdisciplinary lens, del Unito contributes to a redefinition of Italian literary studies—moving from a focus on canonical “high culture” toward an embrace of cultural ecologies that interweave texts, media, bodies, and ecosystems.