In 1804, with her husband, Giuseppe Lattanzi, she founded Corriere delle dame, one of the first Italian periodicals targeted to a female audience, which covered women's fashion, as well as current events.
In July 1797, Lattanzi delivered a lecture at the Academy called "Della schiavitù delle donne" (The Slavery of Women), which was later published as a pamphlet dedicated to Josephine Beauharnais, who was married to Napoleon Bonaparte.
[1] In 1804, in Milan, the Lattanzis co-founded Corriere delle Dame (Ladies' Courier), one of the first Italian periodicals targeted to a female audience, which covered women's fashion, literature, current events, practical advice, and theatrical reviews.
[3] Lattanzi chose to launch the periodical in the year before Bonaparte would be crowned King of Italy, anticipating the balls that would take place, at which Milanese high society would want to be dressed fashionably.
[4] It also published musical scores, such as the cavatina for guitar by Nicola Moretti, and pamphlets, such as l’Elogio storico della Contessa Paolina Secco-Suardo-Grismondi tra le Pastorelle d’Arcadia Lesbia Cidonia.