From the Publisher
'In his new book, Lichtner provides trenchant analysis of the cinematic portrayal of Mussolini's corrupting and violent dictatorship. Time and again he brilliantly illuminates the construction and misconstruction, representation and misrepresentation of a past that should not be permitted to fade away. Italy today needs its past and present read with Lichtner's sensibility and critical acumen.' - Professor Richard Bosworth, University of Oxford, UK
'Fascism in Postwar Cinema brims with considered reflections on the relationship of history, film, and memory, providing a clearly written and forcefully argued account of how film has engaged with Italy's Fascist past. Particular merits of the book are its attention to the often neglected 1950s and 1960s films, and to movies that register contemporary revisionist views of Fascism.'
- Professor Ruth Ben-Ghiat, New York University, USA
'In this ambitious volume on Italy's failure to come to terms with its Fascist past, Giacomo Lichtner demonstrates the leading role that cinema has played in the nation's inability to remember the entirety of its wartime experience. This is no mere overview of portrayals of Fascism in film; it is a condemnation of misleading national stereotypes and the selective amnesia of film-makers, politicians and audiences since 1945. Under Lichtner's scrutiny, films are more than reflections of the sociopolitical context in which they were made; they become contributors to a narrative of national (mis)remembrance.' - Benita Blessing, University of Vienna, Austria