Italian Political Cinema: Public Life, Imaginary, and Identity in Contemporary Italian Film / Edition 1

Italian Political Cinema: Public Life, Imaginary, and Identity in Contemporary Italian Film / Edition 1

by Giancarlo Lombardi, Christian Uva
ISBN-10:
3034322178
ISBN-13:
9783034322171
Pub. Date:
03/28/2016
Publisher:
Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
ISBN-10:
3034322178
ISBN-13:
9783034322171
Pub. Date:
03/28/2016
Publisher:
Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Italian Political Cinema: Public Life, Imaginary, and Identity in Contemporary Italian Film / Edition 1

Italian Political Cinema: Public Life, Imaginary, and Identity in Contemporary Italian Film / Edition 1

by Giancarlo Lombardi, Christian Uva

Paperback

$55.55 Current price is , Original price is $55.55. You
$55.55 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE
    Check Availability at Nearby Stores
  • SHIP THIS ITEM

    Temporarily Out of Stock Online

    Please check back later for updated availability.


Overview

Despite recent societal anti-political sentiments, Italian cinema has continued to address politics, including reflections on public life, memory, and national identity. This is done via (1) thematic approaches discussing contemporary political film, (2) analyses of prominent directors currently engaged in filone, and (3) case studies of selected films.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9783034322171
Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
Publication date: 03/28/2016
Series: Italian Modernities , #38
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 448
Product dimensions: 5.91(w) x 8.86(h) x (d)

About the Author

Giancarlo Lombardi is Professor of Italian and Comparative Literature at the College of Staten Island and at the Graduate Center/CUNY. He has published extensively on Italian film, television studies, and contemporary Italian literature. He is the author of Rooms with a View: Feminist Diary Fiction (2002) and the co-editor of Remembering Aldo Moro (2012) and Terrorism, Italian Style (2012).
Christian Uva is Associate Professor at the University of Roma Tre. His books include Schermi di piombo. Il terrorismo nel cinema italiano (2007), Sergio Leone. Il cinema come favola politica (2013), and L'immagine politica. Forme del contropotere tra cinema, video e fotografie nell' Italia degli anni Settanta (2015). He is the author of numerous articles in international journals and edited volumes, both on the intersection of politics and history in Italian cinema and on the theoretical implications of the advent of the digital era.

Table of Contents

Contents: Giancarlo Lombardi/Christian Uva: Italian Political Cinema: Definitions and Goals – Gaetana Marrone: Italian Political Cinema: The Early Masters – Christian Uva: The New Cinema of Political Engagement – Nicoletta Marini-Maio: Before and After Silvio: A Corpus for Us All – Áine O’Healy: Bound to Care: Gender, Affect, and Immigrant Labour – Anita Angelone: Italian Documentaries and Immigration – Elena Past: Documenting Ecomafia – Mary P. Wood: Noir Style and Political Cinema – Alan O’Leary: Political/Popular Cinema – Vito Zagarrio: The «Great Beauty», or Form Is Politics – Paolo Russo: Gimme (Tax) Shelter: The Politics of the Production System – Ruth Glynn: Marco Bellocchio and the «New» Political Cinema – Cosetta Gaudenzi: Guido Chiesa and Postmodern Impegno – Laura Di Bianco: Francesca Comencini: Women Outside the Polis – Anna Paparcone: Marco Tullio Giordana’s Cinema and Its Civil Engagement: Truth Does Not Play Anyone’s Game – Marguerite Waller: Sabina Guzzanti: Transmediating cinema politico – Clarissa Clò: Gustav Hofer and Luca Ragazzi’s Trilogy: Comizi d’amore in the Digital Age – Simona Bondavalli: Daniele Luchetti as Author of Politics? Little Teachers and Modest Lessons – Marcia Landy: Nanni Moretti by Nanni Moretti: The Biopic as Counter-History – Claudio Bisoni: Paolo Sorrentino: Between Engagement and savoir faire – Monica Jansen: Daniele Vicari: The Real Is also Human – Nicoletta Marini-Maio: Susanna Nicchiarelli’s Cosmonauta: The Space Race, or When Communist Girls Dreamed of the Moon – Pierpaolo Antonello: Il divo: Paolo Sorrentino’s Spectacle of Politics – Millicent Marcus: Gomorra by Matteo Garrone: «La normalità dello sfacelo» – Luca Caminati: Gianni Amelio’s Lamerica and the National Body Politics – Danielle Hipkins: Nessuno mi puo giudicare: Making Over the Prostitute from a Post-Feminist Perspective – Gius Gargiulo: Mario Martone’s Noi credevamo: History and Fiction – Giovanna De Luca: Placido Rizzotto and Segreti di Stato: Italian Investigative Cinema and Memory – Catherine O’Rawe: La prima linea: Film, Terrorism, and the Politics of Funding – Dana Renga: Romanzo criminale as Male Melodrama: «It is in reality always too late» – Ellen Nerenberg: Tutta colpa di Giuda: Performing Captivity – Giancarlo Lombardi: Viva la liberta: Language, Politics, and Consensus.
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews