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Index
Cover Title Page Table of Contents Acknowledgments Notes on Contributors Editor’s Notes Glossary Preface and In Memoriam Part I: First Things
1 Introduction
Italian Cinema and (Very Briefly) Visual Culture Contributors and Aims of This Volume The Contents of the Companion “Metathemes” Italian Cinema as Other References
2 Italian Cinema Studies
References
Part II: Historical/Chronological Perspectives
Silent Cinema 3 Silent Italian Cinema
Before 1905: Films about Italy Domestic Production Arte Muta, Dive, and Auteurs Vernacular Realism The Great War and Beyond Film Discourse References
4 Stardom in Italian Silent Cinema1
Introduction Terminology The Birth of Divismo The Dive, and the Diva Film The Divo References
Fascism and Italian Cinema 5 Genre, Politics, and the Fascist Subject in the Cinema of Italy (1922–1945)1
Industrial and Political Efforts to Create a Popular Film Industry Refashioning Genres: Directors and the Comedy Comedy and Stardom The Forms of Melodrama History, Politics, and Myth: Luis Trenker and Alessandro Blasetti Melodrama and Stardom Calligraphism: Melodrama, Formalism, and War Afterthoughts References
The Italian Film Industry 6 Staying Alive
References
Cinema and Religion 7 Italian Cinema and Catholicism: From Vigilanti cura to Vatican II and Beyond
Introduction First Stage: Art or Morality? Second Stage: Catholic Production Third Stage: The “Folly” of the “Povericristi” Fourth Stage: Toward the Second Vatican Council and Beyond References
Neorealism 8 The Italian Neorealist Experience
Introduction Rossellini’s (Anti‐)War Trilogy De Sica’s Subversive Orphan Children The Italian Neorealist Experience: Beyond Camps References
9 Italian Neorealism
Introduction Initial Observations on Neorealism Italian Neorealism Beyond the First Years Multiple Directions of Influence Roma città aperta and Ladri di biciclette: Echoes, Parallels, Influence The Most Quotidian Story, an Epilogue References
Stardom and the 1950s 10 Italian Female Stars and Their Fans in the 1950s and 1960s1
Introduction Italian Fan Studies Methodology The Peculiarity of Fandom in Italy The Magazines The Place of Fan Mail in the Stars’ Relationship with Their Fans The Fans’ Relationships to the Stars Conclusion References
Film Comedy—the 1950s and Beyond 11 The Popularity of Italian Film Comedy1
From Early Italian Comedy to the Hunger and Harmony of Pink Neorealism Toward commedia all’italiana: Spectacle, Masks, Totò, and Sordi The Economic Miracle and commedia all’italiana After the “Boom”: The 1970s and Beyond What’s So Funny? References
12 The Question of Italian National Character and the Limits of Commedia all’italiana
Cinema and Social Commentary The Sordi Persona and Italian Modernity Fellini and National Vices and Virtues Carlo Lizzani and the Cinema of History and Actuality Conclusion References
French‐Italian Film Collaborations into the 1960s 13 Cross‐Fertilization between France and Italy from Neorealism through the 1960s1
Before Neorealism Neorealism between France and Italy The Case of Rossellini De Sica and Zavattini Coproductions The 1960s The Nouvelle Vague and New Italian Cinema of the 1960s New Theoretical Perspectives References
Auteur Cinema (1960s and 1970s) 14 Italian 1960s Auteur Cinema (and beyond)
Theoretical Introduction Visconti, Popular Auteur Antonioni, the Modern Auteur Par Excellence Fellini, from the “World Text” to the “Self Text” From Modern to Postmodern Auteur References
Popular Film Genres (1950s to 1970s) 15 Italian Popular Film Genres1
The Peplum The Spaghetti Western Italian Horror The Poliziottesco Conclusion References
Politics and/of Terrorism (1960s to the Present) 16 The Representation of Terrorism in Italian Cinema
The Warning Signs Genre Cinema and the Affairs of State The Auteurs’ Disorientation The 1980s: Between the Political and the Individual Spheres A Rendering of Accounts: The 1990s The New Millennium: “Vintage” and Revival References
Italian Cinema from the 1970s to the Present 17 From Cinecittà to the Small Screen
Prologue Introduction The End of the “Golden Age” The April 7 Trial Politics and Economy of the Intimate Screen 1968: “Like Polaroids” How to Make a Movie in Time of Crisis Conclusion References
18 Contemporary Italian Film in the New Media World1
References
Part III: Alternative Film Forms
19 Thinking Cinema
The Origins and Development of the Essay Film Essayist Nonfiction Today References
20 Italian Experimental Cinema
Sandra Lischi Avant‐garde, Independents, Experimentalists: A Premise The Italian Panorama: From the Futurists Onward The 1960s and Beyond Boundary Crossings: Pathways in Artist Cinema Alchemies, Memory, History Animations, Research, Theater The Passage to Video References
21 Notes on the History of Italian Nonfiction Film1
Beginnings Italian Documentary after World War II References
Part IV: Critical, Aesthetic, and Theoretical Issues
22 A Century of Music in Italian Cinema1
The Sound of Silence (1896–1930) It’s Time to Sing a Song (1930–1945) Reconstructing the Country: The “Liberation” of Film Music (1945–1960) Specialists and Film Genres (1960–1980) The Auteur Is Dead, Long Live the Auteur (1980–2010) References
23 The Practice of Dubbing and the Evolution of the Soundtrack in Italian Cinema
Celluloid Hybrids and Greta Garbo Patrolling the Soundtrack The Visual Regime of Cinema Crafting Sound in National Cinema Antonioni and the New Sound of Cinema Listening to Make Sense References
24 Watching Italians Turn Around
Rome’s Awkward Modernity Looking (for Love) in the Neorealist City Seeing What Is and Is Not There Conclusion (Looking and Seeing) References
25 Women in Italian Cinema
From the Silent Era to Fascism The Post–World War II Period From the 1980s to the End of the Twentieth Century The Third Millennium Conclusion References
26 Imagining the Mezzogiorno
Preface The Sociohistorical Mezzogiorno: A Theoretical Framework Filmic Representations of the Mezzogiorno, Part 1: Until 1989 Filmic Representations of the Mezzogiorno, Part 2: After 1989 References
27 The Queerness of Italian Cinema1
Introduction Queer Cinemas Queering Italians The Queer Signature The New Queer Cinema References
28 An Accented Gaze
References
29 How to Tell Time
Crisis in the Action‐Image The Crystals of Time Pasolini and Free Indirect Discourse Time, Thought, and Body References
30 The Screen in the Mirror
The Concept of Reflexivity The Postmodern Gaze A Classic Spectacle of Modernity Cinema’s Modern Conscience The Archive of Dreams, Bodies, and Tales References
31 Deterritorialized Spaces and Queer Clocks
Literary and Visual Contexts Theory Practice A Worldwide Hyperfilm “Queer Clocks” References
Part V: Last Things
32 Forum: The Present State and Likely Prospects of Italian Cinema and Cinema Studies
Editor’s Introduction On (the Notion of) Methodology Cinema, Impegno, and the Local Globalization, Transnationalism, Translocality, Nationality Ecocinema The Current Cinematic and Cultural Scene The Crisis of Exhibition/Importance of Curatorial Work (Other) Material and Institutional Conditions and Limitations Current Areas of Investigation Pleasure, the Popular (Again), Cultural and Gender Studies Italian Cinema and Cinema Studies: The Road from Here References
Index End User License Agreement
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