Masculinity and Italian Cinema : Sexual Politics, Social Conflict and Male Crisis in the 1970s
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0748654542
ISBN-13
9780748654543
Publisher
Edinburgh University Press
Imprint
Edinburgh University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Jul 31st, 2014
Print length
176 Pages
Weight
404 grams
Dimensions
23.50 x 16.40 x 1.50 cms
Product Classification:
Films, cinemaGender studies: men
Ksh 18,000.00
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Offers a study of how Italian films re-envisage male identity in response to sexual liberation. This book examines how this preoccupation with male identity becomes especially acute in the 1970s when a set of more diverse and inclusive images of men emerge in response to the rise of feminism and gay liberation.
How did Italian cinema of the 1970s re-envision masculinity in response to sexual liberation? What role did broader socio-political concerns of the time play in this re-definition? To what extent did this re-envisioning of masculinity intersect with concurrent debates about the function of cinema as a political medium and a mass cultural phenomenon?
Masculinity and Italian Cinema takes the 1970s as an especially instructive period for rethinking the traditional trope of an inadequate male in crisis within Italian cinema. It explores how masculinity functioned in several films of the 1970s as a charged allegory for the many socio-political lacerations of the Italian nation, and as a site of conflict and radical interrogation of ideas about gender and sexuality. Sergio Rigoletto re-examines a number of key films, including Bernardo Bertolucci''s The Conformist, Federico Fellini''s City of Women, Ettore Scola''s A Special Day, Pier Paolo Pasolini''s Teorema and Lina Wertmüller''s The Seduction of Mimì, in the light of gender and queer theory, and considers the challenges that these films pose to received ideas about gender and sexuality of the time, and to some of the aesthetic and narrative conventions which have traditionally regulated the representation of men in film./ppSet within the broader cultural context of 1970s Italy, Masculinity and Italian Cinema rethinks the concept of male crisis in Italian film in an engaging and accessible manner. This is an essential read for students and scholars in Film Studies, Italian and Gender Studies.
Masculinity and Italian Cinema takes the 1970s as an especially instructive period for rethinking the traditional trope of an inadequate male in crisis within Italian cinema. It explores how masculinity functioned in several films of the 1970s as a charged allegory for the many socio-political lacerations of the Italian nation, and as a site of conflict and radical interrogation of ideas about gender and sexuality. Sergio Rigoletto re-examines a number of key films, including Bernardo Bertolucci''s The Conformist, Federico Fellini''s City of Women, Ettore Scola''s A Special Day, Pier Paolo Pasolini''s Teorema and Lina Wertmüller''s The Seduction of Mimì, in the light of gender and queer theory, and considers the challenges that these films pose to received ideas about gender and sexuality of the time, and to some of the aesthetic and narrative conventions which have traditionally regulated the representation of men in film./ppSet within the broader cultural context of 1970s Italy, Masculinity and Italian Cinema rethinks the concept of male crisis in Italian film in an engaging and accessible manner. This is an essential read for students and scholars in Film Studies, Italian and Gender Studies.
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