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Disappearing acts: disability, gender, and the memory of Fascism in Italian film

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journal contribution
posted on 2022-03-14, 06:53 authored by Sarah HillSarah Hill
Benedetto Croce's description of fascism as 'a moral illness of our time' provides a useful starting point for thinking about the phenomenon of cine-revisionismo storiografico and the representation of Fascism and fascists in Italian cinema. In many films from the post-war period and beyond, the metaphor of moral illness is literalised in portrayals of fascist characters who are shown as mentally or physically sick or disabled (often confusing the two), in contrast to the otherwise healthy and wholesome body of Italians. Addressing the conflation of physical and moral impairment in three 1960 films that grapple with the memory of Italy's Fascist past - Roberto Rossellini's Era notte a Roma (Escape by Night), Carlo Lizzani's Il gobbo (The Hunchback of Rome), and Florestano Vancini's La lunga notte del '43 (It Happened in '43) - this article argues that in these films, bodies that do not conform to an able-bodied male norm function as lieux de mémoire that permit both the expression and containment of painful memories of the Fascist period.

History

Preferred citation

Hill, S. (2017). Disappearing acts: disability, gender, and the memory of Fascism in Italian film. Modern Italy, 22(2), 155-166. https://doi.org/10.1017/mit.2017.20

Journal title

Modern Italy

Volume

22

Issue

2

Publication date

2017-01-01

Pagination

155-166

Publisher

Cambridge University Press (CUP)

Publication status

Published

Contribution type

Article

Online publication date

2017-04-06

ISSN

1353-2944

eISSN

1469-9877

Language

en