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Double exposures: The photographic afterlives of Pasolini and Moro
Photographs play a crucial role in the ways the lives and deaths of Pier Paolo Pasolini and Aldo Moro are remembered in Italian culture. Locating photographs of the two men taken before and after their murders against the backdrop of the changes in photographic practice that took place in Italy from the period of the economic boom in the late 1950s through to the early 1970s, this article explores and compares the cultural meanings of the photographs of the bodies of these two very different but equally symbolic public figures, both alive and dead. Analysing the significance of these images in Italy in the 1970s and after, it notes how contemporary theoretical approaches to the medium - particularly in terms of understandings of mass media forms and the theoretical linking of photography and death - shaped how the photographs have been understood in relation to their social and political context. It argues that the afterimage of the photographs of the corpses of Pasolini and Moro is overlaid in Italian cultural memory over the visual record of the two men during their lives in a kind of mnemonic ‘double exposure’ that constitutes these bodies of images as collective icons of their times.
History
Preferred citation
Hill, S. (2016). Double exposures: The photographic afterlives of Pasolini and Moro. Modern Italy, 21(4), 409-425. https://doi.org/10.1017/mit.2016.46Publisher DOI
Journal title
Modern ItalyVolume
21Issue
4Publication date
2016-01-01Pagination
409-425Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)Publication status
PublishedContribution type
ArticleOnline publication date
2016-11-28ISSN
1353-2944eISSN
1469-9877Language
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Pier Paolo Pasolini, death ofAldo Moro, death ofphotography in Italyphotography theory and deathphotography and cultural memoryiconic images4303 Historical Studies47 Language, Communication and Culture4702 Cultural Studies43 History, Heritage and ArchaeologySocial SciencesArts & HumanitiesArea StudiesHistoryStudies in Human SocietyLanguage, Communication and CultureHistory and Archaeology43 History, heritage and archaeology44 Human society47 Language, communication and culture