Description

Book Synopsis
The figure of the child has long been a mainstay of Italian cinema, conventionally interpreted as a witness of adult shortcomings, a vessel of innocence, hope and renewal, or an avatar of nostalgia for the (cinematic) past. New Visions of the Child in Italian Cinema challenges these settled categories of interpretation and reconsiders the Italian canon as it relates to the child. The book draws on a growing body of new work in the history and theory of children on film and is the first volume to bring together and to apply some of these new approaches to Italian cinema. Chapters in the book address aspects of industry and spectatorship and the varied film psychology of infancy, childhood and adolescence, as well as genres as diverse as silent cinema, contemporary teen movies, melodrama and film ethnography. The contributors engage with a wide range of modes and theories including neorealism, auteurism and contemporary postfeminism. The book maps out new roles for gender, the transnational, loss and mourning, and filmmaking itself, leading to a revised understanding of the child in Italian cinema.

Table of Contents
Contents: Danielle Hipkins: The Child in Italian Cinema: An Introduction – Mary P. Wood: The Uses of Children – Lesley Caldwell: Ragazzo Fortunato? Children in Italian Cinema – Robert S.C. Gordon: Pas de Deux: The ‘Situational Ballet’ of Film Fathers-and-Sons – Gábor Gergely: Los Olvidados: A Damning Verdict on Neorealism’s Aesthetic and Moral Positions – Fiona Handyside: Postfeminist (D)au(gh)teurs: Sofia Coppola and the Girl’s Voyage to Italy in Somewhere (2010) – Irene Lottini: From Pinocchio to Cuore: Children in Early Italian Cinema – Louis Bayman: Something Else besides a Man: Melodrama and the Maschietto in Postwar Italian Cinema – Danielle Hipkins: Girls Lost and Found: Daughters of Sin in Italian Melodramas of the 1950s – Roger Pitt: ‘È difficile diventare grandi in Italia!’ The Trauma of Becoming in Nanni Moretti’s La stanza del figlio – Emma Wilson: Un’ora sola ti vorrei: Childhood and Mourning – Alex Marlow-Mann: Subjectivity and the Ethnographic Gaze in Antonio Capuano’s Vito e gli altri – Ella Ide: Boys as Icons of Movement, Potential and Desire in Contemporary Melodramas of Boyhood – Dana Renga: Italian Teen Film and the Female Auteur.

New Visions of the Child in Italian Cinema

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    A Paperback / softback by Danielle Hipkins, Roger Pitt

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      Publisher: Peter Lang AG, Internationaler Verlag der Wissenschaften
      Publication Date: 18/08/2014
      ISBN13: 9783034302692, 978-3034302692
      ISBN10: 303430269X

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      The figure of the child has long been a mainstay of Italian cinema, conventionally interpreted as a witness of adult shortcomings, a vessel of innocence, hope and renewal, or an avatar of nostalgia for the (cinematic) past. New Visions of the Child in Italian Cinema challenges these settled categories of interpretation and reconsiders the Italian canon as it relates to the child. The book draws on a growing body of new work in the history and theory of children on film and is the first volume to bring together and to apply some of these new approaches to Italian cinema. Chapters in the book address aspects of industry and spectatorship and the varied film psychology of infancy, childhood and adolescence, as well as genres as diverse as silent cinema, contemporary teen movies, melodrama and film ethnography. The contributors engage with a wide range of modes and theories including neorealism, auteurism and contemporary postfeminism. The book maps out new roles for gender, the transnational, loss and mourning, and filmmaking itself, leading to a revised understanding of the child in Italian cinema.

      Table of Contents
      Contents: Danielle Hipkins: The Child in Italian Cinema: An Introduction – Mary P. Wood: The Uses of Children – Lesley Caldwell: Ragazzo Fortunato? Children in Italian Cinema – Robert S.C. Gordon: Pas de Deux: The ‘Situational Ballet’ of Film Fathers-and-Sons – Gábor Gergely: Los Olvidados: A Damning Verdict on Neorealism’s Aesthetic and Moral Positions – Fiona Handyside: Postfeminist (D)au(gh)teurs: Sofia Coppola and the Girl’s Voyage to Italy in Somewhere (2010) – Irene Lottini: From Pinocchio to Cuore: Children in Early Italian Cinema – Louis Bayman: Something Else besides a Man: Melodrama and the Maschietto in Postwar Italian Cinema – Danielle Hipkins: Girls Lost and Found: Daughters of Sin in Italian Melodramas of the 1950s – Roger Pitt: ‘È difficile diventare grandi in Italia!’ The Trauma of Becoming in Nanni Moretti’s La stanza del figlio – Emma Wilson: Un’ora sola ti vorrei: Childhood and Mourning – Alex Marlow-Mann: Subjectivity and the Ethnographic Gaze in Antonio Capuano’s Vito e gli altri – Ella Ide: Boys as Icons of Movement, Potential and Desire in Contemporary Melodramas of Boyhood – Dana Renga: Italian Teen Film and the Female Auteur.

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