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Performing Bodies - Female Illness in Italian Literature and Cinema (1860-1920) (Hardcover)
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Performing Bodies - Female Illness in Italian Literature and Cinema (1860-1920) (Hardcover)
Series: The Fairleigh Dickinson University Press Series in Italian Studies
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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Performing Bodies: Female Illness in Italian Literature and Cinema
(1860-1920) explores the variations in the portrayal of female
illness in Italian fin de siecle literature and early cinema.
Catherine Ramsey-Portolano begins her study with an overview of
nineteenth-century theories on female inferiority and nervous
disorders, especially hysteria. 19th-century European scientific
and philosophical discourse on women's bodies, which focused on
female biological functions and malfunctions, accompanied an
abundant fin de siecle literary representation of female illness, a
theme which also carried over into the cinematic genre of diva
films of the 1910s. Ramsey-Portolano's analysis of fin de siecle
Italian literary texts first discusses those novels in which
illness represents the consequence and at times punishment for
women who transgressed traditional societal roles and norms of
behavior. Ramsey-Portolano also demonstrates, however, that there
also existed within a portrayal of female illness which suggested
sickness as a form of agency for women. Rather than depicting women
as powerless victims who succumb to illness due to the pressures
and limitations of patriarchal society, this second group of novels
posits illness as a means for women to take control of their bodies
and demonstrate self-mastery through illness as a chosen form of
behavior. Performing Bodies: Female Illness in Italian Literature
and Cinema (1860-1920) concludes with a discussion of the role of
female illness in Italian cinema of the 1910s. Ramsey-Portolano
analyzes the films Tigre reale (1916) and Malombra (1917),
featuring the divas Pina Menichelli and Lyda Borelli, to show how
illness granted centrality to the female character. By placing the
diva and her point of view at the center of the film's action,
these films posit the female character as the active one in
advancing the story, thus providing a progressive model for female
Italian viewers and an early example of the female gaze in Italian
cinema. Performing Bodies: Female Illness in Italian Literature and
Cinema (1860-1920) examines how in Italian literature and film, as
well as in society, women were confined to traditional roles and
illness often represented the consequence for transgressing those
roles. Feigning illness offered women a way to "own" the illness
and become manipulators and masters not only of their bodies but of
their stories and destinies.
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