This book explores a sensational crime and trial that took place
in Rome in the late 1870s, when the bloody killing of a war hero
triggered a national spectacle. A young southern wife's murder of
her impotent soldier husband exploded into the first great "media
circus" in the new nation of Italy. The trial of the widow and her
acrobat lover shocked the young nation not only with its gruesome
details, but also because masses of women flocked to the court,
took sides and heatedly reacted to testimony, as a new generation
of newspapers exploited the scandal to enchant an untapped
readership. Largely ignored by historians, the Fadda Affair, as it
was called, crucially shaped the young nation's self-image, but it
still resists reduction to historiographical formula, even as its
raucous messiness presages the postmodern centrality of performance
and the displacement of substance by sensation.
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