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Dreamscapes in Italian Cinema explores different representations of
dreams, visions, hallucinations, and hypnagogic states in Italian
film culture, covering the works of some of the most significant
auteurs in the history of Italian cinema (Fellini, Pasolini,
Moretti, Bellocchio, among others). Dreams are discussed both in a
filmic context, considering the diegetic and formal techniques
employed to construct and represent them, and as allegories or
metaphors in a broader cultural, political, and social sense (the
film industry itself as the proverbial dream factory, and dreams as
hopes, aspirations or altogether parallel universes, for example).
The book covers works released over different decades and spanning
multiple genres (drama, gothic film, horror, comedy), and it is
intended to shed light on a topic that is as suggestive as it is
insufficiently studied.
In this stirring memoir by a member of the first generation of
LGBTQ+ activists in Italy, Porpora Marcasciano tells her story and
shares the struggles and accomplishments of her fellow activists
who achieved so much in the 1970s yet suffered devastating losses
during the AIDS epidemic of the
1980s. AntoloGaia offers an insider’s look at the
beginnings of the gay liberation movement in Italy and reveals how
it was intimately intertwined with other forms of left-wing
activism. At the same time, it powerfully conveys the queer joy of
a young person from a small village first encountering the vibrant
sexual minority communities of Naples, Bologna, and Rome. As
Marcasciano starts to embrace her trans identity, she meets the
famous anthropologist Pino Simonelli, who introduces her to
Naples’s unique femminielli subculture and gives her
the name Porporino, which she later shortens to Porpora. In keeping
with this story of gender, sexual, and political
discovery, AntoloGaia is the first piece of Italian
life-writing to use gender-neutral and mixed-gender language.
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