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This book is the first scholarly analysis that considers the
specificity of situated experiences of the maternal from a variety
of theoretical perspectives. From "Fertility Day" to "Family Day,"
the concept of motherhood has been at the center of the public
debate in contemporary Italy, partly in response to the perceived
crisis of the family, the economic crisis, and the crisis of
national identity, provoked by the forces of globalization and
migration, secularization, and the instability of labor markets.
Through essays by an international cohort of established and
emerging scholars, this volume aims to read these shifts in
cinematic terms. How does Italian cinema represent, negotiate, and
elaborate changing definitions of motherhood in narrative, formal,
and stylistic terms? The essays in this volume focus on the figures
of working mothers, women who opt for a child-free adulthood,
single mothers, ambivalent mothers, lost mothers, or imperfect
mothers, who populate contemporary screen narratives.
This book is the first scholarly analysis that considers the
specificity of situated experiences of the maternal from a variety
of theoretical perspectives. From "Fertility Day" to "Family Day,"
the concept of motherhood has been at the center of the public
debate in contemporary Italy, partly in response to the perceived
crisis of the family, the economic crisis, and the crisis of
national identity, provoked by the forces of globalization and
migration, secularization, and the instability of labor markets.
Through essays by an international cohort of established and
emerging scholars, this volume aims to read these shifts in
cinematic terms. How does Italian cinema represent, negotiate, and
elaborate changing definitions of motherhood in narrative, formal,
and stylistic terms? The essays in this volume focus on the figures
of working mothers, women who opt for a child-free adulthood,
single mothers, ambivalent mothers, lost mothers, or imperfect
mothers, who populate contemporary screen narratives.
Women and Migration in Contemporary Italian Cinema: Screening
Hospitality puts gender at the centre of cinematic representations
of contemporary transnational Italian identities. It offers an
intersectional feminist analysis of the ways in which transnational
migration has been represented, understood, and constructed in the
contemporary cinema of Italy. Drawing on Jacques Derrida's notion
of hospitality and in dialogue with postcolonial and decolonial
theory, queer studies, and feminist critiques, the six chapters of
the book focus on a series of exemplary fiction films from the last
twenty years, which both reflect and shape the nation's responses
to the growing presence of transnational migrants in Italian
society. The book shows how questions of gender, sexual difference,
and reproductivity have been central to Italian filmmakers'
approaches to stories of mobility and displacement. Gender is also
enmeshed in the rhetoric and poetic of hospitality that filmmakers
propose as a critical framework to condemn Italian border policies
and politics. Women and Migration in Contemporary Italian Cinema:
Screening Hospitality traces an arc that moves from the embrace of
a humanitarian rhetoric of infinite hospitality toward migrants,
apparent in films produced in the early 2000s, to a more fluid
understanding of Italian identities from a transnational
perspective.
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