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TOTalitarian ARTs: The Visual Arts, Fascism(s) and Mass-society Unabridged edition [Hardback]

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  • Formāts: Hardback, 470 pages, height x width: 212x148 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jan-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1443828742
  • ISBN-13: 9781443828741
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 470 pages, height x width: 212x148 mm
  • Izdošanas datums: 30-Jan-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-10: 1443828742
  • ISBN-13: 9781443828741
Citas grāmatas par šo tēmu:
This collection represents a tool to broaden and deepen our geographical, institutional, and historical understanding of the term totalitarianism. Is totalitarianism only found in 'other' societies? How come, then, it emerged historically in 'ours' first? How come it developed in so many countries either in Western Europe (Italy, Germany, Portugal, and Spain) or under implicit Western forms of coercion (Latin America)? How do relations between individual(s), mass and the visual arts relate to totalitarian trends? These are among the questions this book asks about totalitarianism.The volume does not impose a 'one size fits all' interpretation, but opens new spaces for debate on the connection between the visual arts and mass-culture in totalitarian societies. From the Mediterranean to Scandinavia, from Western Europe to Latin America, from the fascism of the early 20th century to contemporary forms of totalitarian control, and from cinema to architecture, the chapters included in TotArt bring expertise, historical sensibility and political awareness to bear on this varied range of phenomena.This collection offers international contributions on visual, performing and plastic arts. The chapters range from examination of comics to study of YouTube videos and American newsreels, from Italian, Spanish, Portuguese, and Uruguayan cinemas to more contemporary American films and TV series, from painters and sculptors to the study of urban spaces.

Recenzijas

'It is clear how all twenty contributions within this heterogeneous volume are able to clearly identify many of the possible connections between visual arts and mass culture in totalitarian societies in the past and present. The relationships between the many and the individual, civil society and the state, are expertly analysed from a surprising number of perspectives, which not only examine the historical path of fascism and its cultural manifestations but also examine in detail the ways and means with which totalitarianism still overshadows democracy in ever different and ever more modern ways.'Eleonora RimoloUniversitą degli Studi di SalernoSinestesieonline quadrimestrale di studi sulla letteratura italiana della modernitą, 20: 6 (June 2017)Among the greatest merits of the book is its interdisciplinary nature, which will appeal to readers of different degrees of expertise (students as well as scholars)and research fields. In addition to scholars of European national literatures and cultures, this volume will surely attract the interest of scholars of Fascism andTotalitarianism. Those who will most benefit from this collection are certainly Visual Culture scholars, who can take advantage of the reflections on the specificity of the different visual media and their possible uses for inclusive and participatory purposes.'Eloisa MorraUniversity of TorontoRevues des Livres

List of Tables and Illustrations
viii
Preface x
Introduction xi
Part I Totalitarian Environment: Spaces and Images
Chapter One The Use and Abuse of the Classic Fragment: The Case of Genoa and Sculptor Eugenio Baroni
2(18)
Silvia Boero
Chapter Two Fascist Ideology, Mass Media, and the Built Environment: A Case Study
20(20)
Maria D'Anniballe
Chapter Three Face to Face: Iconic Representations and Juxtapositions of St. Francis of Assisi and Mussolini during Italian Fascism
40(22)
Amanda Minervini
Chapter Four Mussolini in American Newsreels: Il Duce as Modern Celebrity
62(20)
Pierluigi Erbaggio
Part II Totalitarianism, Italian Cinema and Beyond
Chapter Five Pasolini's Reflections on Fascism(s): Classic and Contemporary
82(15)
Mark Epstein
Chapter Six From Moravia to Bertolucci: The Monism of The Conformist---The Farce after the Tragedy
97(36)
Part I From Tragedy to Myth
97(19)
Part II From Treatment to Farcical Finale
116(17)
Angelo Favaro
Chapter Seven Nazi-Fascist Echoes in Films from WWII to the Present
133(29)
Fulvio Orsitto
Part III Totalitarian Aesthetics and Politics
Chapter Eight The Other Modernity: Fascist Aesthetics and the Imprint of the Community Myth against the Failure of Liberalism
162(20)
Ana Rodriguez-Granell
Chapter Nine Thought vs. Action: Golden Age Aesthetics in French Proto-Fascist and Fascist Discourses
182(17)
Gaetano DeLeonibus
Chapter Ten Envisioning Vichy: Fascist Visual Culture in France 1940-44
199(18)
Sean P. Connolly
Chapter Eleven Salvador Dali: The Fascist Genius?
217(19)
Anna Vives
Part IV Totalitarian Geography
Chapter Twelve The Impossible Reconciliation: Pedro Lazaga's Torrepartida (1956)
236(15)
Daniel Arroyo-Rodriguez
Chapter Thirteen Representations of Dictatorship in Portuguese Cinema
251(33)
Isabel Macedo
Rita Bastos
Rosa Cabecinhas
Chapter Fourteen Looking Forward, Looking Backwards: Notes on the Dictatorship in Uruguay
284(16)
Claudia Peralta
Part V Contemporary Forms of Totalitarian Representation
Chapter Fifteen Totality and Destruction in Contemporary German Culture: Playing on Fascism in the Total Art of Serdar Somuncu
300(20)
Arina Rotaru
Chapter Sixteen Seit heut fruh wird zuruckgeschrieben: Intertextuality and Interdiscursivity in Political Comics of the Far and Extreme Right
320(30)
Maria Stopfner
Chapter Seventeen YouTube Fascism: Visual Activism of the Extreme Right
350(24)
Matias Ekman
Part VI Comparative Reflections on Totalitarian Worldviews
Chapter Eighteen Totalitarian Trends Today
374(34)
Mark Epstein
Chapter Nineteen Theories of Video Activism and Fascism
408(18)
Matias Ekman
Chapter Twenty Deleuze's and Guattari's Anti-Oedipus as a Theory of Fascism
426(14)
Andrea Righi
Editors 440(2)
Contributors 442
Mark Epstein is a Test Rater for Educational Testing Service and a translator. He is on the editorial boards of Bionomina and Sinestesieonline and has published many essays and book chapters on Italian literature, culture, criticism, cinema and philosophy.Fulvio Orsitto is Associate Professor and Director of the Italian and Italian American Program at California State University, USA. He has published extensively on Italian literature and on Italian and Italian American cinema. Andrea Righi is Assistant Professor of Italian and Coordinator of the Italian Studies Program at Miami University, USA. He is the author of Italian Reactionary Thought and Critical Theory: An Inquiry into Savage Modernities (2015).