- ホーム
- > 洋書
- > 英文書
- > Cinema / Film
Full Description
Unfinished Business is the first book to examine Italian mafia cinema of the past decade. It provides insightful analyses of popular films that sensationalize violence, scapegoat women, or repress the homosexuality of male protagonists. Dana Renga examines these works through the lens of gender and trauma theory to show how the films engage with the process of mourning and healing mafia-related trauma in Italy. Unfinished Business argues that trauma that has yet to be worked through on the national level is displaced onto the characters in the films under consideration. In a mafia context, female characters are sacrificed and non-normative sexual identities are suppressed in order to solidify traditional modes of viewer identification and to assure narrative closure, all so that the image of the nation is left unblemished.
Contents
IntroductionOedipal Conflicts in Marco Tullio Giordana's I cento passi Chapter 2: Honor, Shame and Vendetta: Pasquale Scimeca's Placido Rizzotto Chapter 3: Mafia Woman in a Man's World: Roberta Torre's Angela Chapter 4: The Mafia Noir: Paolo Sorrentino's Le conseguenze dell'amore Chapter 5: Men of Honor, Man of Glass: Stefano Incerti's L'uomo di vetro Chapter 6: The Female Mob Boss: Edoardo Winspeare's Galantuomini Chapter 7: Melancholia and the Mob Weepie: Davide Barletti and Lorenzo Conte's Fine pena mai: paradiso perduto Chapter 8: Mourning Disavowed: Matteo Garrone's Gomorra Chapter 9: Recasting Rita Atria in Marco Amenta's La siciliana ribelle Chapter 10: Trauma Postponed: Claudio Cupellini's Una vita tranquilla Epilogue: Why Must Caesar Die? Works Cited



