Traveling Auteurs
The Geopolitics of Postwar Italian Cinema
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Indiana University Press
Published:28th Mar '24
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
What tensions characterized the relationships between cinema, European Leftists, and emerging postcolonial ideologies after World War II? In Traveling Auteurs, author Luca Caminati analyzes the work of influential Italian filmmakers Roberto Rossellini, Pier Paolo Pasolini, and Michelangelo Antonioni as they engaged politically and aesthetically with the global landscapes and politics of the Cold War period. As documentaries, the films considered in this book record specific manifestations of political sensibilities of the twentieth century. As bodies of work, they reveal that the traveling auteurs who made them were symptomatic actors in complex geopolitical networks. As cultural objects reflecting and shaping contemporaneous debates, they provoke a complex afterlife at home and abroad. In the three chapters dedicated to Rossellini in India, Pasolini in Africa and the Middle East, and Antonioni in China, Caminati pays particular attention both to the reception that these films had in the countries where they were shot and to their legacies in Italian film history. As it follows the entanglements of filmmakers, artists, and activists involved as allies or direct witnesses to momentous political change, this book sheds new light on anticolonial struggles, the reaffirmation of the Non-Aligned Movement, and the consolidation of the Chinese Communist Party.
"This tour de force interrogation of Antonioni, Pasolini, and Rossellini's nonfiction works, set in unfamiliar non-European milieus and inspired by mid-twentieth century geopolitical shifts, decenters key film historiographic categories such as realism, the modernist auteur, and Italian national cinema. The trio's geographic, intellectual, and affective displacements; translations across singular lifeworlds; and myriad balancing acts between solidarity with the global decolonization project and engrained proclivity for orientalist exoticism: articulating such distinct registers, Caminati develops an understanding of travel as method. Based on its slice of global media history, Traveling Auteurs makes a timely case for travel as passage across incompatibilities, as catalyst for the endlessly deferred mediation between the colonizer and the colonized seeking reconciliation and mutuality."—Bhaskar Sarkar, author of Mourning the Nation: Indian Cinema in the Wake of Partition
"Featuring nuanced analyses and surprising discoveries, Traveling Auteurs takes the reader on a marvelous journey with Italian filmmakers through India, Africa, the Middle East, and China. While expanding the canonical oeuvres of these renowned auteurs, Luca Caminati maps them onto a transnational network of artists and intellectuals politically engaged with the Global South. Rethinking the oriental gaze alongside revolutionary solidarity, this book is an invaluable contribution to the study of world cinema, nonfiction film genres, and the cultural and intellectual history of the Cold War period."—Jie Li, author of Cinematic Guerrillas: Propaganda, Projectionists, and Audiences in Socialist China
"Traveling Auteurs returns us to the documentary work of three Italian filmmakers: Roberto Rossellini, Pier Paolo Pasolini, and Michelangelo Antonioni. These directors are most well known for their key contributions to Italian neo-realism and modernist cinema, but Caminati turns our attention to their post-war documentary/film essay productions in the "Third World," then conceived by Western leftist intellectuals and artists as a space of liberatory possibility. These works are often read as "outside" of these directors' canonical works, but Caminati gives them serious consideration as works of their time, produced during the period of decolonization and revolutionary movements. Rather than see these works as exceptional, Caminati demonstrates that they were formally and theoretically part of these auteurs' broader reflections on cinematic realism and the relation between the West and the non-West. Caminati advocates for a broader consideration of Western auteurism, not solely dedicated to narrative and documentary films produced in Europe, but to understanding how a larger, globalized vision informed each director's oeuvre. An intellectually rigorous and timely contribution, Traveling Auteurs expands our understanding of these Italian auteurs, drawing a broader geopolitical and aesthetic map than has previously been granted these directors."—Shelleen Greene, author of Equivocal Subjects: Between Italy and Africa – Constructions of Racial and National Identity in the Italian Cinema
ISBN: 9780253069542
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 494g
220 pages