Contemporary Italian Narrative and 1970s Terrorism

Contemporary Italian Narrative and 1970s Terrorism
Author: David Ward
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 241
Release: 2017-02-13
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9783319466484

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This book is about literary representations of the both left- and right-wing Italian terrorism of the 1970s by contemporary Italian authors. In offering detailed analyses of the many contemporary novels that have terrorism in either their foreground or background, it offers a “take” on postmodern narrative practices that is alternative to and more positive than the highly critical assessment of Italian postmodernism that has characterized some sectors of current Italian literary criticism. It explores how contemporary Italian writers have developed narrative strategies that enable them to represent the fraught experience of Italian terrorism in the 1970s. In its conclusions, the book suggests that to meet the challenge of representation posed by terrorism fiction rather than fact is the writer’s best friend and most effective tool.

Deconstructing the Model in 20th and 21st Century Italian Experimental Writings

Deconstructing the Model in 20th and 21st Century Italian Experimental Writings
Author: Beppe Cavatorta
Publsiher: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
Total Pages: 238
Release: 2019-08-19
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9781527538696

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Through a series of original analyses of experimental works that exist well outside of the established territory inhabited by the Italian literary canon, or which purposely position themselves at its margins, this volume proposes a new way to understand the goals of literary experimentation as a means to break the canon and give literature the same freedom that is easily granted to other arts. This serves to allow literature itself to intersect with those other art forms, while enhancing the powerful and positive outcomes of literary experimentation. Specifically, the volume explores a series of 20th- and 21st-century Italian works that are characterized by a non-normative approach to language or the act of writing itself. The contributors, while addressing diverse writers, and often even adopting different theoretical interpretations of experimentalism itself, all analyze the intersection between experimental literatures and other art forms, as well as cross-disciplinary and non-traditional approaches to the theme of experimentation.

The Years of Alienation in Italy

The Years of Alienation in Italy
Author: Alessandra Diazzi,Alvise Sforza Tarabochia
Publsiher: Springer
Total Pages: 257
Release: 2019-06-11
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9783030151508

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The Years of Alienation in Italy offers an interdisciplinary overview of the socio-political, psychological, philosophical, and cultural meanings that the notion of alienation took on in Italy between the 1960s and the 1970s. It addresses alienation as a social condition of estrangement caused by the capitalist system, a pathological state of the mind and an ontological condition of subjectivity. Contributors to the edited volume explore the pervasive influence this multifarious concept had on literature, cinema, architecture, and photography in Italy. The collection also theoretically reassesses the notion of alienation from a novel perspective, employing Italy as a paradigmatic case study in its pioneering role in the revolution of mental health care and factory work during these two decades.

Ransom Kidnapping in Italy

Ransom Kidnapping in Italy
Author: Alessandra Montalbano
Publsiher: University of Toronto Press
Total Pages: 243
Release: 2023-12-18
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781487546878

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For over thirty years, modern Italy was plagued by ransom kidnappings perpetrated by bandits and organized crime syndicates. Nearly 700 men, women, and children were abducted from across the country between the late 1960s and the late 1990s, held hostage by members of the Sardinian banditry, Cosa Nostra, and the ’Ndrangheta. Subjected to harsh captivities and psychological abuse, the victims spent months and even years in isolation while law enforcement and the state struggled to find them. Ransom Kidnapping in Italy examines this Italian criminal phenomenon. Alessandra Montalbano argues that abduction is a key vantage point from which to understand modern Italy: it troubled the law, terrified society, ignited juridical and parliamentary debates, and mobilized citizens. Bringing together archival and media materials with the victims’ accounts and diverse forms of cultural response, the book examines ransom kidnapping through the lenses of historiography, law, literary criticism, trauma studies, phenomenology, and political philosophy. Ransom Kidnapping in Italy traces how and at what price Italians became aware of living in a country that was being blackmailed by criminal organizations that arguably jeoparded the nation even more than terrorism.

The Importance of Place in Contemporary Italian Crime Fiction

The Importance of Place in Contemporary Italian Crime Fiction
Author: Barbara Pezzotti
Publsiher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 223
Release: 2012
Genre: History
ISBN: 9781611475524

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An analysis of the relationship between detective fiction and its setting, this book is the most wide-ranging examination of the way in which Italian detective fiction in the last 20 years has become a means to articulate the changes in the social landscape of the country.

Discursive Framings of Human Rights

Discursive Framings of Human Rights
Author: Karen-Margrethe Simonsen,Jonas Ross Kjaergard
Publsiher: Routledge
Total Pages: 294
Release: 2016-10-14
Genre: Language Arts & Disciplines
ISBN: 9781317371403

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What does it mean to be a subject of human rights? The status of the subject is closely connected with the form and rhetoric of the framing discourse, and this book investigates the relationship between the status of the subject and the form of human rights discourse, in differing aesthetic and social contexts. Historical as well as contemporary declarations of rights have stressed both the protective and political aspects of human rights. But in concrete situations and conflictual moments, the high moral legitimacy of human rights rhetoric has often clouded the actual character of specific interventions, and so made it difficult to differentiate between the objects of humanitarian intervention and the subjects of politics. Critically re-examining this opposition – between victims and agents of human rights – through a focus on the ways in which discourses of rights are formed and circulated within and between political societies, this book elicits the fluidity of their relationship, and with it the shifting relation between human rights and humanitarianism. Analysing the symbolic framings of testimonies, disaster stories, atrocity tales, political speeches, and philosophical arguments, it thus establishes a relationship between these different genres and the political, economic, and legal dimensions of human rights discourse.

The Literature of Terrorism

The Literature of Terrorism
Author: Edward F. Mickolus
Publsiher: Bloomsbury Publishing USA
Total Pages: 567
Release: 1980-12-29
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 9780313015915

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The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy

The Revolutionary Mystique and Terrorism in Contemporary Italy
Author: Richard Drake
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 248
Release: 1989
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: STANFORD:36105038515099

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Terrorist acts, by both the Left and the Right, have been a scourge in Italy since 1969, the year of the Piazza Fontana explosion in Milan. In the aftermath of that massacre no other Western country of comparable development has suffered from terrorism on the scale that Italy has. In offering an explanation of this violent phenomenon, Richard Drake examines the violence itself--its perpetrators, its program statements, and its victims--as well as its social, economic, political, and cultural origins. This volume describes the fateful encounter between the country's historic revolutionary traditions and its present severe social and political disequilibrium. -- Provided by the publisher.