Hostname: page-component-76fb5796d-dfsvx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-29T21:02:11.443Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Back for good: melodrama and the returning soldier in post-war Italian cinema

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 April 2017

Catherine O’Rawe*
Affiliation:
School of Modern Languages, University of Bristol

Abstract

Italian neorealism is conventionally read as the authoritative cinematic chronicle of Italy’s experience of the Second World War and the Resistance. However, this article argues that viewing this period of Italian cinema solely through the lens of neorealism has obscured the importance of the affective charge of melodrama in constituting an alternative ethics of representation in the late 1940s and early 1950s in Italy, one that worked via an appeal to the emotions. It posits that the traumas of Fascism, war, occupation, and Resistance were worked through by Italian cinema after the war in a range of genres and modes, principally melodrama.

By focusing on the figure of the returning soldier or reduce, and the films’ representation of a return to domestic disruption, the article examines how this domestic or romantic disruption stands in for what cannot be narrated, which is the ideological chaos of the Fascist and post-Fascist period. The article argues that the disturbance caused by the reduce to familial relations speaks to the Italian struggle to come to terms with aspects of its repressed war experience, particularly that of the Italian soldiers imprisoned abroad.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© 2017 Association for the Study of Modern Italy 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Anon. 1952. ‘Ci sono soluzioni?La Settimana Incom Illustrata, 25, 21 June: 26.Google Scholar
Anon. 1957. ‘Una madre.’ La Settimana Incom Illustrata, 9, 2 March: 3.Google Scholar
Anon. 1958. ‘Reduce di Natale.’ Epoca 379, 5 January: 5.Google Scholar
Aprà, A. 1976. ‘Capolavori di massa.’ In Neorealismo d’appendice. Per un dibattito sul cinema popolare. Il caso Matarazzo, edited by A. Aprà, and C. Carabba, 937. Rimini: Guaraldi.Google Scholar
Associazione nazionale comuni decorati al valor militare. 1956. Atti del primo convegno sul tema: il cinema postbellico e la Resistenza. Bologna: Associazione nazionale comuni decorati al valor militare.Google Scholar
Associazione nazionale ex internati. 1984. Resistenza senz’armi. Un capitolo di storia italiana (1943–1945) dalle testimonianze di militari toscani internati nei lager nazisti. Florence: Le Monnier.Google Scholar
Bachman, E., and Calder Williams, E.. 2012. ‘Reopening the Matarazzo Case.’ Film Quarterly 65 (3): 5965.Google Scholar
Bayman, L. 2014. The Operatic and the Everyday in Post-war Italian Melodrama. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press.Google Scholar
Ben-Ghiat, R. 1995. ‘Fascism, Writing, and Memory: The Realist Aesthetic in Italy, 1930–50.’ Journal of Modern History 67: 627665.Google Scholar
Ben-Ghiat, R. 1999. ‘Liberation: Italian Cinema and the Fascist Past, 1945–50.’ In Italian Fascism: History, Memory and Representation, edited by R. Bosworth, and P. Dogliani, 83101. London: Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben-Ghiat, R. 2001. ‘The Secret Histories of Roberto Benigni’s Life is Beautiful .’ Yale Journal of Criticism 14 (1): 253266.Google Scholar
Ben-Ghiat, R. 2005. ‘Unmaking the Fascist Man: Masculinity, Film and the Transition from Dictatorship.’ Journal of Modern Italian Studies 10 (3): 336365.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ben-Ghiat, R. 2010. ‘Italian Cinema and the Transition from Dictatorship to Democracy.’ In Histories of the Aftermath: the Legacies of the Second World War in Europe, edited by F. Biess, and R. Moeller, 156171. New York: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Bertacchi, G. 1999. ‘Il difficile reinserimento dei reduci: memoria e soggettività.’ In Internati, prigionieri, reduci: la deportazione militare italiana durante la seconda guerra mondiale, edited by A. Bendotti, and E. Valtulina, 269290. Bergamo: Istituto bergamasco per la storia della Resistenza e dell’età contemporanea.Google Scholar
Bisoni, C. 2015. ‘“Io posso offrirle solo l’immenso calore del mio affetto”: Masculinity in Italian Cinematic Melodrama.’ The Italianist 35:2: 234−247.Google Scholar
Bistarelli, A. 2007. La storia del ritorno: i reduci italiani nel secondo dopoguerra. Turin: Bollati Boringhieri.Google Scholar
Bravo, A. 2005. ‘Armed and Unarmed: Struggles Without Weapons in Europe and in Italy.’ Journal of Modern Italian Studies 10 (4): 468484.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brooks, P. 1995. The Melodramatic Imagination: Balzac, Henry James, Melodrama, and the Mode of Excess. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Brunetta, G. P. 1996. ‘La ricerca dell’identità nel cinema italiano del dopoguerra.’ In Identità italiana e identità europea nel cinema italiano dal 1945 al miracolo economico, edited by G. P. Brunetta, 1167. Turin: Edizioni della Fondazione Giovanni Agnelli.Google Scholar
Burgoyne, R. 2013. ‘Generational Memory and Affect in Letters From Iwo Jima .’ In A Companion to the Historical Film, edited by R. Rosenstone, and C. Parvulescu, 349364. Chichester, West Sussex; Malden, MA: Wiley-Blackwell.Google Scholar
Caldwell, L. 2000. ‘What About Women?: Italian Films and their Concerns.’ In Heroines Without Heroes, edited by U. Sieglohr, 131146. London: Cassell.Google Scholar
Carter, E. 2000. ‘Sweeping up the Past: Gender and History in the Post-war German “Rubble” Film.’ In Heroines Without Heroes: Reconstructing Female and National Identities in European Cinema, 1945–51, edited by U. Sieglohr, 91110. London: Cassell.Google Scholar
Cereja, F. 1987. ‘La cinematografia sulla Resistenza nella storia italiana (1944–1964).’ In Cinema, storia, Resistenza, 1944–1985, edited by G.P. Brunetta et al Istituto storico della Resistenza Valle d’Aosta: 17−29. Milan: FrancoAngeli.Google Scholar
Chianese, G. 1999. ‘Il ritorno dei reduci: ipotesi di ricerca.’ In Internati, prigionieri, reduci, la deportazione militare italiana durante la seconda guerra mondiale , edited by A. Bendotti, and E. Valtulina, 291−302. Bergamo: Istituto bergamasco per la storia della Resistenza e dell’età contemporanea.Google Scholar
Contessa, Clara 1952. ‘Una generazione perduta?La Settimana Incom Illustrata, 17, 26 April: 3.Google Scholar
De Pascalis, O., and Salemi, G. 1946. Assistenza postbellica: raccolta sistematica delle leggi e delle principali circolari concernienti provvidenze a favore dei reduci con note illustrative e commenti. Rome/Lanciano: Carabba.Google Scholar
Duncan, D. 2011. ‘Grave Unquiet: the Mediterranean and its Dead.’ In Mediterranean Travels: Writing Self and Other from the Ancient World to Contemporary Society, edited by S. Ross, P. Crowley, and N. Humble, 209222. Oxford: Legenda.Google Scholar
Fanchi, M. 2010. ‘“Tra donne sole”: Cinema, Cultural Consumption, and the Female Condition in Post-war Italy.’ In Film-Kino-Zuschauer: Filmrezeption. Film-Cinema-Spectator: Film Reception, edited by I. Schenk, M. Tröhler, and Y. Zimmermann, 305318. Marburg, Schüren.Google Scholar
Finati, R. 1995. ‘Dal ritorno degli IMI nel ’45, ad oggi: 50 anni di rimozione ed oblio. Il lento e tardivo risveglio.’ In Dopo il Lager. La memoria della prigionia e dell’internamento nei reduci e negli ‘altri’ , edited by C. Sommaruga, R. Finati, G. Massia, and O. Orlandi, 4359. Naples: GUISCO.Google Scholar
Focardi, F. 2013. Il cattivo tedesco e il bravo italiano. Bari: Laterza.Google Scholar
Foot, J. 2009. Italy’s Divided Memory. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Garofalo, A. 1956. L’italiana in Italia. Bari: Laterza.Google Scholar
Giuntella, V. 1986. ‘L’associazione nazionale ex internati e la memoria storica dell’internamento.’ In I militari italiani internati dai tedeschi dopo l’8 settembre 1943, edited by N. Della Santa, 7076. Florence: Giunti.Google Scholar
Gledhill, C. 2000. ‘Rethinking Genre.’ In Reinventing Film Studies, edited by C. Gledhill, and L. Williams, 221243. London: Hodder.Google Scholar
Gordon, R. 2012. The Holocaust in Italian Culture, 1944–2010. Stanford: Stanford University Press.Google Scholar
Gribaudi, G. 2016. Combattenti, sbandati, prigionieri: esperienze e memorie di reduci della seconda guerra mondiale. Rome: Donzelli.Google Scholar
Gundle, S. 2000. ‘The “Civic Religion” of the Resistance in Post-War Italy.’ Modern Italy 5 (2): 112132.Google Scholar
Hipkins, D. 2007. ‘Were Sisters Doing It for Themselves? Prostitutes, Brothels and Discredited Masculinity in Postwar Italian Cinema.’ In War-Torn Tales: Literature, Film and Gender in the Aftermath of World War II, edited by D. Hipkins, and G. Plain, 81103. Oxford: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Hipkins, D. 2016. Italy’s Other Women: Gender and Prostitution in Italian Cinema, 1940–1965. Oxford: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Kaplan, A. E. 2001. ‘Melodrama, Cinema and Trauma.’ Screen 42 (2): 201205.Google Scholar
Krutnik, F. 1991. In a Lonely Street: Film Noir, Genre, Masculinity. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Labanca, N. 1999. ‘Il ritorno dei prigionieri, l’identità degli internati militari.’ In Internati, prigionieri, reduci: la deportazione militare italiana durante la seconda guerra mondiale, edited by A. Bendotti, and E. Valtulina, 207220. Bergamo: Istituto bergamasco per la storia della Resistenza e dell’età contemporanea.Google Scholar
Lichtner, G. 2013. Fascism in Italian Cinema Since 1945: the Politics and Aesthetics of Memory. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Lorenzon, E. 2006. ‘Gli Internati Militari Italiani e la memoria di una storia “producente”.’ In La memoria che resiste, edited by D. Celetti, and E. Novello, memoria/memorie, n. 1, 145184.Google Scholar
McVeigh, S., and Cooper, N.. 2013. ‘Introduction: Men After War.’ In Men After War, edited by S. McVeigh, and N. Cooper, 117. New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Montariello, C. 2008. La Napoli milionaria di Eduardo De Filippo. Naples: Liguori.Google Scholar
Morreale, E. 2011. Così piangevano: Il cinema melò nell’Italia degli anni cinquanta. Rome: Donzelli.Google Scholar
Natta, A. 1992. ‘Reducismo o silenzio?’ In Fra sterminio e sfruttamento: militari internati e prigionieri di guerra nella Germania nazista (1939–45) , edited by N. Labanca, 327332. Florence: Le Lettere.Google Scholar
Natta, A. 1997. L’altra Resistenza: I militari italiani internati in Germania. Turin Einaudi.Google Scholar
Neale, S. 1986. ‘Melodrama and Tears.’ Screen 27 (6): 622.Google Scholar
Olivetti, P., ed. 1997. Cinema e Resistenza in Italia e in Europa. Turin: Archivio Nazionale Cinematografico della Resistenza.Google Scholar
O’Rawe, C. 2008. ‘“I padri e i maestri”: Genre, Auteurs, and Absences in Italian Film Studies.’ Italian Studies 62 (2): 173194.Google Scholar
O’Rawe, C. 2012. ‘ Avanti a lui tremava tutta Roma: Opera, Melodrama and the Resistance.’ Modern Italy 17 (2): 185196.Google Scholar
O’Rawe, C. 2014. Stars and Masculinities in Contemporary Italian Cinema. New York: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Pasolini, P.P. 1969. Pasolini on Pasolini: Interviews with Oswald Stack. London: Thames and Hudson.Google Scholar
Patriarca, S. 2010. Italian Vices: Nation and Character from the Risorgimento from the Risorgimento to the Republic. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Pattinson, J., Noakes, L., and Ugolini, W. 2014. ‘Incarcerated Masculinities: Male POWs and the Second World War.’ Journal of War and Culture Studies 7 (3): 179190.Google Scholar
Pavone, C. 2004. ‘Introduction’. Journal of Modern Italian Studies. Special issue on ‘Hidden Pages of Italian History’, 9 (3): 271279.Google Scholar
Pavone, C. 2013. A Civil War: a History of the Italian Resistance, trans. by P. Levy. London: Verso.Google Scholar
Porzio, M. 2011. Arrivano gli alleati: amori e violenze nell’Italia liberate. Bari: Laterza.Google Scholar
Pullini, G. 1976. Il romanzo italiano del dopoguerra (1940–1960). Venice: Marsilio.Google Scholar
Rapporto della Commissione storica italo-tedesca insediata dai Ministri degli Affari Esteri della Repubblica Italiana e della Repubblica Federale di Germania il 28 marzo 2009 http://www.anpi.it/media/uploads/patria/2013/Rapporto_italo-tedesco_su_stragi_naziste_gen2013.pdf (accessed 10 September 2016).Google Scholar
Rochat, G. 1999. ‘Le diverse prigionie dei soldati italiani.’ In Internati, prigionieri, reduci: la deportazione militare italiana durante la seconda guerra mondiale, edited by A. Bendotti, and E. Valtulina, 1126. Bergamo: Istituto bergamasco per la storia della Resistenza e dell’età contemporanea.Google Scholar
Santarelli, L. 2004. ‘Muted Violence: Italian War Crimes in Occupied Greece.’ Journal of Modern Italian Studies 9 (3): 280299.Google Scholar
Schreiber, G. 1997. I militari italiani internati nei campi di concentramento tedeschi del terzo Reich 1943–45. Rome: Stato Maggiore dell’Esercito.Google Scholar
Sechi, L. 1949. ‘Il cinema ha capito i reduci?’ Cinema , nuova serie 1 (6): 174175, 15 January.Google Scholar
Silverman, K. 1992. Male Subjectivity at the Margins. London and New York: Routledge.Google Scholar
Sommaruga, C. 1992. ‘Alcuni aspetti amministrativi della gestione degli IMI nel Lager e fuori del Lager.’ In Fra sterminio e sfruttamento: militari internati e prigionieri di guerra nella Germania nazista (1939–45) , edited by N. Labanca, 249267. Florence: Le Lettere.Google Scholar
Sommaruga, C. 1995a. ‘Introduzione.’ In Dopo il lager. La memoria della prigionia e dell’internamento nei reduci e negli ‘altri’, edited by C. Sommaruga, 3139. Naples: GUISCO.Google Scholar
Sommaruga, C. 1995b. ‘L’internamento: memoria, rimozione e azioni dei reduci e degli “altri”.’ In Dopo il lager. La memoria della prigionia e dell’internamento nei reduci e negli ‘altri’, edited by C. Sommaruga, 61122. Naples: GUISCO.Google Scholar
Spinazzola, V. 1974. Cinema e pubblico: lo spettacolo filmico in Italia 1945–1965 . Milan: Bompiani.Google Scholar
Torriglia, A. M. 2002. Broken Time, Fragmented Space: a Cultural Map for Postwar Italy. Toronto: University of Toronto Press.Google Scholar
Vitella, F. 2016. ‘Il piacere del piangere. Il ferroviere come male weepy.’ In Il cinema di Pietro Germi, edited by L. Malavasi, and E. Morreale, 107115. Rome: Edizioni di Bianco e Nero.Google Scholar
Williams, L. 1998. ‘Melodrama Revised.’ In Refiguring American Film Genres: History and Theory, edited by N. Browne, 4288. Berkeley and Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Wood, M. 2005. Italian Cinema. Oxford: Berg.Google Scholar
Zinni, M. 2010. Fascisti di celluloide: la memoria del ventennio nel cinema italiano (1945–2000). Venice: Marsilio.Google Scholar