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[Commlist] cfp Transatlantic Visions: Italian Film Culture and Modernism in Post-War America
Fri Jun 03 11:57:09 GMT 2022
We wish to inform you about the conference we are organizing in November
at Roma Tre about:
/Transatlantic Visions: Italian Film Culture and Modernism in Post-War
America/.
The call can be found here:
https://www.consultacinema.org/2022/05/24/transatlantic-visions-italian-film-cultures-and-modernisms-in-post-war-america-1949-1972/
+++
Throughout the twentieth century, Italian cinematography played an
important role in the U.S. consumer system. Indeed, cinema has been one
of the privileged vectors for the success of the “Made in Italy”, as
well as an indispensable element of the material and discursive
construction of Italian style.
To what extent, and within what limits, can we speak of an
Italianization of U.S. art and entertainment after World War II? In how
many ways and areas is it possible to measure the significance of this
exchange dynamic, despite the imbalances between the two cultures and
industries?
The conference Transatlantic Visions: Italian Film Cultures and
Modernisms in Post-War America (1949-1972) focuses on the presence of
Italian cinema in post-World War II U.S. cultural consumption. Its aim
is to map the transatlantic exchanges that permitted or fostered the
circulation and influence of Italian cinema in the United States in
various ways during the period under consideration.
In this light, cinema is considered both as an object that circulates
and as a vector for the diffusion of lifestyles and imaginaries; its
impact on middle- class, working-class, and popular cultural consumption
is also examined. Thus, the conference seeks to investigate the cultural
forms that landed in the United States from Italy on various fronts and
under several respects, particularly with regard to lifestyles,
authorial practices, and entrepreneurial cultures.
From these perspectives, the conference aims to explore the general
hypothesis of the research project Transatlantic Transfers: The Italian
Presence in Post-war America, according to which the impact of the so-
called Italian style—that is, a peculiarly modern and recognizable style
associated with cultural products made in Italy—marked the cultural
exchanges between Italy and the U.S. during the 1950s and 1960s,
establishing itself as a distinctive sign in the identity formation of
an affluent and cosmopolitan American middle class.
Scholars are invited to submit contributions on Italian–U.S. film culture
and industry from a variety of disciplinary and methodological
perspectives. A few examples are offered below; these are for
illustrative purposes only,
1 and are not meant as an exhaustive list.
→ Made in Italy and lifestyles
The impact of national productions and Italy–U.S.
co-productions/partnerships
in the creation and reception of traditional or modern Italian
imaginaries, structures of feeling, and lifestyles. These may be
conveyed, for example, by the natural and urban landscape, fashion and
design, genres, and stardom. We especially encourage contributions
concerning the following:
- phenomena or discourses related to the construction of Italian
identity articulated via ethnicity, class, or gender and linked to
Italian and Italian American cinema and stardom;
- paths of valorization of Italian cinematic-style spread in
high-circulation illustrated magazines and other media iconographies
(e.g., advertising or editorial pieces);
- explicit or implicit collaborations between cinema and Italian food
and wine, the automotive industry, fashion, and design brands.
→ Italian style and cinema as modern art
The establishment of postwar Italian cinema in the United States in
terms of the visual and narrative styles, imaginaries, and cultural
practices connected with it through both distribution in U.S. art houses
and circulation of public discourse via various media. In this regard,
for example, we recommend proposals that investigate the following:
- Italian arthouse cinema and its circulation practices in the U.S.; the
American reception of the director's image as a star or artist;
relationships between Italian film genres and arthouse cinema;
- distribution practices within the arthouse circuit and transatlantic
dialogues between institutions and connecting figures;
- critical and academic discourses circulated in critical and industry
journals and in public intellectual debate (e.g., in U.S. media, such as
photography, radio, or television) that helped construct the imaginary
of Italian-style cinema.
→ Transatlantic circulation networks
The involvement of Italian business culture in the production,
distribution, and reception of Italian cinema in the United States, from
the system of the so-called Hollywood on the Tiber to commercial and
cultural promotions by institutions, entities, and companies in
different spheres (e.g., diplomatic, economic, media, and
interpersonal). In this regard, for instance, interesting proposals
could examine the following topics:
- production models and collaboration cases that exemplify a modern
Italian business culture in relation to individuals, companies, and
international networks in support of the propagation of Italian cinema
in the United States;
- production of and cultural events related to specific Italian films,
from conception to financing, from distribution to reception in the
United States during the period under consideration; and
- discourses of promotion and enhancement of Italian cinema through U.S.
2 critical or trade journals.
Save the Dates
→ July 18, 2022 : Abstract submission
→ July 25, 2022 : Notification of acceptance
→ Novembre 9-11, 2022 : Conference
Evaluation Process
Submissions containing a title, an abstract of up to 500 words, five
keywords, and a brief author(s) biography should be sent in a Word
document by July 18, 2022, to (transatlantic.visions /at/ uniroma3.it).
Notification of acceptance will be given by July 25, 2022. The conference
will open on November 9, 2022, and paper presentations will be held on
November 10–11 at the Palladium Theater, Roma Tre University. A small
number of selected contributions will be edited and published in
proceedings.
Organizers: Enrico Carocci, Ilaria A. De Pascalis, Veronica Pravadelli
(Department of Philosophy, Communication and Performing Arts – Roma Tre
University).
Conference Website: transatlantic.visions.uniroma3.it
The research project Transatlantic Transfers: The Italian Presence in
Post- war America (1949–1971) was developed by the University Roma Tre,
together with the Polytechnic University of Milan (national lead), the
University of Gastronomic Sciences of Pollenzo, and the University of
Eastern Piedmont. Project website: transatlantictransfers.polimi.it
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