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Federico Fellini: Contemporary Perspectives PDF

272 Pages·2002·14.2 MB·English
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FEDERICO FELLINI: CONTEMPORARY PERSPECTIVES Edited by Frank Burke and Marguerite R. Waller Federico Fellini remains the best known of the postwar Italian direc- tors. This collection of essays brings Fellini scholarship up to date, employing a range of recent critical approaches, including semiotic, psychoanalytical, feminist, and deconstructionist. Accordingly, a num- ber of important themes arise - the reception of fascism, the crisis of the subject, the question of agency, homoeroticism, feminism, and con- structions of gender. Since the early 1970s, there has been a decline in critical and theoret- ical attention to Fellini's work, accompanied by an assumption that his films are self-indulgent and lacking in political value. This volume moves the discussion forward towards a politics of signification, con- tending that Fellini's evolving self-reflexivity is not mere solipsism but rather a critique of both aesthetics and signification. The essays pre- sented here are almost all new, and were chosen to illustrate the self- critical, analytical dimension of Fellini's work, particularly apparent in some of his earlier and lesser-known films. This lively and ambitious collection brings a new critical language to bear on Fellini's films, offering fresh insights into their underlying issues and meaning. It will have a significant impact on film studies, reclaiming this important director for a contemporary audience. (Toronto Italian Studies) FRANK BURKE is Professor of Film Studies, Queen's University. MARGUERITE R. WALLER is Professor of English and Women's Studies, University of California, Riverside. This page intentionally left blank EDITED BY FRANK BURKE AND MARGUERITE R. WALLER Federico Fellini Contemporary Perspectives UNIVERSITY OF TORONTO PRESS Toronto Buffalo London www.utppublishing.com © University of Toronto Press Incorporated 2002 Toronto Buffalo London Printed in Canada ISBN 0-8020-0696-5 (cloth) ISBN 0-8020-7647-5 (paper) Printed on acid-free paper Toronto Italian Studies National Library of Canada Cataloguing in Publication Data Main entry under title: Federico Fellini: contemporary perspectives (Toronto Italian studies) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-8020-0696-5 (bound). ISBN 0-8020-7647-5 (pbk.) I. Fellini, Federico - Criticism and interpretation. I. Burke, Frank II. Waller, Marguerite R., 1948- III. Series. PN1998.3.F45F453 2002 791.43'0233'092 C2001-903774-0 University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial assistance to its publishing program of the Canada Council for the Arts and the Ontario Arts Council. University of Toronto Press acknowledges the financial support for its Publishing activities of the Government of Canada through the Book Publishing Industry Development Program (BPIDP). This book has been published with the help of grants from Queen's University and the Istituto Italiano di Cultura, Toronto. Contents Preface vii FRANK BURKE Acknowledgments xi Chronology xiii Illustrations xvii Introduction 3 MARGUERITE R. WALLER 1 Federico Fellini: Realism/Representation/Signification 26 FRANK BURKE 2 Subtle Wasted Traces: Fellini and the Circus 47 HELEN STODDART 3 Fellini and Lacan: The Hollow Phallus, the Male Womb, and the Retying of the Umbilical 65 WILLIAM VAN WATSON 4 When in Rome Do As the Romans Do? Federico Fellini's Problematization of Femininity (The White Sheik) 92 VIRGINIA PICCHIETTI 5 Whose Dolce vita Is This, Anyway? The Language of Fellini's Cinema 107 MARGUERITE R. WALLER vi Contents 6 Toby Dammit/ Intertext, and the End of Humanism 121 CHRISTOPHER SHARRETT 7 Fellini's Amarcord: Variations on the Libidinal Limbo of Adolescence 137 DOROTHEE BONNIGAL 8 Memory, Dialect, Politics: Linguistic Strategies in Fellini's Amarcord 155 COSETTA GAUDENZI 9 Fellini's Ginger and Fred: Postmodern Simulation Meets Hollywood Romance 169 MILLICENT MARCUS 10 Cinecitta and America: Fellini Interviews Kafka (Intervista) 188 CARLO TESTA 11 Interview with the Vamp: Deconstructing Femininity in Fellini's Final Films (Intervista, La voce della luna) 209 AINE O'HEALY Selected Bibliography 233 Filmography 235 Contributors 237 Preface FRANK BURKE Federico Fellini is probably the best known of the postwar Italian directors, and he remains among the most noted filmmakers in the his- tory of the medium. In 1980, while still at the peak of his fame (though not necessarily his career), Fellini was described by CBS's Harry Rea- soner as 'maybe the premier filmmaker of the age/ He was awarded five Oscars, and though his reputation declined in the 1980s and early 1990s, his final Oscar was the 1993 Lifetime Achievement Award of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences. Nineteen years earlier he had received a similar award from Cannes; eight years earlier, from the Film Society of Lincoln Center (New York City). Perhaps more important, Fellini's work strongly influenced international filmmaking well into the 1990s. In a 1992 Sight and Sound survey he ranked first in a poll in which world-renowned directors were asked to name their favourite filmmaker. This collection of essays has been motivated by a desire to 'update' Fellini's importance by bringing his work into relation with recent critical methodologies: semiotic/poststructuralist, psychoanalytical, feminist, and deconstructionist. (I use the last term broadly to encom- pass the intertextual thrust of several of the essays below.) Conse- quently, almost all of the essays in this collection were solicited especially for the project. The two exceptions are my own 'Federico Fellini: From Representation to Signification,' Romance Languages Annual I (1989), and Marguerite R. Waller's 'Whose Dolce vita Is This Anyhow?: The Language of Fellini's Cinema,' Quaderni d'italianistica 9.1 (1990), the appearance of which a little over ten years ago helped establish new directions in Fellini criticism.1 In bringing contemporary theoretical approaches to bear on Fellini's viii Preface work, we hope to reverse what has been an unfortunate slide in critical attention to Fellini in the English-speaking world since the early 1970s. Waller addresses this slide in her Introduction, while also suggesting that Fellini's work to a large extent belies the apparent reasoning behind this critical neglect (i.e., an assumption that Fellini's films are self-indulgent and thoroughly lacking in political value). In partic- ular, we have sought to move discussion toward what we might call a politics of signification. We contend that Fellini's engagement with modernism and postmodernism, and in particular his evolving self- reflexivity - which has been read by politicized critics only as self- indulgence - are not mere solipsism but rather a critique and an opening out of both aesthetics and signification at a moment in which politics and the social have themselves become aestheticized or Virtu- alized' as simulation. We believe that many of the essays that follow strongly illuminate this self-critical, analytical dimension of Fellini's work. Because our emphasis is on critical methodology, we have not pro- vided uniform coverage of the Fellini canon. We have included reread- ings of some early work (e.g., The White Sheik) from new perspectives. But we have emphasized readings of those films constructed on the verge of or within postmodernity, precisely because those are the films that demonstrate best Fellini's continuing relevance as an arbiter of social value. All of this explains why some of the staples of conven- tional Fellini criticism - La Strada, Nights of Cabiria, 8l/i - are largely missing, their place taken by films such as Toby Dammit, Amarcord, Ginger and Fred, Intervista, and The Voice of the Moon. We have chosen not to include interview material, because so much is in print nowadays and thus easily accessible (see the Bibliography). It may seem strange that in a collection of essays on an Italian film director, there is no native Italian contributor. We did seek to involve Italian writers in our project, but were unsuccessful. Although there is much solid academic work in Italy, it tends to consist of either general critical/biographical introductions to his career or aesthetic analy- sis focusing on the design and look of his films - often linked to his sketches. We were unable to identify scholars writing, or inclined to write, on Fellini from the critical and theoretical perspectives privi- leged in this volume. The other recent writing on Fellini in Italy has been non-academic, comprising three types: traditional plot and theme summaries of his films; 'behind the scenes' reportage on his filmmak- ing; and celebrations of 'Fellini the great auteur' in the wake of his Preface ix death - coffee table books that bring together images from his films as well as sketches and other memorabilia. This type of writing is more commercial than critical in approach. Our decision to organize the volume according to theoretical issues within postmodernity meant locating Fellini less within the context of Italian culture and more within a broader context of postwar signify- ing strategies. We would welcome a volume that addressed the former, especially one that viewed Fellini's work in relation to Italian cultural studies, a field that has emerged and grown rapidly in the past decade. Note 1 Waller's essay has been somewhat revised for this volume. Two other essays occupy roughly the same historical terrain: Waller's 'Neither an "I" nor an "Eye": The Gaze in Fellini's Giulietta degli spiriti,' Romance Languages Annual 1 (1989): 75-80 and my own 'Fellini: Changing the Subject/ Film Quarterly 43.1 (Fall 1989): 36-48. However, both have been reprinted in Perspectives on Federico Fellini, ed. Peter Bondanella and Cristina Degli-Esposti (New York: G.K. Hall, 1993), and it did not seem sensible to reprint them again here.

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Federico Fellini remains the best known of the postwar Italian directors. This collection of essays brings Fellini criticism up to date, employing a range of recent critical filters, including semiotic, psychoanalytical, feminist and deconstructionist. Accordingly, a number of important themes arise
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