ABSTRACT

Italian neo-realism has inspired film audiences and fascinated critics and film scholars for decades. This book offers an original analysis of the movement and its defining films from the perspective of the cultural unconscious.

Combining a Jungian reading with traditional theorizations of film and national identity, Filming the Nation reinterprets familiar images of well-known masterpieces by Roberto Rossellini, Vittorio de Sica and Luchino Visconti and introduces some of their less renowned yet equally significant films.

Providing an illuminating analysis of film images across a particularly traumatic and complex historical period, Filming the Nation revisits the concept of national identity and its ‘construction’ from a perspective that combines cultural, psychoanalytic and post-Jungian theories. As such this book will be essential reading for all students and scholars of film and psychoanalysis.

chapter |8 pages

Introduction

part |58 pages

Primo tempo

chapter |20 pages

The uninvited guest

Film, psychoanalysis and the Jungian absence

chapter |17 pages

Archetype and complex

The paradox of dynamic structures

chapter |19 pages

Jung, film and nation

Image as witness of a process of becoming

part |121 pages

Secondo tempo

chapter |44 pages

1942-1945

War and archetypes: an orphan nation with a legacy of murder

chapter |26 pages

1947-1949

Clearing the debt to the maternal between war and reconstruction

chapter |37 pages

1949-1952

Redeemers, tricksters and the wisdom of the unconscious

chapter |12 pages

Conclusion