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El. knyga: Era mio padre: Italian Terrorism of the Anni di Piombo in the Postmemorials of Victims' Relatives

Edited by , Series edited by , Series edited by , Edited by
  • Formatas: 284 pages
  • Serija: Italian Modernities 30
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Mar-2018
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788743280
  • Formatas: 284 pages
  • Serija: Italian Modernities 30
  • Išleidimo metai: 30-Mar-2018
  • Leidėjas: Peter Lang International Academic Publishers
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781788743280

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This volume explores the work of authors such as Mario Calabresi, Benedetta Tobagi, Luca Tarantelli and Massimo Coco, whose fathers were victims of Italian political terrorism in the 1970s. It examines how they have narrated their unique experience and how their ‘postmemorials’ contribute to a new relationship between history and personal memory.



Italian political terrorism of the 1970s has produced in its aftermath a rich body of memorial writing, created not only by victims or perpetrators but also by the secondary victims of violence, often children of the dead, who many years after their loss ask why their parents or relatives were chosen as targets, what it means for them personally and for the history of the Italian anni di piombo. This volume brings together a body of essays that explore this field of «postmemorial» writing, a field that extends the scope of memory studies, particularly in relation to political violence, and especially when those memories are fragile and indirect. The book analyses the work of victims’ children such as Mario Calabresi, Benedetta Tobagi, Luca Tarantelli and Massimo Coco, exploring how these authors and others have narrated their unique experiences, from their distant memories of their fathers – each assassinated by different Italian terrorist groups – to their more recent struggles to deal with state institutions ill-equipped to respond to, or indifferent to, their plight. It further examines how their «postmemorial» works have contributed to a new relationship between history and personal memory in Italy. All of these writers, impelled by a sense of marginalization, frustration and sometimes anger to become actors and witnesses against their own will, have added their own indispensable tiles to the mosaic of a national and collective memory of the 1970s that is still largely unresolved in Italy today.

Acknowledgements ix
Introduction 1(28)
Sciltian Gastaldi
David Ward
1 "The Wider Context of the Wricings by Victims of Terrorism and their Relatives
29(14)
David Ward
PART I Figuring the Father
43(66)
2 The Stigma that Dare not Speak its Name: Negotiating Pride and Shame in the Discourse of the Relatives of the Victims of Terrorism
45(24)
Vasiliki Petsa
3 Il padre assente. Storia e autobiografia nelle memorie di figli delle vittime del terrorismo di sinistra
69(22)
Barbara Armani
4 La cicatrice dell'evaporazione del padre in Colpire alcuore di Gianni Amelio
91(18)
Alessandra Diazzi
PART II Case Studies
109(96)
5 `Era mio padre'. Scopi culturali differenti negli scritti di tre familiari delle vittime del terrorismo: Mario Calabresi, Benedetta Tobagi e Luca Tarantelli
111(30)
Sciltian Gastaldi
6 `Il caso Moro non riguardi i Moro'. La dialettica tra personaggio pubblico e personaggio privato nella figura di Aldo Moro attraverso gli scritti della figlia
141(16)
Ilaria Fatta Traducco
7 `Qualunque cosa succeda'. II testamento spirituale di Giorgio Ambrosoli
157(28)
Monica Jansen
8 L'ergastolo del dolore. Scopi culturali differenti negli scritti di due familiari delle vittime del terrorismo genovese: Sabina Rossa e Massimo Coco
185(20)
Sciltian Gastaldi
PART III Histories, Public and Private
205(44)
9 La memoria privata degli anni di piombo
107(124)
Alessandra Montalbano
10 Vittime: Giovanna Gagliardo's Cine-history of the Victims of Terrorism
231(18)
Flavia Laviosa
Appendix
249(6)
11 Discorso tenure- in occasione della presentazione de Il Libro dell'incontro alia Sala Zuccari, Senato della Repubblica, Roma, 19 gennaio 2017
251(4)
Luca Tarantelli
Notes on Contributors 255(4)
Index 259
Sciltian Gastaldi (PhD, University of Toronto) is a history and philosophy high school teacher for the Ministero dell'Istruzione and the Ontario College of Teachers, as well as a journalist and novelist.









David Ward is Professor of Italian Studies at Wellesley College.