Stupendous, Miserable City: Pasolini’s Rome

Stupendous, Miserable City: Pasolini’s Rome

by JohnDavidRhodes (Author)

Synopsis

John David Rhodes places the city of Rome at the center of this original and in-depth examination of the work of Italian director Pier Paolo Pasolini-but it\u2019s not the classical Rome you imagine. Stupendous, Miserable City situates Pasolini within the history of twentieth-century Roman urban development. The book focuses first on the Fascist period, when populations were moved out of the urban center and into public housing on the periphery of the city, called the borgate, and then turns to the progressive social housing experiments of the 1950s. These environments were the settings of most of Pasolini\u2019s films of the early to mid-1960s. Discussing films such as Accattone, Mamma Roma, and The Hawks and the Sparrows, Rhodes shows how Pasolini used the borgate to critique Roman urban planning and neorealism and to draw attention to the contemptuous treatment of Rome\u2019s poor. To Pasolini, the borgate, rich in human incident, linguistic difference, and squalor, \u201cwere life\u201d-and now his passion can be appreciated fully for the first time. Carefully tracing Pasolini\u2019s surprising engagement with this part of Rome and looking beyond his films to explore the interrelatedness of all of Pasolini\u2019s artistic output in the 1950s and 1960s-including his poetry, fiction, and journalism-Rhodes opens up completely new ways of understanding Pasolini\u2019s work and proves how connected Pasolini was to the political and social upheavals in Italy at the time. John David Rhodes is lecturer in literature and visual culture at the University of Sussex.

$31.06

Quantity

20+ in stock

More Information

Format: Illustrated
Pages: 240
Edition: First edition
Publisher: University Of Minnesota Press
Published: 09 Mar 2007

ISBN 10: 0816649308
ISBN 13: 9780816649303

Media Reviews
In this remarkable book, John David Rhodes makes an invaluable contribution to scholarship on cinema and the city. Analyzing Pier Paolo Pasolini's Rome films and his political and emotional engagement with the city, Rhodes has provided a fascinating and moving background to this period of Pasolini's life, vision, and politics. -Laura Mulvey
John David Rhodes portrays the social and aesthetic complexities of this world with the elan and precision of George Eliot. His outline history of Roman urbanism suggests voracious reading and many a walk through. Rhodes' writing constantly surprises. This is an insightful, engrossing book about art, urbanism and consciousness that changes the way we think about Pasolini's early career. -Sight & Sound