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Giorgio Bertellini

职称:Associate Professor of Italian and Screen Arts and Cultures

所属学校:University of Michigan-Ann Arbor

所属院系:Italian

所属专业:Italian Language and Literature

联系方式:734.763.1144

简介

Education/Degree: Michigan Society of Fellows, 2001-2004 Ph.D. and M.A., Cinema Studies, NYU, 2001 B.A., Philosophy, Universita' Cattolica, Milan, Italy, 1991

职业经历

As a visual historian, I am interested in film aesthetics in the context of the dense artistic and cultural exchanges across the Atlantic. In my first book in English, Italy in Early American Cinema: Race, Landscape, and the Picturesque (2009), I followed the historical and geographic journeys of an aesthetic form, the picturesque, from 17th century paintings and 18th century prints to turn-of-the-20th-century films, and from the Italian to the North American racial culture. In the process, I also followed the picturesque’s original subjects, Southern Italians, as both protagonists and consumers of picturesque works. In the end, my research sought to recast established time-centered notions of cinematic modernity by mobilizing equally pressingly modern notions of geographic variance, racial difference, and migration. In my current project, Divo/Duce: Film Stardom and Political Leadership in 1920s America, I am focusing on a historically narrower type of Atlantic exchange, the 1920s American popularity of Hollywood star Rudolph Valentino and dictator Benito Mussolini. Based again on a wide variety of sources and documents, Divo/Duce seeks to unearth the historical convergences of celebrity culture, charismatic leadership and national sovereignty and in the process identify the affinities between stardom and political theory. While the bulk of the research relates to the North American scene, for comparative purposes a substantial portion will also be devoted to the repercussions of the Divo/Duce’s transnational fame in Italy and Argentina—two Latin, predominantly Catholic, cultural settings. Over the years, I have published essays in such scholarly journals as Cinema Journal, Film Quarterly, Film History, The Velvet Light Trap, Urban History, The Journal of Urban History, Agalma: Rivista di Cultura ed Estetica; Italian American Review; Italica; Kintop; Comunicazioni Sociali, and NEMLA Italian Studies. I have also edited volumes for both pedagogical and scholarly use, from Emir Kusturica (Rome, 1995), The Cinema of Italy (London: 2004; 2007), and Early Cinema and the National (London, 2008; with Richard Abel and Rob King) to Italian Cinema: A Reader (2013). Recently I have revised and expanded my 1996 monograph on Bosnian film director Emir Kusturica, for the series Il Castoro Cinema (Milan, 2011), to appear in English in late 2014 in the series "Contemporary Film Directors" of the University of Illinois Press.

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