Fellini’s Eternal Rome: Paganism and Christianity in the Films of Federico Fellini

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In Fellini's Eternal Rome, Alessandro Carrera explores the co-existence and conflict of paganism and Christianity in the works of Federico Fellini. By combining source analysis, cultural history and jargon-free psychoanalytic film theory, Carrera introduces the reader to a new appreciation of Fellini's work.

Life-affirming Franciscanism and repressive Counter-Reformation dogmatism live side by side in Fellini's films, although he clearly tends toward the former and resents the latter. The fascination with pre-Christian Rome shines through
La Dolce Vita and finds its culmination in Fellini-Satyricon, the most audacious attempt to imagine what the West would be if Christianity had never replaced classical Rome. Minimal clues point toward a careful, extremely subtle use of classical texts and motifs.

Fellini's interest in the classics culminates in
Olympus, a treatment of Hesiod's Theogony for a never-realized TV miniseries on Greek mythology, here introduced for the first time to an English-speaking readership. Fellini's recurrent dream of the Mediterranean Goddess is shaped by the phantasmatic projection of paganism that Christianity created as its convenient Other. His characters long for a “maternal space” where they will be protected from mortality and left free to roam. Yet Fellini shows how such maternal space constantly fails, not because the Church has erased it, but because the utopia of unlimited enjoyment is a self-defeating fantasy.

Author(s): Alessandro Carrera
Series: Classical Receptions in Twentieth-Century Writing
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Year: 2018

Language: English
Pages: 200
City: London

Cover page
Halftitle page
Series page
Title page
Copyright page
Contents
Series Editor’s Preface
Author’s Preface
Introduction
1 Fellini, Dante and the Gaze of Medusa
Beaming up Fellini
Eyes wide shut
2 Fellini and Rossellini
‘Appennino emiliano’ or a lesson in humility
‘The Miracle’, or the satyr and the nymph
The mystery of Perfect Joy
3 La dolce vita
All gods lead to Rome
The fish-thing and the maiden
4 8½ Or Trouble in Paradise
An albatross around Guido’s neck
Circe vs the virginal saints
The troublesome ethics of eternal life
5 Fellini Satyricon I
Foreclosing Rome
What were you (analogically) thinking?
Madness or ‘mental confusion’? Parallel lives
6 Fellini Satyricon II
‘The mask is ripped off ’
Lichas, Acéphale
‘Come on baby, light my fire’, or the two bodies of Oenothea
The sailor’s tale
7 Roma
Internal city, eternal city
Attack of the sixty-foot goddess
Escape from Rome
8 From City of Women to The Voice of the Moon
The witch and the lawyer
Fellini on Mount Olympus
Shooting at the moon
Conclusion: Rome’s extensive and in-tensive space
Notes
Bibliography
Index