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Not Only Divas. Women Pioneers of Italian Cinema

International Conference – Bologna, Italy: 14-16 December 2007





Promoted by:

Dipartimento di Musica e Spettacolo-Università di Bologna

Biblioteca Italiana delle Donne

Associazione Orlando

  Women’s Film History Association



In association with:

Cineteca di Bologna

Cineteca Nazionale

Associazione Italiana per le Ricerche di Storia del Cinema



Supported by:

Ministero dei Beni Culturali

Regione Emilia-Romagna

Provincia di Bologna






Until recently, the issue of women’s contribution to the creation and  
development of film industry has been largely ignored in  
historiographical reasearch, producing an image of silent cinema as a  
territory exclusively dominated by male agency and desire. In the  
last few years, however, a new line of international research has  
revealed a surprising number of traces of women’s creative and  
professional participation in the silent film industry, showing  
clearly as the very few feminine names that have been traditionally  
credited in official film histories are in fact only the visible part  
of a much larger iceberg. One of the most interesting results of this  
research is actually to have revealed that in all national cinemas  
during the silent period the women working in the film industry in  
non-acting roles were far more numerous than in any other period of  
film history.



Though peculiar in many aspects, the case of Italian cinema is no  
exception. Besides Elvira Notari, pioneer of Neapoleatan cinema, who  
has no doubt to be recalled as one of the most productive women  
directors of all times (second, perhaps, only to Alice Guy) and  
Francesca Bertini (the widely celebrated Diva, who in her late years  
repeatedly claimed for herself the maternity of her films), many  
others are the women who succeeded in entering as professionals the  
sphere of a mainly masculine industry. We can think as an example of  
the nowadays forgotten names of directors like Diana Karenne, Gemma  
Bellincioni, Giulia Cassini, Elettra Raggio; of screenwriters like  
Renée de Lion or Nelly Carrère; or even of a film distributor like  
Fanny Kluge.



The Not Only Divas Conference is the first step in a multiannual  
research project aimed at producing new knowledge on such pioneering  
figures by means of an articulated series of events, including film  
retrospectives, film restaurations and publications.



More generally, the International Conference intends to stimulate a  
reflection on the scope of movement that was available in Italian  
silent cinema, in a particularly conservative socio-cultural context,  
for all the forms of feminine expression or women’s representation  
that are impossible to simply reduce to the traditional figure of the  
Diva.



The following thematic and methological issues will be considered :



Reconstruction of Italian women film pioneers’ biographies and  
production
Forms of women’s representation in Italian silent cinema
The anti-Divas: comic actresses and muscle-women
Women’s professional agency in the Italian socio-cultural context of  
the silent period
Italian silent cinema and female audiences
Relationships among women across film, theater and literature
Comparative analysis of the women’s role in Italian and foreign cinemas
The feminist movement in Italy during the silent period
The problem of sources: women’s history in the Italian film history



Conference Director:

Monica Dall’Asta – Università di Bologna


Advisory Board:


Gian Piero Brunetta – Università di Padova
Giuliana Bruno – Harvard University, USA
Giulia Carluccio – Università di Torino
Elena Dagrada – Università Statale di Milano
Ester De Miro D’Ayeta – Università di Genova
Jane Gaines – Columbia University, USA
Jean Gili – Université Paris I
Christine Gledhill – Sunderland University, USA
Giovanna Grignaffini – Cinecittà Holding
Mariann Lewinsky – Università di Zurigo
Elena Mosconi – Università Cattolica, Milano
Giuliana Muscio – Università di Padova
Kim Tomadjoglou – American Film Institute, USA



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