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Performing Stragismo and Counterspectacularisation: Italian Right-Wing Terrorism and Its Legacies

Autor Irene Ros
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 22 dec 2025
Performing Stragismo and Counterspectacularisation offers a new theoretical lens on political violence as spectacle, drawing on performance theory to explore how acts of violence – particularly terrorism – are staged, circulated, and remembered. It interrogates the role of spectacularity in shaping public discourse, tracing how power and media mobilise violence into a visual and rhetorical regime that leaves deep imprints on collective memory.
In response, this book proposes counterspectacularisation: a repertoire of critical strategies developed by the public and by performance-makers to resist or reframe the spectacle of terror. Through a mix of theoretical reflection, close analysis of performance case studies, and four original artworks created by the author, the text explores how performance can respond ethically to silences and fractures in memory. It advocates for cross-disciplinary approaches that challenge dominant representations of violence and that offer alternative frameworks for grappling with trauma, remembrance, and representation in an age of political spectacle.
This will be of particular value to researchers working on the afterlives of terrorism and state violence, especially within memory studies, media studies, and trauma theory. It will also speak to scholars in Italian studies, ethnography, and performance.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781032978147
ISBN-10: 1032978147
Pagini: 228
Ilustrații: 84
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 14 mm
Greutate: 0.58 kg
Ediția:1
Editura: Taylor & Francis
Colecția Routledge
Locul publicării:Oxford, United Kingdom

Public țintă

Academic, Postgraduate, and Undergraduate Advanced

Recenzii

Performing Stragismo and Counterspectacularisation is a timely intervention that recentres the impact of right-wing terrorism on Italy’s memory culture, challenging dominant narratives and demonstrating how performance can serve as a powerful medium for collective remembrance and political reckoning.’
Bryce Lease, Professor, Royal Central School of Speech and Drama, UK

Cuprins

Acknowledgements
 
Introduction              
 
Part One
 
Chapter One Performing (state) violence – “I remember images of this train ripped apart”
Introduction               
The spectacular 1970s              
The aesthetics of stragisti            
The Italicus spectacle
The Bologna station spectacle
Spectacularised trials
Representation
Conclusion
 
Chapter Two Performing resistance – “Bologna has a lot to teach”
Introduction
The influence of Nuovo Teatro
The state funerals and the resistance narrative
The Italicus commemoration
The Bologna train station commemorative complex
Counterspectacularisation
Conclusion
 
 
 
Chapter Three Bodies in remembrance – “They became collective dead. They are ours too”
Introduction
“Da ferito a morte”
The two Antigones
From Cantiere 2 agosto to Un’altra vita
Conclusion     
 
Part Two
 
Chapter Four Methodologies of Encounter – “I don’t have any particular memories”
Introduction
Wider context
Methodology
Recruitment
Intersubjectivity and power dynamics
Research design
Findings
Conclusion     
 
Chapter Five Representing memory gaps – “It looks like a movie, but it was like this”
Introduction
Devising counterspectacularisation
Conclusion     
 
Conclusions
 
 
Bibliography

Notă biografică

Irene Ros is a theatre and performance practitioner, SGSAH alumna, and independent researcher. Co-founder of Cut Moose, a charity exploring inclusive storytelling through diverse art forms, she shares her research internationally through papers and screenings at conferences and symposia, and recently published "Will Cinderella Fight Inequality?" (IJPADM, 2025).

Descriere

This book offers a new theoretical lens on political violence as spectacle, drawing on performance theory to explore how acts of violence are staged, circulated, and remembered. It interrogates the role of spectacularity in shaping public discourse, tracing how power and media mobilise violence into a visual and rhetorical regime.