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Pier Paolo Pasolini

Pier Paolo Pasolini (Italian: [ˈpjɛr ˈpaːolo pazoˈliːni]; 5 March 1922 – 2 November 1975) was an Italian poet, filmmaker, writer, and intellectual who also distinguished himself as a journalist, novelist, translator, playwright, visual artist and actor. He is considered one of the defining public intellectuals in 20th-century Italy, influential both as an artist and a political figure.[1][2][3][4]

Pier Paolo Pasolini
Pasolini in 1964
Born(1922-03-05)5 March 1922
Bologna, Emilia, Italy
Died2 November 1975(1975-11-02) (aged 53)
Ostia, Lazio, Italy
Occupation
  • Film director
  • novelist
  • poet
  • intellectual
  • journalist
Alma materUniversity of Bologna
Notable worksFilms:
Accattone
Mamma Roma
The Gospel According to St. Matthew
Teorema
Arabian Nights
Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom
Literary works:
Ragazzi di vita
Una vita violenta
Signature

A controversial personality due to his straightforward style, Pasolini's legacy remains contentious. Openly gay and a strong advocate for Christian values in his youth, he also became an avowed Marxist shortly after the end of World War II,[5] while voicing strong criticism of petty bourgeois values and the emerging consumerism in Italy,[6] juxtaposing socio-political polemics with a critical examination of taboo sexual matters. A prominent protagonist of the Roman cultural scene of the post-war period, he was an established major figure in European literature and cinema.

Pasolini's unsolved murder at Ostia in November 1975 during an altercation with a young male prostitute prompted an outcry in Italy, and its circumstances continue to be a matter of heated debate.

Biography

Early life

Pier Paolo Pasolini was born in Bologna, traditionally one of the most politically leftist of Italy's cities. He was the son of elementary-school teacher Susanna Colussi, named after her Polish-Jewish great-grandmother,[7] and Carlo Alberto Pasolini, a lieutenant in the Royal Italian Army; they had married in 1921. Pasolini was born in 1922 and named after a paternal uncle. His family moved to Conegliano in 1923, then to Belluno in 1925, where their second son, Guidalberto, was born. In 1926, Pasolini's father was arrested for gambling debts. His mother moved with the children to her family's home in Casarsa della Delizia, in the Friuli region. In that same year, his father first detained, then identified Anteo Zamboni as the would-be assassin of Benito Mussolini following his assassination attempt.[citation needed] Carlo Alberto was persuaded of the virtues of fascism.[8]

Pasolini began writing poems at age seven, inspired by the natural beauty of Casarsa. One of his early influences was the work of Arthur Rimbaud. His father was transferred to Idria in the Julian March (now in Slovenia) in 1931;[9] in 1933 they moved again to Cremona in Lombardy, and later to Scandiano and Reggio Emilia. Pasolini found it difficult to adapt to all these dislocations, though he enlarged his poetry and literature readings (Dostoyevsky, Tolstoy, Shakespeare, Coleridge, Novalis) and left behind the religious fervour of his early years. In the Reggio Emilia high school, he met his first true friend, Luciano Serra. The two met again in Bologna, where Pasolini spent seven years completing high school. Here he cultivated new passions, including football. With other friends, including Ermes Parini, Franco Farolfi, Elio Meli, he formed a group dedicated to literary discussions.

In 1939, Pasolini graduated and entered the Literature College of the University of Bologna, discovering new themes such as philology and aesthetics of figurative arts. He also frequented the local cinema club. Pasolini always showed his friends a virile and strong exterior, totally hiding his interior turmoil. In his poems of this period, Pasolini started to include fragments in Friulan, a minority language he did not speak but learned after he had begun to write poetry in it. "I learnt it as a sort of mystic act of love, a kind of félibrisme, like the Provençal poets."[10] In 1943, he founded with fellow students the Academiuta della lenga furlana (Academy of the Friulan Language).[11] As a young adult, Pasolini identified as an atheist.[12]

Early poetry

 
Pasolini in his young years

In 1942, Pasolini published at his own expense a collection of poems in Friulan, Versi a Casarsa, which he had written at the age of eighteen. The work was noted and appreciated by such intellectuals and critics as Gianfranco Contini, Alfonso Gatto and Antonio Russi. Pasolini's pictures had also been well received. He was chief editor of a magazine called Il Setaccio ("The Sieve"), but was fired after conflicts with the director, who was aligned with the Fascist regime. A trip to Germany helped him also to perceive the "provincial" status of Italian culture in that period. These experiences led Pasolini to revise his opinion about the cultural politics of Fascism and to switch gradually to a Communist position.

Pasolini's family took shelter in Casarsa, considered a more tranquil place to wait for the conclusion of the Second World War, a decision common among Italian military families. Here he joined a group of other young enthusiasts of the Friulan language who wanted to give Casarsa Friulan a status equal to that of Udine, the official regional standard. From May 1944, they issued a magazine entitled Stroligùt di cà da l'aga. In the meantime Casarsa suffered Allied bombardments and forced enlistments by the Italian Social Republic, as well as partisan activity.

Pasolini tried to distance himself from these events. Starting in October 1943, Pasolini, his mother and other colleagues taught students unable to reach the schools in Pordenone or Udine. This educational workshop was considered illegal and broke up in February 1944.[13] It was here that Pasolini had his first experience of homosexual attraction to one of his students.[citation needed] His brother Guido, aged 19, joined the Party of Action and their Osoppo-Friuli Brigade, taking to the bush near Slovenia. On 12 February 1945, Guido was killed in an ambush planted by Italian Garibaldine partisans serving in the lines of Josip Broz Tito's Yugoslavian guerrillas. This devastated Pasolini and his mother.[14]

Six days after his brother's death, Pasolini and others founded the Friulan Language Academy (Academiuta di lenga furlana). Meanwhile, on account of Guido's death, Pasolini's father returned to Italy from his detention period in November 1945, settling in Casarsa. That same month, Pasolini graduated from university after completing a final thesis about the work of Giovanni Pascoli (1855–1912), an Italian poet and classical scholar.[15]

In 1946, Pasolini published a small poetry collection, I Diarii ("The Diaries"), with the Academiuta. In October he traveled to Rome. The following May he began the so-called Quaderni Rossi, handwritten in old school exercise books with red covers. He completed a drama in Italian, Il Cappellano. His poetry collection, I Pianti ("The cries"), was also published by the Academiuta.

Rome

In January 1950, Pasolini moved to Rome with his mother Susanna to start a new life. He was acquitted of two indecency charges in 1950 and 1952.[16] After one year sheltered in a maternal uncle's flat next to Piazza Mattei, Pasolini and his 59-year-old mother moved to a run-down suburb called Rebibbia, next to a prison, living there for three years; he transferred his Friulan countryside inspiration to this Roman suburb, one of the infamous borgate where poor proletarian immigrants lived, often in horrendous sanitary and social conditions. Instead of asking for help from other writers, Pasolini preferred to go his own way.

Pasolini found a job working in the Cinecittà film studios and sold his books in the bancarelle ("sidewalk shops") of Rome. In 1951, with the help of the Abruzzese-language poet Vittorio Clemente, he found a job as a secondary school teacher in Ciampino, just outside the capital. He had a long commute involving two train changes, and earned a meagre salary of 27,000 lire.

 
Pasolini with Federico Fellini in the late 1950s
 
Pasolini with Prime Minister Aldo Moro at the Venice Film Festival in 1964
 
Pasolini with Totò in 1966

Career

Writing

In 1954, Pasolini, who now worked for the literary section of Cinecittà, left his teaching job and moved to the Monteverde quarter. At this point, his cousin Graziella moved in. They also accommodated Pasolini's ailing, cirrhotic father Carlo Alberto, who died in 1958. Pasolini published La meglio gioventù, his first important collection of Friulan poems. His first novel, Ragazzi di vita (English: Hustlers), which dealt with the Roman lumpenproletariat, was published in 1955. The work had great success but was poorly received by the PCI establishment and, most important, by the Italian government. It initiated a lawsuit for "obscenity" against Pasolini and his editor, Garzanti.[17] Although exonerated, Pasolini became a target of insinuations, especially in the tabloid press.

In 1955, together with Francesco Leonetti, Roberto Roversi and others, Pasolini edited and published a poetry magazine called Officina. The magazine closed in 1959 after fourteen issues. That year he also published his second novel, Una vita violenta, which unlike his first was embraced by the Communist cultural sphere: he subsequently wrote a column titled Dialoghi con Passolini (meaning Passolini in Dialogue), for the PCI magazine Vie Nuove from May 1960 to September 1965,[18] which were published in book form in 1977 as Le belle bandiere (The Beautiful Flags).[19] In the late 1960s Pasolini edited an advice column in the weekly news magazine Tempo'.[20]

In 1966, Pasolini wrote a screenplay for a never-produced film about the apostle Saint Paul which he subsequently revised.[21] Pasolini's screenplay was intended to depict Paul as a modern contemporary without modifying any of Paul's statements.[22] In Pasolini's story, Paul is a fascist Vichy France collaborator who becomes illuminated while traveling to Franco's Spain and joins the antifascist French resistance, an event which serves as the modern analogue for the Pauline conversion.[23] The screenplay follows Paul as he preaches resistance in Italy, Spain, Germany, and New York (where he is betrayed, arrested, and executed).[24] As philosopher Alain Badiou writes, "The most surprising thing in all this is the way in which Paul's texts are transplanted unaltered, and with an almost unfathomable naturalness, into the situations in which Pasolini deploys them: war, fascism, American capitalism, the petty debates of Italian intelligentsia[.]"[25]

In 1970, Pasolini bought an old castle near Viterbo, several miles north of Rome, where he began to write his last novel, Il Petrolio, where he denounced obscure dealing in the highest levels of government and the corporate world (Eni, CIA, the Mafia, etc.).[26] The novel-documentary was left incomplete at his death. In 1972, Pasolini started to collaborate with the extreme-left association Lotta Continua, producing a documentary, 12 dicembre, concerning the Piazza Fontana bombing. The following year he began a collaboration for Italy's most renowned newspaper, Il Corriere della Sera. At the beginning of 1975 Garzanti published a collection of his critical essays, Scritti corsari ("Corsair Writings").

Narrative

  • Ragazzi di vita (The Ragazzi, 1955)
  • Una vita violenta (A Violent Life, 1959)
  • Il sogno di una cosa (1962)
  • Amado Mio—Atti Impuri (1982, originally written in 1948)
  • Alì dagli occhi azzurri (1965)
  • Teorema (1968)
  • Reality (The Poets' Encyclopedia, 1979)
  • Petrolio (1992, incomplete)

Poetry

  • La meglio gioventù (1954)
  • Le ceneri di Gramsci (1957)
  • L'usignolo della chiesa cattolica (1958)
  • La religione del mio tempo (1961)
  • Poesia in forma di rosa (1964)
  • Trasumanar e organizzar (1971)
  • La nuova gioventù (1975)
  • Roman Poems. Pocket Poets No. 41 (1986)
  • The Selected Poetry of Pier Paolo Pasolini: A Bilingual Edition. (2014)

Essays

  • Passione e ideologia (1960)
  • Canzoniere italiano, poesia popolare italiana (1960)
  • Empirismo eretico (1972)
  • Lettere luterane (1976)
  • Le belle bandiere (1977)
  • Descrizioni di descrizioni (1979)
  • Il caos (1979)
  • La pornografia è noiosa (1979)
  • Scritti corsari (1975)
  • Lettere (1940–1954) (Letters, 1940–54, 1986)

Theatre

  • Orgia (1968)
  • Porcile (1968)
  • Calderón (1973)
  • Affabulazione (1977)
  • Pilade (1977)
  • Bestia da stile (1977)

Films

In 1957, together with Sergio Citti, Pasolini collaborated on Federico Fellini's film Le notti di Cabiria, writing dialogue for the Roman dialect sections. Fellini also asked him to work on dialogue for some episodes of La dolce vita.[27] Pasolini made his debut as an actor in Il gobbo in 1960, and co-wrote Long Night in 1943. Along with Ragazzi di vita, he had his celebrated poem Le ceneri di Gramsci published, where Pasolini voiced tormented tensions between reason and heart, as well as the existing ideological dialectics within communism, a debate over artistic freedom, socialist realism and commitment.[28]

Pasolini's first film as director and screenwriter was Accattone in 1961, again set in Rome's marginal quarters, a story of pimps, prostitutes and thieves that contrasted with Italy's postwar economic reforms. Although Pasolini tried to distance himself from neorealism, it is considered to be a kind of second neorealism. Nick Barbaro, a critic writing in the Austin Chronicle, stated it "may be the grimmest movie" he has ever seen.[29] The film aroused controversy and scandal, with conservatives demanded stricter censorship by the government. In 1963, the episode "La ricotta", included in the anthology film RoGoPaG, was censored and Pasolini was tried for "offense to the Italian state and religion".[30]

During this period, Pasolini frequently traveled abroad: in 1961, with Elsa Morante and Alberto Moravia to India (where he went again seven years later); in 1962, to Sudan and Kenya; in 1963, to Ghana, Nigeria, Guinea, Jordan and Israel (where he shot the documentary Sopralluoghi in Palestina). In 1970 he traveled again to Africa to shoot another documentary, Appunti per un'Orestiade africana. Pasolini was a member of the jury at the 16th Berlin International Film Festival in 1966.[31] In 1967, in Venice, he met and interviewed American poet Ezra Pound.[32] They discussed the Italian movement neoavanguardia and Pasolini read some verses from the Italian translation of Pound's Pisan Cantos.[32]

The late 1960s and early 1970s were the era of the so-called "student movement". Pasolini, though acknowledging the students' ideological motivations, and referring to himself as a "Catholic Marxist",[33] thought them "anthropologically middle-class" and therefore destined to fail in their attempts at revolutionary change. Regarding the Battle of Valle Giulia, which took place in Rome in March 1968, he said that he sympathized with the police, as they were "children of the poor", while the young militants were exponents of what he called "left-wing fascism".[citation needed] His film that year, Teorema, was shown at the Venice Film Festival in a hot political climate. Pasolini had proclaimed that the festival would be managed by the directors.[citation needed]

He wrote and directed the black-and-white The Gospel According to Matthew (1964). It is based on scripture, but adapted by Pasolini, and he is credited as writer. Jesus, a barefoot peasant, is played by Enrique Irazoqui.

In his 1966 film Uccellacci e uccellini (literally Bad Birds and Little Birds but translated in English as The Hawks and the Sparrows), a picaresque—and at the same time mystic—fable, Pasolini hired great Italian comedian Totò to work with Ninetto Davoli, the director's lover at the time and one of his preferred "naif" actors. It was a unique opportunity for Totò to demonstrate that he was a great dramatic actor as well.[citation needed]

In Teorema (Theorem, 1968), starring Terence Stamp as a mysterious stranger, Pasolini depicted the sexual coming-apart of a bourgeois family. (Variations of this theme were later done by François Ozon in Sitcom, Joe Swanberg in The Zone and Takashi Miike in Visitor Q).[citation needed]

Later films centered on sex-laden folklore, such as Boccaccio's Decameron (1971), Chaucer's The Canterbury Tales (1972), and Il fiore delle mille e una notte (literally The Flower of 1001 Nights, released in English as Arabian Nights, 1974). These films are usually grouped as the Trilogy of Life. While basing them on classics, Pasolini wrote the screenplays and took sole writing credit. This trilogy, prompted largely by Pasolini's attempt to show the secular sacredness of the body against man-made social controls and especially against the venal hypocrisy of religious state (indeed, the religious characters in The Canterbury Tales are shown as pious but amorally grasping fools) were an effort at representing a state of natural sexual innocence essential to the true nature of free humanity. Alternately playfully bawdy and poetically sensuous, wildly populous, subtly symbolic and visually exquisite, the films were wildly popular in Italy and remain perhaps his most enduringly popular works. Yet despite the fact that the trilogy as a whole is considered by many as a masterpiece, Pasolini later reviled his own creation on account of the many soft-core imitations of these three films in Italy that happened afterwards on account of the very same popularity he wound up deeply uncomfortable with. He believed that a bastardisation of his vision had taken place that amounted to a commoditisation of the body he had tried to deny in his trilogy in the first place. The disconsolation this provided is seen as one of the primary reasons for his final film, Salò, in which humans are not only seen as commodities under authoritarian control but are viewed merely as ciphers for its whims, without the free vitality of the figures in the Trilogy of Life.

His final work, Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma (Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom, 1975), exceeded what most viewers could accept at the time in its explicit scenes of sexual perversity and intensely sadistic violence. Based on the novel 120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade, it is considered Pasolini's most controversial film. In May 2006, Time Out's Film Guide named it the "Most Controversial Film" of all time. Salò was intended as the first film of his Trilogy of Death, followed by an aborted biopic film about Gilles de Rais.

All titles listed below were written and directed by Pasolini, unless stated otherwise.

Year Title Adapted from Notes
Original In English
1961 Accattone Accattone Pasolini's novel Una vita violenta. Screenplay written in collaboration with Sergio Citti.
1962 Mamma Roma Mamma Roma Screenplay by Pasolini with additional dialogue by Citti.
1964 Il vangelo secondo Matteo The Gospel According to St. Matthew The Gospel of Matthew. Won Silver Lion at the 25th Venice International Film Festival, United Nations Award at the 21st British Academy Film Awards.
1966 Uccellacci e uccellini The Hawks and the Sparrows
1967 Edipo re Oedipus Rex Oedipus Rex by Sophocles. Acted in the film as High Priest
1968 Teorema Theorem[a] Pasolini's novel Teorema was also published in 1968.
1969 Porcile Pigsty
1969 Medea Medea Medea by Euripides.
1971 Il Decameron The Decameron The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio. Won the Silver Bear at the 21st Berlin International Film Festival.[5]
1972 I racconti di Canterbury The Canterbury Tales The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer. Won the Golden Bear at the 22nd Berlin International Film Festival.[34] Acted in the film as Allievo di Giotto.
1974 Il fiore delle Mille e una Notte A Thousand and One Nights (Arabian Nights) Screenplay written in collaboration with Dacia Maraini. Won the Grand Prix Spécial Prize at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival.[35] Acted in the film as Chaucer.
1975 Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma Salo, or the 120 Days of Sodom Les 120 journées de Sodome ou l'école du libertinage by the Marquis de Sade. Screenplay written in collaboration with Citti with extended quotes from Roland Barthes' Sade, Fourier, Loyola and Pierre Klossowski's Sade mon prochain.

Episodes in omnibus films

Documentaries

Personal life

A small scandal broke out during a local festival in Ramuscello in September 1949. Someone informed Cordovado, the local sergeant of the carabinieri, of sexual conduct (masturbation) by Pasolini with three youngsters aged sixteen and younger after dancing and drinking.[36] Cordovado summoned the boys' parents, who hesitantly refused to file charges despite Cordovado's urging. Cordovado nevertheless drew up a report, and the informer elaborated publicly on his accusations, sparking a public uproar. A judge in San Vito al Tagliamento charged Pasolini with "corruption of minors and obscene acts in public places".[36][16] He and the 16-year-old were both indicted.[37]

The next month, when questioned, Pasolini would not deny the facts, but talked of a "literary and erotic drive" and cited André Gide, the 1947 Nobel Prize for Literature laureate. Cordovado informed his superiors and the regional press stepped in.[37] According to Pasolini, the Christian Democrats instigated the entire affair to smear his name ("the Christian Democrats pulled the strings"). He was fired from his job in Valvasone[16] and was expelled from the PCI by the party's Udine section, which he considered a betrayal. He addressed a critical letter to the head of the section, his friend Ferdinando Mautino, and claimed he was being subject to a "tacticism" of the PCI. In the party, the expulsion was opposed by Teresa Degan, Pasolini's colleague in education. He also wrote her a letter admitting his regret for being "such a naif, even indecently so".[36] Pasolini's parents reacted angrily and the situation in the family also became untenable.[38] In late 1949, he decided to move to Rome along with his mother seeking to start a new life, settling down in the outskirts of Rome.

In 1963, at the age of 41, Pasolini met "the great love of his life", 15-year-old Ninetto Davoli, whom he later cast in his 1966 film Uccellacci e uccellini (literally Bad Birds and Little Birds but translated in English as The Hawks and the Sparrows). Pasolini became the youth's mentor and friend.[39]

However, there were some important women in Pasolini's life, with whom Pasolini shared a feeling of profound and unique friendship, in particular Laura Betti and Maria Callas. Dacia Maraini, a famous Italian writer, said of Callas' behavior towards Pasolini: "She used to follow him everywhere, even to Africa. She hoped to 'convert' him to heterosexuality and to marriage."[40] Pasolini was also sensible to the problematics related to the "new" role ascribed to women through the Italian media, stating in a 1972 interview that "women are not slot machines."[41]

Political views

 
Pasolini visiting Antonio Gramsci's tomb

Relationship with the Italian Communist Party

 
Piazza del Popolo in San Vito al Tagliamento

By October 1945, the political status of the Friuli region became a matter of contention between different political factions. On 30 October, Pasolini joined the pro-devolution association Patrie tal Friul, founded in Udine. Pasolini wanted a Friuli based on its tradition, attached to its Christianity, but intent on civic and social progress, as opposed to those advocates of regional autonomy who wanted to preserve their privileges based on "immobilism".[42] He also criticized the Italian Communist Party (PCI) for its opposition to devolution and its preference for Italian centralism. Pasolini founded the party Movimento Popolare Friulano, but ended up quitting upon realizing that it was being used by the Christian Democratic Party to counter the Yugoslavs, who in turn were attempting to annex large swaths of the Friuli region.[42]

On 26 January 1947, Pasolini wrote a declaration that was published on the front page of the newspaper Libertà: "In our opinion, we think that currently only Communism is able to provide a new culture." It generated controversy, partly due to the fact he was still not a member of the PCI.

Pasolini planned to extend the work of the Academiuta to the literature of other Romance languages, and met exiled Catalan poet Carles Cardó. He took part in several demonstrations after joining the PCI. In May 1949, he attended the Peace Congress in Paris. Observing the struggles of workers and peasants, and watching the clashes of protesters with Italian police, he began to conceive his first novel. During this period, while holding a position as a teacher in a secondary school, he stood out in the local Communist Party section as a skillful writer defying the notion that communism was contrary to Christian values. Local Christian Democrats took notice. In the summer of 1949, Pasolini was told by a priest to renounce politics or lose his teaching position. Similarly, after some posters were put up in Udine, Giambattista Caron, a Christian Democrat deputy, warned Pasolini's cousin Nico Naldini that "[Pasolini] should abandon communist propaganda" to prevent "pernicious reactions".[36]

1968 protests

Pasolini generated heated public discussion with controversial analyses of public affairs. For instance, during the disorders of 1968, autonomist university students were carrying on a guerrilla-style uprising against the police in the streets of Rome, and all the leftist forces declared their complete support for the students, describing the disorders as a civil fight of proletariat against the system. Pasolini, however, made comments that have frequently been interpreted as the opinion that he was with the police; or, more precisely, with the policemen.[citation needed]

The main source regarding Pasolini's views of the student movement is his poem "Il PCI ai giovani" ("The PCI to Young People"), written after the Battle of Valle Giulia. Addressing the students, he tells them that, unlike the international news media which has been reporting on them, he will not flatter them. He points out that they are the children of the bourgeoisie ("Avete facce di figli di papà / Vi odio come odio i vostri papà" – "You have the faces of daddy's boys / I hate you like I hate your dads"), before stating "Quando ieri a Valle Giulia avete fatto a botte coi poliziotti / io simpatizzavo coi poliziotti" ("When you and the policemen were throwing punches yesterday at Valle Giulia / I was sympathising with the policemen"). He explained that this sympathy was because the policemen were "figli di poveri" ("children of the poor"). The poem highlights the aspect of generational struggle within the bourgeoisie represented by the student movement: "Stampa e Corriere della Sera, News- week e Monde / vi leccano il culo. Siete i loro figli / la loro speranza, il loro futuro... Se mai / si tratta di una lotta intestina" ("Stampa and Corriere della Sera, Newsweek and Le Monde / they kiss your arse. You are their children / their hope, their future... If anything / it's in-fighting").[43] The 1968 revolt was seen by Pasolini as an internal, benign reform of the establishment in Italy, since the protesters were part of the petite bourgeoisie.[44] The poem also implied a class hypocrisy on the part of the establishment towards the protesters, asking whether young workers would be treated similarly if they behaved in the same way: "Occupate le università / ma dite che la stessa idea venga / a dei giovani operai / E allora: Corriere della Sera e Stampa, Newsweek e Monde / avranno tanta sollecitudine / nel cercar di comprendere i loro problemi? / La polizia si limiterà a prendere un po’ di botte / dentro una fabbrica occupata? / Ma, soprattutto, come potrebbe concedersi / un giovane operaio di occupare una fabbrica / senza morire di fame dopo tre giorni?" ("Occupy the universities / but say that the same idea comes / to young workers / So: Corriere della Sera and Stampa, Newsweek and Le Monde / will have so much care / in trying to understand their problems? / Will the police just get a bit of a fight / inside an occupied factory? / But above all, how could / a young worker be allowed to occupy a factory / without dying of hunger after three days?".[43]

Pasolini suggested that the police were the true proletariat, sent to fight for a poor salary and for reasons which they could not understand, against pampered boys of their same age, because they had not had the fortune of being able to study, referring to "poliziotti figli di proletari meridionali picchiati da figli di papà in vena di bravate" (lit. "policemen, sons of proletarian southerners, beaten up by arrogant daddy's boys"). He found that the policemen were but the outer layer of the real power, e.g. the judiciary.[45] Pasolini was not alien to courts and trials. During all his life, Pasolini was frequently entangled in up to 33 lawsuits filed against him, variously charged with "public disgrace", "foul language", "obscenity", "pornography", "contempt of religion", "contempt of the state", etc., for which he was always eventually acquitted.

However, the conventional interpretation of Pasolini's position has been challenged: in an article published in 2015, Wu Ming argues that Pasolini's statements need to be understood in the context of Pasolini's self-confessed hatred of the bourgeoisie which had persecuted him for so long. He notes that "Il PCI ai giovani" states that "We (i.e. Pasolini and the students) are obviously in agreement against the police institution", and that the poem portrays policemen as dehumanised by their work, and that although the battles between students and the police were fights between the rich and the poor, Pasolini concedes that the students were "on the side of reason" whilst the police were "in the wrong". Wu Ming suggests that Pasolini's intent was to express scepticism regarding the idea of students being a revolutionary force, contending that only the working class could make a revolution, and that revolutionary students should join the PCI. Furthermore, he cites a column by Pasolini which was published in the magazine Tempo later that year, which described the student movement, along with the wartime resistance, as "the Italian people's only two democratic-revolutionary experiences". That year he also wrote in support of the Communist Party's proposals for disarming the police, arguing that this would create a break in the psychology of policemen: "It would lead to the sudden collapse of that ‘false idea of himself’ ascribed to him by Power, which has programmed him like a robot". Pasolini's polemics were aimed at goading protesters into re-thinking their revolt, and did not stop him from contributing to the autonomist Lotta continua movement, who he described as "extremists, yes, maybe fanatic and insolently boorish from a cultural point of view, but they push their luck and that is precisely why I think they deserve to be supported. We must want too much to obtain a little".[46][47]

The rising society of consumption

Pasolini was particularly concerned about the class of the subproletariat, which he portrayed in Accattone, and to which he felt both humanly and artistically drawn. He observed that the kind of purity which he perceived in the pre-industrial popular culture was rapidly vanishing, a process that he named la scomparsa delle lucciole (lit. "the disappearance of the fireflies"). The joie de vivre of boys was being rapidly replaced with more bourgeois ambitions such as a house and a family. He was critical of those leftists who held a "traditional and never admitted hatred against lumpenproletariats and poor populations": in 1958 he called on the PCI to become "‘the party of the poor people’: the party, we may say, of the lumpenproletarians".[19]

Pasolini's stance finds its roots in the belief that a Copernican change was taking place in the Italian society and the world. Linked to that very idea, he was also an ardent critic of consumismo, i.e. consumerism, which he felt had rapidly destroyed Italian society since the mid-1960s to the early 1970s. He described the coprophagia scenes in Salò as a comment on the processed food industry. As he saw it, the society of consumerism ("neocapitalism") and the "new fascism" had thus expanded an alienation / homogenization and centralization that the former clerical-fascism had not managed to achieve, so bringing about an anthropological change.[48] That change is related to the loss of humanism and the expansion of productivity as central to the human condition, which he despised. He found that 'new culture' was degrading and vulgar.[49] In one interview, he said: "I hate with particular vehemency the current power, the power of 1975, which is a power that manipulates bodies in a horrible way; a manipulation that has nothing to envy to that performed by Himmler or Hitler." According to Pasolini scholar Simona Bondavalli, Pasolini's definition of neo-capitalism as a "new fascism" enforced a uniform conformity without resorting to coercive means. As Pasolini put it, "No Fascist centralism succeeded in doing what the centralism of consumer culture did."[50] Philosopher Davide Tarizzo summarized Pasolini's position:

"In his view, both old and new fascisms undermine the fundamentals of modern democracy. Yet new fascism does not do this by absolutizing popular sovereignty at the expense of individual rights. New fascism celebrates our freedoms and absolutizes human rights to the detriment of our sense of belonging to a social-political community. Therefore, old and new fascisms strive to accomplish democracy—which is the restless ambition of fascism—via opposite routes. In the former case, the result is the birth of political subjects such as the master race, supported by a revelatory political grammar. In the latter case, the result is the birth of an altogether different subject, which is no longer a political actor, properly speaking, but a passive, anonymous entity: the human population."[51]

Strong criticism of Christian Democracy

 
Pasolini in 1975

Pasolini saw some continuity between the Fascist era and the post-war political system which was led by the Christian Democrats, describing the latter as "clerico-fascism" due to its use of the state as a repressive instrument and its manipulation of power: he saw the conditions among the Roman subproletariat in the borgate as an example of this, being marginalised and segregated socially and geographically as they were under Fascism, and in conflict with a criminal police force.[46] He also blamed the Christian Democrats for assimilating the values of consumer capitalism, contributing to what he saw as the erosion of human values.[52]

The 1975 regional elections saw the rise of the leftist parties, and dwelling on his blunt, ever more political approach and prophetic style during this period, he declared in Corriere della Sera that the time had come to put the most prominent Christian Democrat figures on trial, where they would need to be shown walking in handcuffs and led by the carabinieri: he felt that this was the only way they could be removed from power.[52][53] Pasolini charged the Christian Democratic leadership with being "riddled with Mafia influence", covering up a number of bombings by neo-fascists, collaborating with the CIA, and working with the CIA and the Italian Armed Forces to prevent the rise of the left.[54][52]

Television linked to cultural alienation

Pasolini was angered by economic globalization and cultural domination of the North of Italy (around Milan) over other regions, especially the South.[citation needed] He felt this was accomplished through the power of television. A debate TV program recorded in 1971, where he denounced censorship, was not actually aired until the day following his murder in November 1975. In a PCI reform plan that he drew up in September and October 1975, among the desirable measures to be implemented, he cited the abolition of television.[53]

Others

 
Pasolini between Ferdinando Adornato and Walter Veltroni during an anti-francoist demonstration in Rome in September 1975

Pasolini opposed the gradual disappearance of Italy's minority languages by writing some of his poetry in Friulan, the regional language of his childhood. His opposition to the liberalization of abortion law made him unpopular on the left.[55]

After 1968, Pasolini engaged with the left-libertarian, liberal and anti-clerical Radical Party (Partito Radicale). He involved himself in polemics with party leader Marco Pannella,[52][56] supported the Party's initiative calling for eight referendums on various liberalising reforms[57] and had accepted an invitation to speak at the Party's congress before he was killed.[19] However, despite supporting the holding of a referendum on the decriminalisation of abortion, he was opposed to actually decriminalising it,[57] and he also criticised the Party's understanding of democratic activism as being a matter of equalising access to capitalist markets for the working class and other subaltern groups.[58] In an interview he gave shortly before his death, Pasolini stated he frequently disagreed with the Party.[59] He continued to give qualified support to the PCI:[52] in June 1975 he said that he would still vote for the PCI because he felt it was "an island where critical consciousness is always desperately defended: and where human behaviour has been still able to preserve the old dignity", and in his final months he became close to the Rome section of the Italian Communist Youth Federation. A Federation activist, Vincenzo Cerami, delivered the speech he was due to give at the Radical Party congress: in it, Pasolini confirmed his Marxism and his support for the PCI.[19]

Outside of Italy, Pasolini took a particular interest in the developing world, seeing parallels between life among the Italian underclass and in the third world, going so far as to declare that Bandung was the capital of three-quarters of the world and half of Italy. He was also positive about the New Left in the United States, predicting that it would "lead to an original form of non-Marxist Socialism" and writing that the movement reminded him of the Italian Resistance. Pasolini saw these two areas of struggle as inter-linked: after visiting Harlem he stated that "the core of the struggle for the Third World revolution is really America".[19]

Filmography

Year Title Credited as Role Notes
Writer Director Actor Soundtrack
1955 The River Girl    
1957 Nights of Cabiria    
1958 Young Husbands    
1959 Bad Girls Don't Cry    
1960 Long Night in 1943    
The Hunchback of Rome       Monco
La Dolce Vita    
Il bell'Antonio    
From a Roman Balcony    
1961 Accattone    
Girl in the Window    
1962 Mamma Roma    
1963 Ro.Go.Pa.G.     Segment: "La ricotta"
La rabbia     Documentary
1964 The Gospel According to St. Matthew    
1965 Love Meetings     The Interviewer Documentary
Location Hunting in Palestine     Himself Documentary
1966 The Hawks and the Sparrows      
1967 Requiescant         Don Juan
The Witches     Segment: "La Terra vista dalla Luna"
Oedipus Rex     High Priest
1968 Teorema    
Appunti per un film sull'India     Himself Documentary
Caprice Italian Style       Segment: "Cosa sono le nuvole?"
1969 Love and Anger     Segment: "La sequenza del fiore di carta"
Pigsty    
Medea    
1970 Notes Towards an African Orestes     Narrator (voice) Documentary
1971 The Decameron     Giotto's Pupil
1972 The Canterbury Tales   Geoffrey Chaucer
1973 Bawdy Tales    
1974 Arabian Nights    
1975 Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom    

Death

Pasolini was murdered and possibly assassinated on 2 November 1975 on the beach at Ostia.[60] He had been run over several times by his own car. Multiple bones were broken and his testicles were crushed by what appeared to be a metal bar.[61] An autopsy revealed that his body had been partially burned with gasoline after his death. The crime was long viewed as a Mafia-style revenge killing, one extremely unlikely to have been carried out by only one person. Pasolini was buried in Casarsa.

Giuseppe (Pino) Pelosi (1958–2017), then 17 years old, was caught driving Pasolini's car and confessed to the murder. He was convicted in 1976, initially with "unknown others", but this phrase was later removed from the verdict.[54][62] Twenty-nine years later, on 7 May 2005, Pelosi retracted his confession, which he said had been made under the threat of violence to his family. He claimed that three people "with a Southern accent" had committed the murder, insulting Pasolini as a "dirty communist".[63]

Other evidence uncovered in 2005 suggested that Pasolini had been murdered by an extortionist. Testimony by his friend Sergio Citti indicated that some of the rolls of film from Salò, or the 120 Days of Sodom had been stolen, and that Pasolini planned to meet with the thieves on 2 November 1975 after a visit to Stockholm, Sweden.[64][65][66][67] Citti's investigation uncovered additional evidence, including a bloody wooden stick and an eyewitness who said he saw a group of men pull Pasolini from the car.[54][62] The Rome police reopened the case after Pelosi's retraction, but the judges responsible for the investigation found that the new elements were insufficient to justify a continued inquiry.

Legacy

As a director, Pasolini created a picaresque neorealism, showing a sad reality. Many people did not want to see such portrayals in artistic work for public distribution. Mamma Roma (1962), featuring Anna Magnani and telling the story of a prostitute and her son, was an affront to the public ideals of morality of those times. His works, with their unequaled poetry applied to cruel realities, showed that such realities were less distant from most daily lives, and contributed to changes in the Italian psyche.[68]

Pasolini's work often engendered disapproval perhaps primarily because of his frequent focus on sexual behavior, and the contrast between what he presented and what was publicly sanctioned. While Pasolini's poetry often dealt with his gay love interests, this was not the only, or even main, theme. His interest in and use of Italian dialects should also be noted. Much of the poetry was about his highly revered mother. He depicted certain corners of the contemporary reality as few other poets could do. His poetry, which took some time before it was translated, was not as well known outside Italy as were his films. A collection in English was published in 1996.[69]

Pasolini also developed a philosophy of language mainly related to his studies on cinema.[70] This theoretical and critical activity was another hotly debated topic. His collected articles and responses are still available today.[68][71][72]

These studies can be considered as the foundation of his artistic point of view: he believed that the language—such as English, Italian, dialect or other—is a rigid system in which human thought is trapped. He also thought that the cinema is the "written" language of reality which, like any other written language, enables man to see things from the point of view of truth.[70]

His films won awards at the Berlin International Film Festival, Cannes Film Festival, Venice Film Festival, Italian National Syndicate for Film Journalists, Jussi Awards, Kinema Junpo Awards, International Catholic Film Office and New York Film Critics Circle. The Gospel According to St. Matthew was nominated for the United Nations Award of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts (BAFTA) in 1968.

In popular culture

Many documentaries and films have been released since the time of his murder, some of which include:

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The translated English title is used infrequently.

References

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  8. ^ Siciliano, Enzo (2014). Pasolini; Una vida tormentosa. Torres de Papel. p. 37. ISBN 978-84-943726-4-3.
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  29. ^ "Movie Review: Accattone". www.austinchronicle.com.
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  35. ^ "Festival de Cannes: Arabian Nights". festival-cannes.com. Retrieved 26 June 2011.
  36. ^ a b c d Siciliano, Enzo. 2014, 148
  37. ^ a b Siciliano, Enzo. 2014, 149
  38. ^ Siciliano, Enzo. 2014, 151
  39. ^ Ireland, Doug (4 August 2005). . LA Weekly. LA Weekly, LP. Archived from the original on 27 December 2013. Retrieved 29 August 2010.
  40. ^ "L'Amore impossibile tra PPP e Maria Callas nel film "L'isola di Medea" di Sergio Naitza". 7 August 2016.
  41. ^ "Pasolini e le donne-oggetto del piccolo schermo". 2 June 2017.
  42. ^ a b Siciliano, Enzo. 2014, 111–112
  43. ^ a b Pasolini, Pier Paolo (16 June 1968). "Il Pci ai giovani" [The PCI to Young People]. L'espresso (in Italian). Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  44. ^ Martelini, L. 2006, pp. 141–142
  45. ^ Martelini, L. 2006, p. 141
  46. ^ a b Wu Ming 1; Meer, Ayan (3 January 2016). "The Police vs. Pasolini, Pasolini vs. The Police". Tumblr. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  47. ^ Wu Ming 1 (29 October 2015). "La polizia contro Pasolini, Pasolini contro la polizia" [The Police vs. Pasolini, Pasolini vs. The Police]. internazionale.it (in Italian). Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  48. ^ Martelini, L. 2006, pp. 184–185
  49. ^ Siciliano, Enzo. 2014, p. 389
  50. ^ Bondavalli, Simona (2015). Fictions of Youth:Pier Paolo Pasolini, Adolescence, Fascisms. Toronto, ON: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 9781442627079.
  51. ^ Tarizzo, Davide (2021). Political grammars: the unconscious foundations of modern democracy. Square One: First Order Questions in the Humanities. Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. p. 163. ISBN 9781503615328.
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  53. ^ a b Siciliano, Enzo. 2014, pp. 388–389
  54. ^ a b c Vulliamy, Ed (24 August 2014). "Who really killed Pier Paolo Pasolini?". The Guardian. Retrieved 12 May 2017.
  55. ^ Liukkonen, Petri. . Books and Writers (kirjasto.sci.fi). Finland: Kuusankoski Public Library. Archived from the original on 7 March 2006.
  56. ^ "Conversation with Pier Paolo Pasolini". Radio Radicale. Retrieved 7 June 2018.
  57. ^ a b Pasolini, Pier Paolo (1 January 1975). [Abortion, Copulation]. Corriere della Sera. Archived from the original on 12 June 2018. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  58. ^ Rumble, Patrick (1996). Allegories of Contamination: Pier Paolo Pasolini's Trilogy of Life. Toronto Italian Studies. University of Toronto Press. p. 136. ISBN 9780802072191. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
  59. ^ Colombo, Furio; Battista, Anna (8 November 1975). "Siamo tutti in pericolo" [We are all in danger] (PDF). La Stampa. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
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Further reading

  • Aichele, George. "Translation as De-canonization: Matthew's Gospel According to Pasolini – filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini – Critical Essay." Cross Currents (2002).
  • Chiesa, Lorenzo. Pasolini and the Ugliness of Bodies. In: Polezzi, Loredana and Ross, Charlotte, eds. In Corpore: Bodies in Post-Unification Italy. Farleigh Dickinson University Press, Madison, pp. 208–227. ISBN 978-0-8386-4164-4.
  • Distefano, John. "Picturing Pasolini", Art Journal (1997).
  • Eloit, Audrene. "Oedipus Rex by Pier Paolo Pasolini The Palimpsest: Rewriting and the Creation of Pasolini's Cinematic Language." Literature Film Quarterly (2004).
  • Fabbro, Elena (ed.). Il mito greco nell'opera di Pasolini. Atti del Convegno Udine-Casarsa della Delizia, 24–26 ottobre 2002. Udine: Forum (2004); ISBN 88-8420-230-2
  • Forni, Kathleen. "A "Cinema of Poetry": What Pasolini Did to Chancer's Canterbury Tales." Literature Film Quarterly (2002).
  • Frisch, Anette. "Francesco Vezzolini: Pasolini Reloaded." Interview, Rutgers University Alexander Library, New Brunswick, NJ.
  • Ginzburg, Carlo, Safran, Yehuda, Sherer Daniel. "An Interview with Carlo Ginzburg, by Yehuda Safran and Daniel Sherer." Potlatch 5 (2022), special issue on Carlo Ginzburg. Discussion of Ginzburg's meeting with Pasolini and Elsa Morante and Pasolini's interest in Ginzburg's work as a historian of Friuli.
  • Green, Martin. "The Dialectic Adaptation."
  • Greene, Naomi. Pier Paolo Pasolini: Cinema as Heresy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP, 1990.
  • Hamza, Agon. Althusser and Pasolini - Philosophy, Marxism and Film. Palgrave, NY (2016); ISBN 978-1-137-56651-5
  • Meyer-Krahmer, Benjamin. "Transmediality and Pastiche as Techniques in Pasolini’s Art Production", in: P.P.P. – Pier Paolo Pasolini and death, eds. Bernhart Schwenk, Michael Semff, Ostfildern 2005, pp. 109–118
  • Passannanti, Erminia, Il corpo & il potere. Salò o le 120 giornate di Sodoma di Pier Paolo Pasolini, Prima edizione, Troubador, Leicester, 2004; Seconda Edizione, Joker, Savona 2008.
  • Passannanti, Erminia, Il Cristo del'Eresia. Pier Paolo Pasolini. Cinema e Censura, Joker, Savona 2009.
  • Passannanti, Erminia, La ricotta. Il Sacro trasgredito. Il cinema di Pier Paolo Pasolini e la censura religiosa, 2009 also published in "Italy on Screen" (Peter Lang Ed., 2011). The book contains excerpts from the 1962 court trial.
  • Pugh, Tison. "Chaucerian Fabliaux, Cinematic Fabliau: Pier Paolo Pasolini's I racconti di Canterbury", Literature Film Quarterly (2004).
  • Restivo, Angelo. The Cinema of Economic Miracles: Visuality and Modernization in the Italian Art Film. London: Duke UP, 2002.
  • Rohdie, Sam. The Passion of Pier Paolo Pasolini. Bloomington, Indiana: Indiana UP, 1995.
  • Rumble, Patrick A. Allegories of contamination: Pier Paolo Pasolini's Trilogy of life. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996.
  • Schwartz, Barth D. Pasolini Requiem. 1st ed. New York: Pantheon Books, 1992.
  • Siciliano, Enzo. Pasolini: A Biography. Trans. John Shepley. New York: Random House, 1982.
  • Thompson, N.S., Pier Paolo Pasolini: Poet and Prophet, in Murray, Glen (ed.), Cencrastus No. 7, Winter 1981 - 82, pp. 30 – 32.
  • Tusa, Giovanbattista. "The Pasolinian Century", in: Hildebrandt, Toni and Tusa, Giovanbattista (eds.), PPPP. Pier Paolo Pasolini Philosopher. Mimesis International, 2022, pp. 317–323.
  • Viano, Maurizio. A Certain Realism: Making Use of Pasolini's Film Theory and Practice. Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993.
  • Willimon, William H. "Faithful to the script", Christian Century (2004).

External links

  • Pier Paolo Pasolini at IMDb
  • Interview with Jonas Mekas in Bomb Magazine 18 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine
  • Pasolini on Filmgalerie451 16 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine
  • Piers Paolo Pasolini, Italian Website with Extensive Commentary
  • "Pier Paolo Pasolini", Senses of Cinema
  • BBC News Report on the Reopening of the Murder Case
  • Guy Flatley: "The Atheist Who Was Obsessed with God" 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine, MovieCrazed
  • , ZMag
  • Pier Paolo Pasolini Poems – Original Italian Text.
  • Video (in Italian): Pasolini on the Destructive Impact of Television on YouTube (Interrupted and Half-Censored by Enzo Biagi)
  • Italian Website dedicated to Pasolini
  • Pasolini's Second to Last Interview, Long Believed to Have Been Lost
  • "Pasolini’s Legacy: A Sprawl of Brutality", Dennis Lim, The New York Times, 26 December 2012

pier, paolo, pasolini, pasolini, redirects, here, other, people, with, that, surname, pasolini, surname, 2014, film, pasolini, film, italian, ˈpjɛr, ˈpaːolo, pazoˈliːni, march, 1922, november, 1975, italian, poet, filmmaker, writer, intellectual, also, disting. Pasolini redirects here For other people with that surname see Pasolini surname For the 2014 film see Pasolini film Pier Paolo Pasolini Italian ˈpjɛr ˈpaːolo pazoˈliːni 5 March 1922 2 November 1975 was an Italian poet filmmaker writer and intellectual who also distinguished himself as a journalist novelist translator playwright visual artist and actor He is considered one of the defining public intellectuals in 20th century Italy influential both as an artist and a political figure 1 2 3 4 Pier Paolo PasoliniPasolini in 1964Born 1922 03 05 5 March 1922Bologna Emilia ItalyDied2 November 1975 1975 11 02 aged 53 Ostia Lazio ItalyOccupationFilm directornovelistpoetintellectualjournalistAlma materUniversity of BolognaNotable worksFilms AccattoneMamma RomaThe Gospel According to St MatthewTeoremaArabian NightsSalo or the 120 Days of Sodom Literary works Ragazzi di vitaUna vita violentaSignatureA controversial personality due to his straightforward style Pasolini s legacy remains contentious Openly gay and a strong advocate for Christian values in his youth he also became an avowed Marxist shortly after the end of World War II 5 while voicing strong criticism of petty bourgeois values and the emerging consumerism in Italy 6 juxtaposing socio political polemics with a critical examination of taboo sexual matters A prominent protagonist of the Roman cultural scene of the post war period he was an established major figure in European literature and cinema Pasolini s unsolved murder at Ostia in November 1975 during an altercation with a young male prostitute prompted an outcry in Italy and its circumstances continue to be a matter of heated debate Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life 1 2 Early poetry 1 3 Rome 2 Career 2 1 Writing 2 2 Narrative 2 3 Poetry 2 4 Essays 2 5 Theatre 2 6 Films 2 7 Episodes in omnibus films 2 8 Documentaries 3 Personal life 4 Political views 4 1 Relationship with the Italian Communist Party 4 2 1968 protests 4 3 The rising society of consumption 4 4 Strong criticism of Christian Democracy 4 5 Television linked to cultural alienation 4 6 Others 5 Filmography 6 Death 7 Legacy 8 In popular culture 9 See also 10 Notes 11 References 12 Further reading 13 External linksBiography EditEarly life Edit Pier Paolo Pasolini was born in Bologna traditionally one of the most politically leftist of Italy s cities He was the son of elementary school teacher Susanna Colussi named after her Polish Jewish great grandmother 7 and Carlo Alberto Pasolini a lieutenant in the Royal Italian Army they had married in 1921 Pasolini was born in 1922 and named after a paternal uncle His family moved to Conegliano in 1923 then to Belluno in 1925 where their second son Guidalberto was born In 1926 Pasolini s father was arrested for gambling debts His mother moved with the children to her family s home in Casarsa della Delizia in the Friuli region In that same year his father first detained then identified Anteo Zamboni as the would be assassin of Benito Mussolini following his assassination attempt citation needed Carlo Alberto was persuaded of the virtues of fascism 8 Pasolini began writing poems at age seven inspired by the natural beauty of Casarsa One of his early influences was the work of Arthur Rimbaud His father was transferred to Idria in the Julian March now in Slovenia in 1931 9 in 1933 they moved again to Cremona in Lombardy and later to Scandiano and Reggio Emilia Pasolini found it difficult to adapt to all these dislocations though he enlarged his poetry and literature readings Dostoyevsky Tolstoy Shakespeare Coleridge Novalis and left behind the religious fervour of his early years In the Reggio Emilia high school he met his first true friend Luciano Serra The two met again in Bologna where Pasolini spent seven years completing high school Here he cultivated new passions including football With other friends including Ermes Parini Franco Farolfi Elio Meli he formed a group dedicated to literary discussions In 1939 Pasolini graduated and entered the Literature College of the University of Bologna discovering new themes such as philology and aesthetics of figurative arts He also frequented the local cinema club Pasolini always showed his friends a virile and strong exterior totally hiding his interior turmoil In his poems of this period Pasolini started to include fragments in Friulan a minority language he did not speak but learned after he had begun to write poetry in it I learnt it as a sort of mystic act of love a kind of felibrisme like the Provencal poets 10 In 1943 he founded with fellow students the Academiuta della lenga furlana Academy of the Friulan Language 11 As a young adult Pasolini identified as an atheist 12 Early poetry Edit Pasolini in his young years In 1942 Pasolini published at his own expense a collection of poems in Friulan Versi a Casarsa which he had written at the age of eighteen The work was noted and appreciated by such intellectuals and critics as Gianfranco Contini Alfonso Gatto and Antonio Russi Pasolini s pictures had also been well received He was chief editor of a magazine called Il Setaccio The Sieve but was fired after conflicts with the director who was aligned with the Fascist regime A trip to Germany helped him also to perceive the provincial status of Italian culture in that period These experiences led Pasolini to revise his opinion about the cultural politics of Fascism and to switch gradually to a Communist position Pasolini s family took shelter in Casarsa considered a more tranquil place to wait for the conclusion of the Second World War a decision common among Italian military families Here he joined a group of other young enthusiasts of the Friulan language who wanted to give Casarsa Friulan a status equal to that of Udine the official regional standard From May 1944 they issued a magazine entitled Stroligut di ca da l aga In the meantime Casarsa suffered Allied bombardments and forced enlistments by the Italian Social Republic as well as partisan activity Pasolini tried to distance himself from these events Starting in October 1943 Pasolini his mother and other colleagues taught students unable to reach the schools in Pordenone or Udine This educational workshop was considered illegal and broke up in February 1944 13 It was here that Pasolini had his first experience of homosexual attraction to one of his students citation needed His brother Guido aged 19 joined the Party of Action and their Osoppo Friuli Brigade taking to the bush near Slovenia On 12 February 1945 Guido was killed in an ambush planted by Italian Garibaldine partisans serving in the lines of Josip Broz Tito s Yugoslavian guerrillas This devastated Pasolini and his mother 14 Six days after his brother s death Pasolini and others founded the Friulan Language Academy Academiuta di lenga furlana Meanwhile on account of Guido s death Pasolini s father returned to Italy from his detention period in November 1945 settling in Casarsa That same month Pasolini graduated from university after completing a final thesis about the work of Giovanni Pascoli 1855 1912 an Italian poet and classical scholar 15 In 1946 Pasolini published a small poetry collection I Diarii The Diaries with the Academiuta In October he traveled to Rome The following May he began the so called Quaderni Rossi handwritten in old school exercise books with red covers He completed a drama in Italian Il Cappellano His poetry collection I Pianti The cries was also published by the Academiuta Rome Edit In January 1950 Pasolini moved to Rome with his mother Susanna to start a new life He was acquitted of two indecency charges in 1950 and 1952 16 After one year sheltered in a maternal uncle s flat next to Piazza Mattei Pasolini and his 59 year old mother moved to a run down suburb called Rebibbia next to a prison living there for three years he transferred his Friulan countryside inspiration to this Roman suburb one of the infamous borgate where poor proletarian immigrants lived often in horrendous sanitary and social conditions Instead of asking for help from other writers Pasolini preferred to go his own way Pasolini found a job working in the Cinecitta film studios and sold his books in the bancarelle sidewalk shops of Rome In 1951 with the help of the Abruzzese language poet Vittorio Clemente he found a job as a secondary school teacher in Ciampino just outside the capital He had a long commute involving two train changes and earned a meagre salary of 27 000 lire Pasolini with Federico Fellini in the late 1950s Pasolini with Prime Minister Aldo Moro at the Venice Film Festival in 1964 Pasolini with Toto in 1966Career EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed November 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Writing Edit In 1954 Pasolini who now worked for the literary section of Cinecitta left his teaching job and moved to the Monteverde quarter At this point his cousin Graziella moved in They also accommodated Pasolini s ailing cirrhotic father Carlo Alberto who died in 1958 Pasolini published La meglio gioventu his first important collection of Friulan poems His first novel Ragazzi di vita English Hustlers which dealt with the Roman lumpenproletariat was published in 1955 The work had great success but was poorly received by the PCI establishment and most important by the Italian government It initiated a lawsuit for obscenity against Pasolini and his editor Garzanti 17 Although exonerated Pasolini became a target of insinuations especially in the tabloid press In 1955 together with Francesco Leonetti Roberto Roversi and others Pasolini edited and published a poetry magazine called Officina The magazine closed in 1959 after fourteen issues That year he also published his second novel Una vita violenta which unlike his first was embraced by the Communist cultural sphere he subsequently wrote a column titled Dialoghi con Passolini meaning Passolini in Dialogue for the PCI magazine Vie Nuove from May 1960 to September 1965 18 which were published in book form in 1977 as Le belle bandiere The Beautiful Flags 19 In the late 1960s Pasolini edited an advice column in the weekly news magazine Tempo 20 In 1966 Pasolini wrote a screenplay for a never produced film about the apostle Saint Paul which he subsequently revised 21 Pasolini s screenplay was intended to depict Paul as a modern contemporary without modifying any of Paul s statements 22 In Pasolini s story Paul is a fascist Vichy France collaborator who becomes illuminated while traveling to Franco s Spain and joins the antifascist French resistance an event which serves as the modern analogue for the Pauline conversion 23 The screenplay follows Paul as he preaches resistance in Italy Spain Germany and New York where he is betrayed arrested and executed 24 As philosopher Alain Badiou writes The most surprising thing in all this is the way in which Paul s texts are transplanted unaltered and with an almost unfathomable naturalness into the situations in which Pasolini deploys them war fascism American capitalism the petty debates of Italian intelligentsia 25 In 1970 Pasolini bought an old castle near Viterbo several miles north of Rome where he began to write his last novel Il Petrolio where he denounced obscure dealing in the highest levels of government and the corporate world Eni CIA the Mafia etc 26 The novel documentary was left incomplete at his death In 1972 Pasolini started to collaborate with the extreme left association Lotta Continua producing a documentary 12 dicembre concerning the Piazza Fontana bombing The following year he began a collaboration for Italy s most renowned newspaper Il Corriere della Sera At the beginning of 1975 Garzanti published a collection of his critical essays Scritti corsari Corsair Writings Narrative Edit Ragazzi di vita The Ragazzi 1955 Una vita violenta A Violent Life 1959 Il sogno di una cosa 1962 Amado Mio Atti Impuri 1982 originally written in 1948 Ali dagli occhi azzurri 1965 Teorema 1968 Reality The Poets Encyclopedia 1979 Petrolio 1992 incomplete Poetry Edit La meglio gioventu 1954 Le ceneri di Gramsci 1957 L usignolo della chiesa cattolica 1958 La religione del mio tempo 1961 Poesia in forma di rosa 1964 Trasumanar e organizzar 1971 La nuova gioventu 1975 Roman Poems Pocket Poets No 41 1986 The Selected Poetry of Pier Paolo Pasolini A Bilingual Edition 2014 Essays Edit Passione e ideologia 1960 Canzoniere italiano poesia popolare italiana 1960 Empirismo eretico 1972 Lettere luterane 1976 Le belle bandiere 1977 Descrizioni di descrizioni 1979 Il caos 1979 La pornografia e noiosa 1979 Scritti corsari 1975 Lettere 1940 1954 Letters 1940 54 1986 Theatre Edit Orgia 1968 Porcile 1968 Calderon 1973 Affabulazione 1977 Pilade 1977 Bestia da stile 1977 Films Edit In 1957 together with Sergio Citti Pasolini collaborated on Federico Fellini s film Le notti di Cabiria writing dialogue for the Roman dialect sections Fellini also asked him to work on dialogue for some episodes of La dolce vita 27 Pasolini made his debut as an actor in Il gobbo in 1960 and co wrote Long Night in 1943 Along with Ragazzi di vita he had his celebrated poem Le ceneri di Gramsci published where Pasolini voiced tormented tensions between reason and heart as well as the existing ideological dialectics within communism a debate over artistic freedom socialist realism and commitment 28 Pasolini s first film as director and screenwriter was Accattone in 1961 again set in Rome s marginal quarters a story of pimps prostitutes and thieves that contrasted with Italy s postwar economic reforms Although Pasolini tried to distance himself from neorealism it is considered to be a kind of second neorealism Nick Barbaro a critic writing in the Austin Chronicle stated it may be the grimmest movie he has ever seen 29 The film aroused controversy and scandal with conservatives demanded stricter censorship by the government In 1963 the episode La ricotta included in the anthology film RoGoPaG was censored and Pasolini was tried for offense to the Italian state and religion 30 During this period Pasolini frequently traveled abroad in 1961 with Elsa Morante and Alberto Moravia to India where he went again seven years later in 1962 to Sudan and Kenya in 1963 to Ghana Nigeria Guinea Jordan and Israel where he shot the documentary Sopralluoghi in Palestina In 1970 he traveled again to Africa to shoot another documentary Appunti per un Orestiade africana Pasolini was a member of the jury at the 16th Berlin International Film Festival in 1966 31 In 1967 in Venice he met and interviewed American poet Ezra Pound 32 They discussed the Italian movement neoavanguardia and Pasolini read some verses from the Italian translation of Pound s Pisan Cantos 32 The late 1960s and early 1970s were the era of the so called student movement Pasolini though acknowledging the students ideological motivations and referring to himself as a Catholic Marxist 33 thought them anthropologically middle class and therefore destined to fail in their attempts at revolutionary change Regarding the Battle of Valle Giulia which took place in Rome in March 1968 he said that he sympathized with the police as they were children of the poor while the young militants were exponents of what he called left wing fascism citation needed His film that year Teorema was shown at the Venice Film Festival in a hot political climate Pasolini had proclaimed that the festival would be managed by the directors citation needed He wrote and directed the black and white The Gospel According to Matthew 1964 It is based on scripture but adapted by Pasolini and he is credited as writer Jesus a barefoot peasant is played by Enrique Irazoqui In his 1966 film Uccellacci e uccellini literally Bad Birds and Little Birds but translated in English as The Hawks and the Sparrows a picaresque and at the same time mystic fable Pasolini hired great Italian comedian Toto to work with Ninetto Davoli the director s lover at the time and one of his preferred naif actors It was a unique opportunity for Toto to demonstrate that he was a great dramatic actor as well citation needed In Teorema Theorem 1968 starring Terence Stamp as a mysterious stranger Pasolini depicted the sexual coming apart of a bourgeois family Variations of this theme were later done by Francois Ozon in Sitcom Joe Swanberg in The Zone and Takashi Miike in Visitor Q citation needed Later films centered on sex laden folklore such as Boccaccio s Decameron 1971 Chaucer s The Canterbury Tales 1972 and Il fiore delle mille e una notte literally The Flower of 1001 Nights released in English as Arabian Nights 1974 These films are usually grouped as the Trilogy of Life While basing them on classics Pasolini wrote the screenplays and took sole writing credit This trilogy prompted largely by Pasolini s attempt to show the secular sacredness of the body against man made social controls and especially against the venal hypocrisy of religious state indeed the religious characters in The Canterbury Tales are shown as pious but amorally grasping fools were an effort at representing a state of natural sexual innocence essential to the true nature of free humanity Alternately playfully bawdy and poetically sensuous wildly populous subtly symbolic and visually exquisite the films were wildly popular in Italy and remain perhaps his most enduringly popular works Yet despite the fact that the trilogy as a whole is considered by many as a masterpiece Pasolini later reviled his own creation on account of the many soft core imitations of these three films in Italy that happened afterwards on account of the very same popularity he wound up deeply uncomfortable with He believed that a bastardisation of his vision had taken place that amounted to a commoditisation of the body he had tried to deny in his trilogy in the first place The disconsolation this provided is seen as one of the primary reasons for his final film Salo in which humans are not only seen as commodities under authoritarian control but are viewed merely as ciphers for its whims without the free vitality of the figures in the Trilogy of Life His final work Salo o le 120 giornate di Sodoma Salo or the 120 Days of Sodom 1975 exceeded what most viewers could accept at the time in its explicit scenes of sexual perversity and intensely sadistic violence Based on the novel 120 Days of Sodom by Marquis de Sade it is considered Pasolini s most controversial film In May 2006 Time Out s Film Guide named it the Most Controversial Film of all time Salo was intended as the first film of his Trilogy of Death followed by an aborted biopic film about Gilles de Rais All titles listed below were written and directed by Pasolini unless stated otherwise Year Title Adapted from NotesOriginal In English1961 Accattone Accattone Pasolini s novel Una vita violenta Screenplay written in collaboration with Sergio Citti 1962 Mamma Roma Mamma Roma Screenplay by Pasolini with additional dialogue by Citti 1964 Il vangelo secondo Matteo The Gospel According to St Matthew The Gospel of Matthew Won Silver Lion at the 25th Venice International Film Festival United Nations Award at the 21st British Academy Film Awards 1966 Uccellacci e uccellini The Hawks and the Sparrows1967 Edipo re Oedipus Rex Oedipus Rex by Sophocles Acted in the film as High Priest1968 Teorema Theorem a Pasolini s novel Teorema was also published in 1968 1969 Porcile Pigsty1969 Medea Medea Medea by Euripides 1971 Il Decameron The Decameron The Decameron by Giovanni Boccaccio Won the Silver Bear at the 21st Berlin International Film Festival 5 1972 I racconti di Canterbury The Canterbury Tales The Canterbury Tales by Geoffrey Chaucer Won the Golden Bear at the 22nd Berlin International Film Festival 34 Acted in the film as Allievo di Giotto 1974 Il fiore delle Mille e una Notte A Thousand and One Nights Arabian Nights Screenplay written in collaboration with Dacia Maraini Won the Grand Prix Special Prize at the 1974 Cannes Film Festival 35 Acted in the film as Chaucer 1975 Salo o le 120 giornate di Sodoma Salo or the 120 Days of Sodom Les 120 journees de Sodome ou l ecole du libertinage by the Marquis de Sade Screenplay written in collaboration with Citti with extended quotes from Roland Barthes Sade Fourier Loyola and Pierre Klossowski s Sade mon prochain Episodes in omnibus films Edit La ricotta in RoGoPaG 1963 First segment of La rabbia 1963 La Terra vista dalla Luna in Le streghe 1967 Che cosa sono le nuvole in Capriccio all Italiana 1968 La sequenza del fiore di carta in Amore e rabbia 1969 Documentaries Edit Comizi d amore 1965 Sopralluoghi in Palestina per Il Vangelo secondo Matteo 1965 Appunti per un film sull India 1968 Appunti per un romanzo dell immondizia 1970 Appunti per un Orestiade Africana 1970 Le mura di Sana a 1971 12 Dicembre 1972 1972 Pasolini e la forma della citta 1974 Personal life EditA small scandal broke out during a local festival in Ramuscello in September 1949 Someone informed Cordovado the local sergeant of the carabinieri of sexual conduct masturbation by Pasolini with three youngsters aged sixteen and younger after dancing and drinking 36 Cordovado summoned the boys parents who hesitantly refused to file charges despite Cordovado s urging Cordovado nevertheless drew up a report and the informer elaborated publicly on his accusations sparking a public uproar A judge in San Vito al Tagliamento charged Pasolini with corruption of minors and obscene acts in public places 36 16 He and the 16 year old were both indicted 37 The next month when questioned Pasolini would not deny the facts but talked of a literary and erotic drive and cited Andre Gide the 1947 Nobel Prize for Literature laureate Cordovado informed his superiors and the regional press stepped in 37 According to Pasolini the Christian Democrats instigated the entire affair to smear his name the Christian Democrats pulled the strings He was fired from his job in Valvasone 16 and was expelled from the PCI by the party s Udine section which he considered a betrayal He addressed a critical letter to the head of the section his friend Ferdinando Mautino and claimed he was being subject to a tacticism of the PCI In the party the expulsion was opposed by Teresa Degan Pasolini s colleague in education He also wrote her a letter admitting his regret for being such a naif even indecently so 36 Pasolini s parents reacted angrily and the situation in the family also became untenable 38 In late 1949 he decided to move to Rome along with his mother seeking to start a new life settling down in the outskirts of Rome In 1963 at the age of 41 Pasolini met the great love of his life 15 year old Ninetto Davoli whom he later cast in his 1966 film Uccellacci e uccellini literally Bad Birds and Little Birds but translated in English as The Hawks and the Sparrows Pasolini became the youth s mentor and friend 39 However there were some important women in Pasolini s life with whom Pasolini shared a feeling of profound and unique friendship in particular Laura Betti and Maria Callas Dacia Maraini a famous Italian writer said of Callas behavior towards Pasolini She used to follow him everywhere even to Africa She hoped to convert him to heterosexuality and to marriage 40 Pasolini was also sensible to the problematics related to the new role ascribed to women through the Italian media stating in a 1972 interview that women are not slot machines 41 Political views Edit Pasolini visiting Antonio Gramsci s tomb Relationship with the Italian Communist Party Edit Piazza del Popolo in San Vito al Tagliamento By October 1945 the political status of the Friuli region became a matter of contention between different political factions On 30 October Pasolini joined the pro devolution association Patrie tal Friul founded in Udine Pasolini wanted a Friuli based on its tradition attached to its Christianity but intent on civic and social progress as opposed to those advocates of regional autonomy who wanted to preserve their privileges based on immobilism 42 He also criticized the Italian Communist Party PCI for its opposition to devolution and its preference for Italian centralism Pasolini founded the party Movimento Popolare Friulano but ended up quitting upon realizing that it was being used by the Christian Democratic Party to counter the Yugoslavs who in turn were attempting to annex large swaths of the Friuli region 42 On 26 January 1947 Pasolini wrote a declaration that was published on the front page of the newspaper Liberta In our opinion we think that currently only Communism is able to provide a new culture It generated controversy partly due to the fact he was still not a member of the PCI Pasolini planned to extend the work of the Academiuta to the literature of other Romance languages and met exiled Catalan poet Carles Cardo He took part in several demonstrations after joining the PCI In May 1949 he attended the Peace Congress in Paris Observing the struggles of workers and peasants and watching the clashes of protesters with Italian police he began to conceive his first novel During this period while holding a position as a teacher in a secondary school he stood out in the local Communist Party section as a skillful writer defying the notion that communism was contrary to Christian values Local Christian Democrats took notice In the summer of 1949 Pasolini was told by a priest to renounce politics or lose his teaching position Similarly after some posters were put up in Udine Giambattista Caron a Christian Democrat deputy warned Pasolini s cousin Nico Naldini that Pasolini should abandon communist propaganda to prevent pernicious reactions 36 1968 protests Edit Pasolini generated heated public discussion with controversial analyses of public affairs For instance during the disorders of 1968 autonomist university students were carrying on a guerrilla style uprising against the police in the streets of Rome and all the leftist forces declared their complete support for the students describing the disorders as a civil fight of proletariat against the system Pasolini however made comments that have frequently been interpreted as the opinion that he was with the police or more precisely with the policemen citation needed The main source regarding Pasolini s views of the student movement is his poem Il PCI ai giovani The PCI to Young People written after the Battle of Valle Giulia Addressing the students he tells them that unlike the international news media which has been reporting on them he will not flatter them He points out that they are the children of the bourgeoisie Avete facce di figli di papa Vi odio come odio i vostri papa You have the faces of daddy s boys I hate you like I hate your dads before stating Quando ieri a Valle Giulia avete fatto a botte coi poliziotti io simpatizzavo coi poliziotti When you and the policemen were throwing punches yesterday at Valle Giulia I was sympathising with the policemen He explained that this sympathy was because the policemen were figli di poveri children of the poor The poem highlights the aspect of generational struggle within the bourgeoisie represented by the student movement Stampa e Corriere della Sera News week e Monde vi leccano il culo Siete i loro figli la loro speranza il loro futuro Se mai si tratta di una lotta intestina Stampa and Corriere della Sera Newsweek and Le Monde they kiss your arse You are their children their hope their future If anything it s in fighting 43 The 1968 revolt was seen by Pasolini as an internal benign reform of the establishment in Italy since the protesters were part of the petite bourgeoisie 44 The poem also implied a class hypocrisy on the part of the establishment towards the protesters asking whether young workers would be treated similarly if they behaved in the same way Occupate le universita ma dite che la stessa idea venga a dei giovani operai E allora Corriere della Sera e Stampa Newsweek e Monde avranno tanta sollecitudine nel cercar di comprendere i loro problemi La polizia si limitera a prendere un po di botte dentro una fabbrica occupata Ma soprattutto come potrebbe concedersi un giovane operaio di occupare una fabbrica senza morire di fame dopo tre giorni Occupy the universities but say that the same idea comes to young workers So Corriere della Sera and Stampa Newsweek and Le Monde will have so much care in trying to understand their problems Will the police just get a bit of a fight inside an occupied factory But above all how could a young worker be allowed to occupy a factory without dying of hunger after three days 43 Pasolini suggested that the police were the true proletariat sent to fight for a poor salary and for reasons which they could not understand against pampered boys of their same age because they had not had the fortune of being able to study referring to poliziotti figli di proletari meridionali picchiati da figli di papa in vena di bravate lit policemen sons of proletarian southerners beaten up by arrogant daddy s boys He found that the policemen were but the outer layer of the real power e g the judiciary 45 Pasolini was not alien to courts and trials During all his life Pasolini was frequently entangled in up to 33 lawsuits filed against him variously charged with public disgrace foul language obscenity pornography contempt of religion contempt of the state etc for which he was always eventually acquitted However the conventional interpretation of Pasolini s position has been challenged in an article published in 2015 Wu Ming argues that Pasolini s statements need to be understood in the context of Pasolini s self confessed hatred of the bourgeoisie which had persecuted him for so long He notes that Il PCI ai giovani states that We i e Pasolini and the students are obviously in agreement against the police institution and that the poem portrays policemen as dehumanised by their work and that although the battles between students and the police were fights between the rich and the poor Pasolini concedes that the students were on the side of reason whilst the police were in the wrong Wu Ming suggests that Pasolini s intent was to express scepticism regarding the idea of students being a revolutionary force contending that only the working class could make a revolution and that revolutionary students should join the PCI Furthermore he cites a column by Pasolini which was published in the magazine Tempo later that year which described the student movement along with the wartime resistance as the Italian people s only two democratic revolutionary experiences That year he also wrote in support of the Communist Party s proposals for disarming the police arguing that this would create a break in the psychology of policemen It would lead to the sudden collapse of that false idea of himself ascribed to him by Power which has programmed him like a robot Pasolini s polemics were aimed at goading protesters into re thinking their revolt and did not stop him from contributing to the autonomist Lotta continua movement who he described as extremists yes maybe fanatic and insolently boorish from a cultural point of view but they push their luck and that is precisely why I think they deserve to be supported We must want too much to obtain a little 46 47 The rising society of consumption Edit Pasolini was particularly concerned about the class of the subproletariat which he portrayed in Accattone and to which he felt both humanly and artistically drawn He observed that the kind of purity which he perceived in the pre industrial popular culture was rapidly vanishing a process that he named la scomparsa delle lucciole lit the disappearance of the fireflies The joie de vivre of boys was being rapidly replaced with more bourgeois ambitions such as a house and a family He was critical of those leftists who held a traditional and never admitted hatred against lumpenproletariats and poor populations in 1958 he called on the PCI to become the party of the poor people the party we may say of the lumpenproletarians 19 Pasolini s stance finds its roots in the belief that a Copernican change was taking place in the Italian society and the world Linked to that very idea he was also an ardent critic of consumismo i e consumerism which he felt had rapidly destroyed Italian society since the mid 1960s to the early 1970s He described the coprophagia scenes in Salo as a comment on the processed food industry As he saw it the society of consumerism neocapitalism and the new fascism had thus expanded an alienation homogenization and centralization that the former clerical fascism had not managed to achieve so bringing about an anthropological change 48 That change is related to the loss of humanism and the expansion of productivity as central to the human condition which he despised He found that new culture was degrading and vulgar 49 In one interview he said I hate with particular vehemency the current power the power of 1975 which is a power that manipulates bodies in a horrible way a manipulation that has nothing to envy to that performed by Himmler or Hitler According to Pasolini scholar Simona Bondavalli Pasolini s definition of neo capitalism as a new fascism enforced a uniform conformity without resorting to coercive means As Pasolini put it No Fascist centralism succeeded in doing what the centralism of consumer culture did 50 Philosopher Davide Tarizzo summarized Pasolini s position In his view both old and new fascisms undermine the fundamentals of modern democracy Yet new fascism does not do this by absolutizing popular sovereignty at the expense of individual rights New fascism celebrates our freedoms and absolutizes human rights to the detriment of our sense of belonging to a social political community Therefore old and new fascisms strive to accomplish democracy which is the restless ambition of fascism via opposite routes In the former case the result is the birth of political subjects such as the master race supported by a revelatory political grammar In the latter case the result is the birth of an altogether different subject which is no longer a political actor properly speaking but a passive anonymous entity the human population 51 Strong criticism of Christian Democracy Edit Pasolini in 1975 Pasolini saw some continuity between the Fascist era and the post war political system which was led by the Christian Democrats describing the latter as clerico fascism due to its use of the state as a repressive instrument and its manipulation of power he saw the conditions among the Roman subproletariat in the borgate as an example of this being marginalised and segregated socially and geographically as they were under Fascism and in conflict with a criminal police force 46 He also blamed the Christian Democrats for assimilating the values of consumer capitalism contributing to what he saw as the erosion of human values 52 The 1975 regional elections saw the rise of the leftist parties and dwelling on his blunt ever more political approach and prophetic style during this period he declared in Corriere della Sera that the time had come to put the most prominent Christian Democrat figures on trial where they would need to be shown walking in handcuffs and led by the carabinieri he felt that this was the only way they could be removed from power 52 53 Pasolini charged the Christian Democratic leadership with being riddled with Mafia influence covering up a number of bombings by neo fascists collaborating with the CIA and working with the CIA and the Italian Armed Forces to prevent the rise of the left 54 52 Television linked to cultural alienation Edit Pasolini was angered by economic globalization and cultural domination of the North of Italy around Milan over other regions especially the South citation needed He felt this was accomplished through the power of television A debate TV program recorded in 1971 where he denounced censorship was not actually aired until the day following his murder in November 1975 In a PCI reform plan that he drew up in September and October 1975 among the desirable measures to be implemented he cited the abolition of television 53 Others Edit Pasolini between Ferdinando Adornato and Walter Veltroni during an anti francoist demonstration in Rome in September 1975 Pasolini opposed the gradual disappearance of Italy s minority languages by writing some of his poetry in Friulan the regional language of his childhood His opposition to the liberalization of abortion law made him unpopular on the left 55 After 1968 Pasolini engaged with the left libertarian liberal and anti clerical Radical Party Partito Radicale He involved himself in polemics with party leader Marco Pannella 52 56 supported the Party s initiative calling for eight referendums on various liberalising reforms 57 and had accepted an invitation to speak at the Party s congress before he was killed 19 However despite supporting the holding of a referendum on the decriminalisation of abortion he was opposed to actually decriminalising it 57 and he also criticised the Party s understanding of democratic activism as being a matter of equalising access to capitalist markets for the working class and other subaltern groups 58 In an interview he gave shortly before his death Pasolini stated he frequently disagreed with the Party 59 He continued to give qualified support to the PCI 52 in June 1975 he said that he would still vote for the PCI because he felt it was an island where critical consciousness is always desperately defended and where human behaviour has been still able to preserve the old dignity and in his final months he became close to the Rome section of the Italian Communist Youth Federation A Federation activist Vincenzo Cerami delivered the speech he was due to give at the Radical Party congress in it Pasolini confirmed his Marxism and his support for the PCI 19 Outside of Italy Pasolini took a particular interest in the developing world seeing parallels between life among the Italian underclass and in the third world going so far as to declare that Bandung was the capital of three quarters of the world and half of Italy He was also positive about the New Left in the United States predicting that it would lead to an original form of non Marxist Socialism and writing that the movement reminded him of the Italian Resistance Pasolini saw these two areas of struggle as inter linked after visiting Harlem he stated that the core of the struggle for the Third World revolution is really America 19 Filmography EditYear Title Credited as Role NotesWriter Director Actor Soundtrack1955 The River Girl 1957 Nights of Cabiria 1958 Young Husbands 1959 Bad Girls Don t Cry 1960 Long Night in 1943 The Hunchback of Rome MoncoLa Dolce Vita Il bell Antonio From a Roman Balcony 1961 Accattone Girl in the Window 1962 Mamma Roma 1963 Ro Go Pa G Segment La ricotta La rabbia Documentary1964 The Gospel According to St Matthew 1965 Love Meetings The Interviewer DocumentaryLocation Hunting in Palestine Himself Documentary1966 The Hawks and the Sparrows 1967 Requiescant Don JuanThe Witches Segment La Terra vista dalla Luna Oedipus Rex High Priest1968 Teorema Appunti per un film sull India Himself DocumentaryCaprice Italian Style Segment Cosa sono le nuvole 1969 Love and Anger Segment La sequenza del fiore di carta Pigsty Medea 1970 Notes Towards an African Orestes Narrator voice Documentary1971 The Decameron Giotto s Pupil1972 The Canterbury Tales Geoffrey Chaucer1973 Bawdy Tales 1974 Arabian Nights 1975 Salo or the 120 Days of Sodom Death EditPasolini was murdered and possibly assassinated on 2 November 1975 on the beach at Ostia 60 He had been run over several times by his own car Multiple bones were broken and his testicles were crushed by what appeared to be a metal bar 61 An autopsy revealed that his body had been partially burned with gasoline after his death The crime was long viewed as a Mafia style revenge killing one extremely unlikely to have been carried out by only one person Pasolini was buried in Casarsa Giuseppe Pino Pelosi 1958 2017 then 17 years old was caught driving Pasolini s car and confessed to the murder He was convicted in 1976 initially with unknown others but this phrase was later removed from the verdict 54 62 Twenty nine years later on 7 May 2005 Pelosi retracted his confession which he said had been made under the threat of violence to his family He claimed that three people with a Southern accent had committed the murder insulting Pasolini as a dirty communist 63 Other evidence uncovered in 2005 suggested that Pasolini had been murdered by an extortionist Testimony by his friend Sergio Citti indicated that some of the rolls of film from Salo or the 120 Days of Sodom had been stolen and that Pasolini planned to meet with the thieves on 2 November 1975 after a visit to Stockholm Sweden 64 65 66 67 Citti s investigation uncovered additional evidence including a bloody wooden stick and an eyewitness who said he saw a group of men pull Pasolini from the car 54 62 The Rome police reopened the case after Pelosi s retraction but the judges responsible for the investigation found that the new elements were insufficient to justify a continued inquiry Legacy EditAs a director Pasolini created a picaresque neorealism showing a sad reality Many people did not want to see such portrayals in artistic work for public distribution Mamma Roma 1962 featuring Anna Magnani and telling the story of a prostitute and her son was an affront to the public ideals of morality of those times His works with their unequaled poetry applied to cruel realities showed that such realities were less distant from most daily lives and contributed to changes in the Italian psyche 68 Pasolini s work often engendered disapproval perhaps primarily because of his frequent focus on sexual behavior and the contrast between what he presented and what was publicly sanctioned While Pasolini s poetry often dealt with his gay love interests this was not the only or even main theme His interest in and use of Italian dialects should also be noted Much of the poetry was about his highly revered mother He depicted certain corners of the contemporary reality as few other poets could do His poetry which took some time before it was translated was not as well known outside Italy as were his films A collection in English was published in 1996 69 Pasolini also developed a philosophy of language mainly related to his studies on cinema 70 This theoretical and critical activity was another hotly debated topic His collected articles and responses are still available today 68 71 72 These studies can be considered as the foundation of his artistic point of view he believed that the language such as English Italian dialect or other is a rigid system in which human thought is trapped He also thought that the cinema is the written language of reality which like any other written language enables man to see things from the point of view of truth 70 His films won awards at the Berlin International Film Festival Cannes Film Festival Venice Film Festival Italian National Syndicate for Film Journalists Jussi Awards Kinema Junpo Awards International Catholic Film Office and New York Film Critics Circle The Gospel According to St Matthew was nominated for the United Nations Award of the British Academy of Film and Television Arts BAFTA in 1968 In popular culture EditMany documentaries and films have been released since the time of his murder some of which include Das Mitleid ist gestorben documentary directed by Ebbo Demant and released in 1978 Re Pasolini made by Stefano Battaglia in 2005 it was dedicated to Pasolini Who Killed Pasolini directed by Marco Tullio Giordana in 1995 The film reconstructs the trial of Pino Pelosi accused of Pasolini s murder Pasolini directed by Abel Ferrara A 2014 biopic directed about Pasolini with Willem Dafoe in the lead role It was selected to compete for the Golden Lion at the 71st Venice International Film Festival 73 74 PPPasolini directed by Malga Kubiak a drama movie based on the story of Pier Paolo Pasolini s life and death released in 2015 The movie was screened at the seventh edition of the LGBT Film Festival in Warsaw and received a People s Choice Award at the festival 75 La macchinazione directed by his former collaborator David Grieco a 2016 biopic on the last hours of Pasolini s life starring Massimo Ranieri as Pasolini 76 See also EditPasolini film La macchinazione List of unsolved murdersNotes Edit The translated English title is used infrequently References Edit Il Dissenso di un Intellettuale Pier Paolo Pasolini a Cen news art it in Italian Retrieved 17 August 2022 Quarti Matilde 18 November 2017 La vita e i libri di Pier Paolo Pasolini intellettuale corsaro ilLibraio it in Italian Retrieved 17 August 2022 Pier Paolo Pasolini l uomo l artista l intellettuale un volume in digitale dell Espresso la Repubblica in Italian 15 November 2021 Retrieved 17 August 2022 Pasolini 100 anni intellettuale sempre piu profetico Libri Approfondimenti Agenzia ANSA in Italian 27 February 2022 Retrieved 17 August 2022 a b Berlinale 1972 Prize Winners berlinale de Archived from the original on 4 May 2014 Retrieved 26 June 2011 Pier Paolo Pasolini Cultural Hegemony Film Analysis Robin Cross College Film amp Media Studies Retrieved 2 November 2021 Frank Northen Magill Critical survey of poetry foreign language series Salem Press 1984 p 1145 Siciliano Enzo 2014 Pasolini Una vida tormentosa Torres de Papel p 37 ISBN 978 84 943726 4 3 Ste vedeli da je Pier Paolo Pasolini v otrostvu nekaj casa zivel v Idriji Prvi interaktivni multimedijski portal MMC RTV Slovenija Rtvslo si 20 October 2012 Retrieved 22 May 2014 Stack O 1969 Pasolini on Pasolini pp 15 17 London Thames and Hudson Thompson N S 1981 Pier Paolo Pasolini Poet and Prophet in Murray Glen ed Cencrastus No 7 Winter 1981 82 pp 30 32 Guy Flatley The Atheist who was Obsessed with God Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine 1969 located at Moviecrazed com accessed 25 April 2008 Martellini Luigi 2006 Pier Paolo Pasolini Retrato de un intelectual Valencia Universidad de Valencia p 28 ISBN 978 84 370 7928 8 Martelini L 2006 p 29 Martelini L 2006 p 33 a b c Martelini L 2006 p 48 Martelini L 2006 p 62 Robert Samuel Clive Gordon 1996 Pasolini Forms of Subjectivity Clarendon Press p 47 ISBN 978 0 19 815905 6 a b c d e Peretti Luca 1 June 2018 Remembering Pier Paolo Pasolini Jacobin Retrieved 7 June 2018 Emma Baron 2018 Popular High Culture in Italian Media 1950 1970 Cham Switzerland Palgrave Macmillan p 55 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 90963 9 3 ISBN 978 3 319 90963 9 Pasolini and St Paul British Library 15 June 2015 Retrieved 16 January 2023 Badiou Alain 2003 Saint Paul the foundation of universalism Stanford Calif Stanford University Press pp 36 37 ISBN 0 8047 4470 X OCLC 51093150 Badiou Alain 2003 Saint Paul the foundation of universalism Stanford Calif Stanford University Press pp 37 38 ISBN 0 8047 4470 X OCLC 51093150 Badiou Alain 2003 Saint Paul the foundation of universalism Stanford Calif Stanford University Press p 38 ISBN 0 8047 4470 X OCLC 51093150 Badiou Alain 2003 Saint Paul the foundation of universalism Stanford Calif Stanford University Press p 39 ISBN 0 8047 4470 X OCLC 51093150 Martelini L 2006 p 192 Monopoli Leonardo Pasolini e il cinema homolaicus com in Italian Retrieved 9 September 2018 Martelini L 2006 pp 79 81 Movie Review Accattone www austinchronicle com Barbaro Nick 19 January 2001 Che Bella Italian Neorealism and the Movies and the AFS Series It Inspired The Austin Chronicle Archived from the original on 7 December 2006 Retrieved 13 December 2006 Berlinale 1966 Juries berlinale de Retrieved 22 February 2010 a b Video on YouTube Retrieved 22 May 2014 Pier Paolo Pasolini Biography pierpaolopasolini com Berlinale 1972 Prize Winners berlinale de Archived from the original on 27 April 2014 Retrieved 16 March 2010 Festival de Cannes Arabian Nights festival cannes com Retrieved 26 June 2011 a b c d Siciliano Enzo 2014 148 a b Siciliano Enzo 2014 149 Siciliano Enzo 2014 151 Ireland Doug 4 August 2005 Restoring Pasolini LA Weekly LA Weekly LP Archived from the original on 27 December 2013 Retrieved 29 August 2010 L Amore impossibile tra PPP e Maria Callas nel film L isola di Medea di Sergio Naitza 7 August 2016 Pasolini e le donne oggetto del piccolo schermo 2 June 2017 a b Siciliano Enzo 2014 111 112 a b Pasolini Pier Paolo 16 June 1968 Il Pci ai giovani The PCI to Young People L espresso in Italian Retrieved 8 June 2018 Martelini L 2006 pp 141 142 Martelini L 2006 p 141 a b Wu Ming 1 Meer Ayan 3 January 2016 The Police vs Pasolini Pasolini vs The Police Tumblr Retrieved 8 June 2018 Wu Ming 1 29 October 2015 La polizia contro Pasolini Pasolini contro la polizia The Police vs Pasolini Pasolini vs The Police internazionale it in Italian Retrieved 8 June 2018 Martelini L 2006 pp 184 185 Siciliano Enzo 2014 p 389 Bondavalli Simona 2015 Fictions of Youth Pier Paolo Pasolini Adolescence Fascisms Toronto ON University of Toronto Press ISBN 9781442627079 Tarizzo Davide 2021 Political grammars the unconscious foundations of modern democracy Square One First Order Questions in the Humanities Stanford CA Stanford University Press p 163 ISBN 9781503615328 a b c d e Andrews Geoff 1 November 2005 The life and death of Pier Paolo Pasolini OpenDemocracy Retrieved 7 November 2022 a b Siciliano Enzo 2014 pp 388 389 a b c Vulliamy Ed 24 August 2014 Who really killed Pier Paolo Pasolini The Guardian Retrieved 12 May 2017 Liukkonen Petri Pier Paolo Pasolini Books and Writers kirjasto sci fi Finland Kuusankoski Public Library Archived from the original on 7 March 2006 Conversation with Pier Paolo Pasolini Radio Radicale Retrieved 7 June 2018 a b Pasolini Pier Paolo 1 January 1975 L aborto il coito Abortion Copulation Corriere della Sera Archived from the original on 12 June 2018 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Rumble Patrick 1996 Allegories of Contamination Pier Paolo Pasolini s Trilogy of Life Toronto Italian Studies University of Toronto Press p 136 ISBN 9780802072191 Retrieved 8 June 2018 Colombo Furio Battista Anna 8 November 1975 Siamo tutti in pericolo We are all in danger PDF La Stampa Retrieved 8 June 2018 The violent death of inconvenient intellect Pier Paolo Pasolini Italianmedia ilglobo com au Archived from the original on 11 August 2020 Retrieved 20 October 2019 Barber Stephen 17 July 2020 The Massacre Game Pasolini Terminal Film Text Words Elektron Ebooks ISBN 9781909923072 a b Gumbell Andrew 23 September 1995 Who killed Pasolini The Independent Archived from the original on 26 May 2022 Retrieved 25 May 2015 Cataldi Benedetto 5 May 2005 Pasolini death inquiry reopened BBC Asesinato de Pasolini nueva investigacion La Razon in Spanish Archived from the original on 2 July 2017 Retrieved 4 July 2012 Hector Rivera 28 March 2010 Pasolini de nuevo Sentido contrario in Italian Grupo Milenio Archived from the original on 29 June 2012 Retrieved 4 July 2012 Pier Paolo Pasolini 1922 1975 in Italian Cinematismo Archived from the original on 12 August 2014 Retrieved 4 July 2012 Google Drive Viewer Google 2 April 2010 Retrieved 22 May 2014 a b Pier Paolo Pasolini 1995 Il Caos collected articles in Italian Rome Editori Riuniti Pier Paolo Pasolini 1996 Collected Poems Noonday Press ISBN 9780374524692 a b Pasolini Pier Paolo 1988 2005 Heretical empiricism New Academia Publishing ISBN 9780976704225 A Covi 1971 Dibattiti sui film in Italian Padova Gregoriana A Asor Rosa 1988 Scrittori e Popolo il populismo nella letteratura italiana contemporanea in Italian Torino Gregoriana International competition of feature films Venice Archived from the original on 6 October 2014 Retrieved 24 July 2014 Venice Film Festival Lineup Announced Deadline Hollywood Retrieved 24 July 2014 7th edition of LGBT Film Festival in Warsaw Warszawa Archived from the original on 14 April 2016 Retrieved 5 April 2016 Pier Paolo Pasolini La Macchinazione film di David Grieco chiede la verita sulla morte del poeta HuffPost 2 March 2016 Retrieved 3 August 2019 Further reading EditAichele George Translation as De canonization Matthew s Gospel According to Pasolini filmmaker Pier Paolo Pasolini Critical Essay Cross Currents 2002 Chiesa Lorenzo Pasolini and the Ugliness of Bodies In Polezzi Loredana and Ross Charlotte eds In Corpore Bodies in Post Unification Italy Farleigh Dickinson University Press Madison pp 208 227 ISBN 978 0 8386 4164 4 Distefano John Picturing Pasolini Art Journal 1997 Eloit Audrene Oedipus Rex by Pier Paolo Pasolini The Palimpsest Rewriting and the Creation of Pasolini s Cinematic Language Literature Film Quarterly 2004 Fabbro Elena ed Il mito greco nell opera di Pasolini Atti del Convegno Udine Casarsa della Delizia 24 26 ottobre 2002 Udine Forum 2004 ISBN 88 8420 230 2 Forni Kathleen A Cinema of Poetry What Pasolini Did to Chancer s Canterbury Tales Literature Film Quarterly 2002 Frisch Anette Francesco Vezzolini Pasolini Reloaded Interview Rutgers University Alexander Library New Brunswick NJ Ginzburg Carlo Safran Yehuda Sherer Daniel An Interview with Carlo Ginzburg by Yehuda Safran and Daniel Sherer Potlatch 5 2022 special issue on Carlo Ginzburg Discussion of Ginzburg s meeting with Pasolini and Elsa Morante and Pasolini s interest in Ginzburg s work as a historian of Friuli Green Martin The Dialectic Adaptation Greene Naomi Pier Paolo Pasolini Cinema as Heresy Princeton NJ Princeton UP 1990 Hamza Agon Althusser and Pasolini Philosophy Marxism and Film Palgrave NY 2016 ISBN 978 1 137 56651 5 Meyer Krahmer Benjamin Transmediality and Pastiche as Techniques in Pasolini s Art Production in P P P Pier Paolo Pasolini and death eds Bernhart Schwenk Michael Semff Ostfildern 2005 pp 109 118 Passannanti Erminia Il corpo amp il potere Salo o le 120 giornate di Sodoma di Pier Paolo Pasolini Prima edizione Troubador Leicester 2004 Seconda Edizione Joker Savona 2008 Passannanti Erminia Il Cristo del Eresia Pier Paolo Pasolini Cinema e Censura Joker Savona 2009 Passannanti Erminia La ricotta Il Sacro trasgredito Il cinema di Pier Paolo Pasolini e la censura religiosa 2009 also published in Italy on Screen Peter Lang Ed 2011 The book contains excerpts from the 1962 court trial Pugh Tison Chaucerian Fabliaux Cinematic Fabliau Pier Paolo Pasolini s I racconti di Canterbury Literature Film Quarterly 2004 Restivo Angelo The Cinema of Economic Miracles Visuality and Modernization in the Italian Art Film London Duke UP 2002 Rohdie Sam The Passion of Pier Paolo Pasolini Bloomington Indiana Indiana UP 1995 Rumble Patrick A Allegories of contamination Pier Paolo Pasolini s Trilogy of life Toronto University of Toronto Press 1996 Schwartz Barth D Pasolini Requiem 1st ed New York Pantheon Books 1992 Siciliano Enzo Pasolini A Biography Trans John Shepley New York Random House 1982 Thompson N S Pier Paolo Pasolini Poet and Prophet in Murray Glen ed Cencrastus No 7 Winter 1981 82 pp 30 32 Tusa Giovanbattista The Pasolinian Century in Hildebrandt Toni and Tusa Giovanbattista eds PPPP Pier Paolo Pasolini Philosopher Mimesis International 2022 pp 317 323 Viano Maurizio A Certain Realism Making Use of Pasolini s Film Theory and Practice Berkeley University of California Press 1993 Willimon William H Faithful to the script Christian Century 2004 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Pier Paolo Pasolini Wikimedia Commons has media related to Pier Paolo Pasolini Pier Paolo Pasolini at IMDb Interview with Jonas Mekas in Bomb Magazine Archived 18 June 2015 at the Wayback Machine Pasolini on Filmgalerie451 Archived 16 April 2013 at the Wayback Machine Piers Paolo Pasolini Italian Website with Extensive Commentary Pier Paolo Pasolini Senses of Cinema BBC News Report on the Reopening of the Murder Case Guy Flatley The Atheist Who Was Obsessed with God Archived 3 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine MovieCrazed Doug Ireland Restoring Pasolini ZMag Pasolini s Own Notes on Salo from 1974 Pier Paolo Pasolini Poems Original Italian Text Video in Italian Pasolini on the Destructive Impact of Television on YouTube Interrupted and Half Censored by Enzo Biagi Italian Website dedicated to Pasolini Pasolini s Second to Last Interview Long Believed to Have Been Lost Pasolini s Legacy A Sprawl of Brutality Dennis Lim The New York Times 26 December 2012 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pier Paolo Pasolini amp oldid 1152660820, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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