Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface: The Poly-Expressive Symphony of Futurist Cinema
- Section 1 Joyful Deformation Of The Universe
- 1 Introduction: The Poetics of Futurist Cinema
- 2 Speed and Dynamism: Futurism and the Soviet Cinematographic Avant-garde
- 3 Futurism and Film Theories: Manifesto of Futurist Cinema and Theories in Italy in the 1910-1920s
- 4 Film Aesthetics Without Films
- 5 Marinetti’s Tattilismo Revisited: Hand Travels, Tactile Screens, and Touch Cinema in the 21st Century
- 6 Dance and Futurism in Italian Silent Cinema
- 7 Futurism and cinema in the 1910s: A Reinterpretation Starting from McLuhan
- 8 The Human in the Fetish of the Human: Cuteness in Futurist Cinema, Literature, and Visual Arts
- Section 2 Daily Filmed Exercises Designed To Free Us From Logic
- 9 Yambo on the moon of Verne and Méliès: From La Colonia Lunare to UN MATRIMONIO INTERPLANETARIO
- 10 An Avant-Garde Heritage: VITA FUTURISTA
- 11 Thaïs: A Different Challenge to the Stars
- 12 VELOCITÀ, a Screenplay by F.T. Marinetti: From Futurist Simultaneity to Live Streaming Media
- 13 Velocità/Vitesse: Filmed Dramas of Objects and ‘avant-garde integrale’
- 14 From Science to the Marvellous: The Illusion of Movement, Between Chronophotography and Contemporary Cinema
- Section 3 Shop Windows Of Filmed Ideas, Events, Types, Objects
- Chronology: Fernando Maramai
- Filmography
- Index
- Film Culture in Transition
8 - The Human in the Fetish of the Human: Cuteness in Futurist Cinema, Literature, and Visual Arts
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 December 2020
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Preface: The Poly-Expressive Symphony of Futurist Cinema
- Section 1 Joyful Deformation Of The Universe
- 1 Introduction: The Poetics of Futurist Cinema
- 2 Speed and Dynamism: Futurism and the Soviet Cinematographic Avant-garde
- 3 Futurism and Film Theories: Manifesto of Futurist Cinema and Theories in Italy in the 1910-1920s
- 4 Film Aesthetics Without Films
- 5 Marinetti’s Tattilismo Revisited: Hand Travels, Tactile Screens, and Touch Cinema in the 21st Century
- 6 Dance and Futurism in Italian Silent Cinema
- 7 Futurism and cinema in the 1910s: A Reinterpretation Starting from McLuhan
- 8 The Human in the Fetish of the Human: Cuteness in Futurist Cinema, Literature, and Visual Arts
- Section 2 Daily Filmed Exercises Designed To Free Us From Logic
- 9 Yambo on the moon of Verne and Méliès: From La Colonia Lunare to UN MATRIMONIO INTERPLANETARIO
- 10 An Avant-Garde Heritage: VITA FUTURISTA
- 11 Thaïs: A Different Challenge to the Stars
- 12 VELOCITÀ, a Screenplay by F.T. Marinetti: From Futurist Simultaneity to Live Streaming Media
- 13 Velocità/Vitesse: Filmed Dramas of Objects and ‘avant-garde integrale’
- 14 From Science to the Marvellous: The Illusion of Movement, Between Chronophotography and Contemporary Cinema
- Section 3 Shop Windows Of Filmed Ideas, Events, Types, Objects
- Chronology: Fernando Maramai
- Filmography
- Index
- Film Culture in Transition
Summary
Abstract
This study examines the photographic, painting, and literary theory output of several Futurists in the context of the invention and diffusion in English-language and Italian illustration and advertising of a formal stereotype: the Kindchenschema. In summary, the study aims to demonstrate the relevance of the aesthetic category of ‘cuteness’ to the use of personification in Marinetti, the adoption of Kindchenschema by Depero, the morphology of some of Balla's furnishings, and the so-called ‘camouflaging of objects’ photography of Tato. There is, then, a specific fetishistic structure that, exploiting the effect of personalization and simplification of objects caused by the morphological properties of Kindchenschema for leverage, produces a semantic short circuit between the presence of the object that has been animated and its negation.
Keywords: Kindchenschema, Marinetti, Tato, Depero, Balla, Cuteness, Commodity Fetishism
The aim of this paper is to highlight parallels between two recent interpretations regarding the rhetorical figure of personification and, more broadly, the processes of animating inanimate objects: one interpretation derives from the field of studies of literary futurism, while the other derives from the study of aesthetics and hinges upon the aesthetic category of cuteness and the art associated with it. Following a theoretical introduction of the two interpretations, critical, iconographic, and historical-stylistic evidence will be presented to demonstrate a degree of interdependence between their artistic aims from a formal and historical point of view.
In his afterword to the recent edition of Marinetti's novel Venezianella e Studentaccio, Patrizio Ceccagnoli argues that the use of the rhetorical figure of personification in the novel invokes the concept of commodity fetishism – in the sense of the term in which Marx employed it – and describes the recurring animation of inanimate objects in Marinetti’s writing as a fetishistic act. ‘However, in giving to matter a de facto human psychology, Marinetti simply ascribes to the substitute (the “life of matter, the non-human”) various aspects of what has been replaced (the “literary I”, the human)’ (Ceccagnoli 2013: 146). The principle characteristic of this interpretation is immediately apparent: the animation of objects is not seen simply as a process of vivification (of, for example, the monuments of Venice), but also as a process of mortification of those negative contents the city represents – the past.
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- Futurist CinemaStudies on Italian Avant-garde Film, pp. 115 - 130Publisher: Amsterdam University PressPrint publication year: 2017