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«Et io ne vidi uno in Napoli». Orientalismo e processi di patrimonializzazione dei femminielli napoletani
Author(s) -
Maria Carolina Vesce
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
storia delle donne
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 1826-7513
pISSN - 1826-7505
DOI - 10.36253/sd-11462
Subject(s) - the imaginary , orientalism , identity (music) , femininity , subject (documents) , sociology , distancing , field (mathematics) , colonialism , ideal (ethics) , aesthetics , ethnology , history , gender studies , epistemology , art , philosophy , literature , psychology , covid-19 , psychoanalysis , computer science , mathematics , archaeology , pathology , medicine , disease , library science , infectious disease (medical specialty) , pure mathematics
In Naples, as in several other cities of the Campania region (Italy), the word femminiello/femminella “traditionally” refers to effeminate men who behave and act as women. In the last decade femminielli/femminelle were the subject of a true heritagization process, intended to enhace and capitalize their “ancient identity”, now considered on the verge of extinction. Nonetheless, still today, people who self-identify as femminiello/femminella embody an “old-fashioned way” ideal of femininity, sometimes claiming the specificity of their local identity, and distancing themselves from the LGBTQI+ representations and identities. Based on the data collected during a long term fieldwork in Campania, this essay focuses on the processes of production, reproduction and manipulation of the femminielli/femminelle’ identities. More specifically by crossing literature and field notes, I will propose an analysis of the interactions between an orientalist and colonial imaginary that “produces” the femminiello/femminella as otherness (southern) and the reversal that occurs with the distinctive claim of gender experiences embodied by people who still identify as femminielli/femminelle. How do these imaginaries interact? And what implicit stereotypes lurk in such representations?

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