The Conformist
The Conformist kick started my love affair with Moravia's work, of which now I am a big fan.I think of him as not just one of Italy's greatest writers, but one of the most undervalued writers of the 20th century. In a spare and poetic prose he relishing in the finer details of existence, whilst also brilliantly capturing the Italian landscape. In The Conformist Moravia attempts to analyze what makes a fascist by using a physiological fictive narrative. His main character here: Marcello Clarici,
This is the first Italian literature I ever read, and it is damned good.The narrative style is quite cold and gripping---it's divinely put me in the shoe of this secretive, melancholic, hermitlike character of Clerici---but at the same time has its alluring sentimental way of reflecting things surround him. Our titular protagonist is a quiet, solemn young man who consciously chose to spent his life in a box---figuratively speaking, that is. It is a frigid, solidly closed box, inch-by-inch built
I so adore this film I when reading the novel can actually hear the voices of the actors. (or maybe I should stop taking so many psychiatric meds) Terrific story about the neurosis behind the morbid conformist fixation that drives the main character into working within the rising Italian fascist system .
One of several brilliant novels by MoraviaThe Conformist is a psychologically complex novelistic study of an Italian fascist, although not necessarily a typical fascist, done in an existential style with intense interior monologues and introspection by Alberto Moravia's protagonist, Marcello Clerici. No doubt Moravia intended Marcello as the conformist, but ironically it is his wife Giulia who nearly always conforms to what is considered normal behavior and who harbors uncritically knee jerk
A Psychological ThrillerSome of my favourite films explore how people have dealt with life under Fascism or Communism: * Istvan Szabos "Mephisto" (Germany);* Ingmar Bergmans "The Serpents Egg" (Sweden); * Bernardo Bertoluccis "The Conformist" (Italy); * Florian Henckel von Donnersmarcks "The Lives of Others" (Germany).Not only do they help understand the relationship of an individual to an authoritarian regime, but they also explore existentialist issues that became more pressing in the context
Alberto Moravia
Paperback | Pages: 323 pages Rating: 3.98 | 1844 Users | 128 Reviews
Describe Containing Books The Conformist
Title | : | The Conformist |
Author | : | Alberto Moravia |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Special Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 323 pages |
Published | : | November 1st 1999 by Steerforth (first published April 15th 1951) |
Categories | : | Fiction. European Literature. Italian Literature. Cultural. Italy. Classics. Literature |
Chronicle During Books The Conformist
Secrecy and Silence are second nature to Marcello Clerici, the hero of The Conformist, a book which made Alberto Moravia one of the world's most read postwar writers. Clerici is a man with everything under control - a wife who loves him, colleagues who respect him, the hidden power that comes with his secret work for the Italian political police during the Mussolini years. But then he is assigned to kill his former professor, now exiled in France, to demonstrate his loyalty to the Fascist state, and falls in love with a strange, compelling woman; his life is torn open - and with it the corrupt heart of Fascism. Moravia equates the rise of Italian Fascism with the psychological needs of his protagonist for whom conformity becomes an obsession in a life that has included parental neglect, an oddly self-conscious desire to engage in cruel acts, and a type of male beauty which, to Clerici's great distress, other men find attractive.Be Specific About Books Conducive To The Conformist
Original Title: | Il conformista |
ISBN: | 1883642655 (ISBN13: 9781883642655) |
Edition Language: | English |
Characters: | Marcello, Giulia, Quadri,, Lina |
Rating Containing Books The Conformist
Ratings: 3.98 From 1844 Users | 128 ReviewsCommentary Containing Books The Conformist
It was very nice) the author really does a great job at showing how all the screws in the head of the main character work.The Conformist kick started my love affair with Moravia's work, of which now I am a big fan.I think of him as not just one of Italy's greatest writers, but one of the most undervalued writers of the 20th century. In a spare and poetic prose he relishing in the finer details of existence, whilst also brilliantly capturing the Italian landscape. In The Conformist Moravia attempts to analyze what makes a fascist by using a physiological fictive narrative. His main character here: Marcello Clarici,
This is the first Italian literature I ever read, and it is damned good.The narrative style is quite cold and gripping---it's divinely put me in the shoe of this secretive, melancholic, hermitlike character of Clerici---but at the same time has its alluring sentimental way of reflecting things surround him. Our titular protagonist is a quiet, solemn young man who consciously chose to spent his life in a box---figuratively speaking, that is. It is a frigid, solidly closed box, inch-by-inch built
I so adore this film I when reading the novel can actually hear the voices of the actors. (or maybe I should stop taking so many psychiatric meds) Terrific story about the neurosis behind the morbid conformist fixation that drives the main character into working within the rising Italian fascist system .
One of several brilliant novels by MoraviaThe Conformist is a psychologically complex novelistic study of an Italian fascist, although not necessarily a typical fascist, done in an existential style with intense interior monologues and introspection by Alberto Moravia's protagonist, Marcello Clerici. No doubt Moravia intended Marcello as the conformist, but ironically it is his wife Giulia who nearly always conforms to what is considered normal behavior and who harbors uncritically knee jerk
A Psychological ThrillerSome of my favourite films explore how people have dealt with life under Fascism or Communism: * Istvan Szabos "Mephisto" (Germany);* Ingmar Bergmans "The Serpents Egg" (Sweden); * Bernardo Bertoluccis "The Conformist" (Italy); * Florian Henckel von Donnersmarcks "The Lives of Others" (Germany).Not only do they help understand the relationship of an individual to an authoritarian regime, but they also explore existentialist issues that became more pressing in the context
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