Sarah Bernhardt and the Others. La Phisionomie Nerveuse des Femmes Artistes According to Enrico Ferri From the second half of nineteenth century, female sexuality was the focal point of a complex story between the medical and legal question at hand so as to catalog a women’s body in a rigid framework of predefined rules of “natural” role of wife and mother. Within this prospect, this article will analyze Enrico Ferri’s contribution, as socialist leader and one of the main advocates of criminal positive school in liberal Italy, focused on analyzing the personality of “divine” Sarah Bernhardt. Far from the gender stereotypes of passivity and submission, the iconic figure of the diva seemed to embody new and destabilizing patterns of sexuality and female desire, revealing the axieties and underlying fears of social modernization in Europe at the end of the century
A partire dalla seconda metà dell’Ottocento, la sessualità femminile fu al centro di un complesso intreccio tra il discorso medico e quello giuridico al fine di iscrivere il corpo della donna in una fitta maglia di prescrizioni definita dalla sua “naturale” funzione di moglie e di madre. All’interno di questa prospettiva, l’articolo si propone di analizzare un contributo di Enrico Ferri, leader socialista e tra i principali esponenti della Scuola positiva, incentrato sull’analisi della personalità della “divina” Sarah Bernhardt. Lontana dagli stereotipi di genere della passività e dalla sottomissione, la figura iconica della diva sembrava riassumere in sé nuovi e destabilizzanti modelli di identificazione della sessualità e del desiderio femminile contribuendo così a rivelare le ansie ed i timori sottesi al processo di modernizzazione sociale nell’Europa fin de siècle.
Sarah Bernhardt e le altre. La physionomie nerveuse des femmes artistes secondo Enrico Ferri
Francesco Serpico
2023-01-01
Abstract
Sarah Bernhardt and the Others. La Phisionomie Nerveuse des Femmes Artistes According to Enrico Ferri From the second half of nineteenth century, female sexuality was the focal point of a complex story between the medical and legal question at hand so as to catalog a women’s body in a rigid framework of predefined rules of “natural” role of wife and mother. Within this prospect, this article will analyze Enrico Ferri’s contribution, as socialist leader and one of the main advocates of criminal positive school in liberal Italy, focused on analyzing the personality of “divine” Sarah Bernhardt. Far from the gender stereotypes of passivity and submission, the iconic figure of the diva seemed to embody new and destabilizing patterns of sexuality and female desire, revealing the axieties and underlying fears of social modernization in Europe at the end of the centuryI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.