Benigni's life-affirming lie: "Life is beautiful" as an aesthetic and moral response to the Holocaust
TitleBenigni's life-affirming lie: "Life is beautiful" as an aesthetic and moral response to the Holocaust
Author
Call number791.430909358/0023
Object number08970h
Place of publicationLeicester
PublisherTroubador Publishing Ltd
Year of publication
2005
Physical descriptionpp179-200
MaterialArticle
ISBN1904744834
NotesArticle from the book Beyond 'Life is beautiful' : comedy and tragedy in the cinema of Roberto Benigni pp179-200
Description
The cinematic narrative of 'Life is beautiful' conflicts with historical reality. This alteration of the reality of the Holocaust has fed the often angry reception of the film among critics who consider historical reality to be a primary concern of Holocaust art. Some have charged Benigni's film with distorting this reality and injuring its historical memory. This charge seems to embody the assumption that the audience's historical understanding of the Holocaust would be modified through the identification with the child's point of view. This is a simplistic position that underestimates the sophistication of both the film and its audience