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Pizzolato, Nicola. "Revolution in a Comic Strip: Gasparazzo and the identity of southern migrants in turin, 1969–1975." International Review of Social History 52. (2007): 59–75. 
Added by: joachim (27/07/2009, 18:05)   Last edited by: joachim (12/02/2014, 18:34)
Resource type: Journal Article
Language: en: English
Peer reviewed
DOI: 10.1017/S0020859007003124
BibTeX citation key: Pizzolato2007a
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Categories: General
Keywords: "Gasparazzo", Comic strip, Italy, Sociology, Zamarin. Roberto
Creators: Pizzolato
Collection: International Review of Social History
Views: 5/478
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Abstract
Between 1969 and 1975, in Turin, a social movement with migrants from southern Italy as its protagonists addressed the issues of working conditions in the automobile plants, and housing and living standards in the city’s overcrowded working-class neighbourhoods. Southern migrants, from different regions and speaking sometimes mutually incomprehensible dialects, forged a collective identity as Meridionali – “southerners” – and claimed recognition as fully fledged citizens of Turin’s industrial society. This identity-building was captured in the making through the satirical cartoons featuring Gasparazzo, the character of a southern worker at FIAT who struggled daily with the alienation of work, the arrogance of supervisors, the repression enforced by the police, and, back in the south, the backwardness of the social system. Although the publication of Gasparazzo ended abruptly in 1972 the qualities of the cartoon character continued to resonate in succeeding years. As militancy waned and the social movement started to crumble, Gasparazzo came to symbolize the nostalgic model of a working-class hero rather than any actual southerner in the plant.
Added by: joachim  Last edited by: joachim
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