Research Project:
Tarantism Revisited1

cris.legacyIdpj00018en_US
cris.sourceIdINTERNAL-SUBMISSION::0d4b5637-edbd-4451-b73f-3cf3a3d5c4b9en_US
cris.sourceIdMIGRATION::pj00018
crispj.coinvestigator.affiliationInstitute of Social Anthropologyen_US
crispj.coinvestigatorsDreschke, Anja Susanneen_US
crispj.investigatorSchäuble, Michaelaen_US
crispj.investigator.affiliationInstitute of Social Anthropologyen_US
datacite.rightsmetadata.only
dc.date.accessioned2022-01-27T08:42:06Z
dc.date.available2024-07-01T10:37:17Z
dc.description.abstractTarantism is a Southern Italian possession cult in which the afflicted – mostly young, unmarried women – experience violent physical seizures. According to local concepts, this condition is caused by the poisonous bite of a tarantula spider and can only be cured through music and exorcist trance dancing. The film and reseach project ›Tarantism Rivisited‹ traces the multiple facets of a phenomenon that has been endemic to Apulia (Southern Italy) for at least five hundred years yet currently experiences an unprecedented revival and growth in popularity. In the past decade, tarantism and pizzicata music have become a crucial element of local popular culture which not only attracts ten thousands of tourists from Italy and abroad to large-scale festivals each year, but has also become part of the transnational world music scene, thus contributing to the construction of a new, neo-traditional local Apulian identity. Historian of religion and ethnographer Ernesto De Martino (1908-1965) was the first to study the socio-political implications of the phenomenon in his native Italy in the early 1950s. Taking his writings as well as the uniquely rich historic footage -16mm films, hundreds of photographs and sound recordings - that were produced in the scientific and artistic surrounding of his “expeditions” as a starting point, our project explores the strong impact that these iconic images continue to have on the way tarantism is perceived and performed today. To better grasp and convey to a broader audience the complex history and present-day mobilisation of tarantism as a tourist spectacle and politicised site of folklore, cultural heritage and female empowerment, we propose a cossmedia project in collaboration with local performers, musicians and activists that results in three interlinked activities: the realisation of a 60-minute documentary film and complementary 360° videos, both of which formats will culminate in and contribute to an interactive multimedia website comprising historic and contemporary photographs, explanatory texts, short video clips, sound pieces, interview excerpts and samples of tarantella music. We primarily focus on the performance aspects of tarantism, thus highlighting its role as politicised multimedia event along with its importance as cultural and economic resource in the region. Furthermore, we attempt to create awareness for the fact that religious traditions are currently not per se disappearing into insignificance, but, quite to the contrary, are re-discovered, revived, and filled with new meanings in many places. With specific reference to the example of Apulian tarantism, we also intend to foster a better understanding of how tradition, heritage and cultural identity are presently created and mobilised through religious performances.en_US
dc.description.sponsorshipInstitute of Social Anthropology
dc.identifier.urihttps://boris-portal.unibe.ch/handle/20.500.12422/31148
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.subject.keywordsReenactmenten_US
dc.subject.keywordstranceen_US
dc.subject.keywordspossession culten_US
dc.subject.keywordsdocumentary filmen_US
dc.titleTarantism Revisited1en_US
dspace.entity.typeProject
oairecerif.project.endDate2021-10-31en_US
oairecerif.project.startDate2018-01-01en_US
oairecerif.project.statusActiveen_US
unibe.isfundedtrueen_US
unibe.project.duration01-01-2018 - 31-10-2021en_US
unibe.project.managerSchäuble, Michaelaen_US
unibe.project.primarycontactSchäuble, Michaelaen_US
unibe.projectManager.affiliationInstitute of Social Anthropologyen_US
unibe.projectprimarycontact.affiliationInstitute of Social Anthropologyen_US

Files

Collections