Morire Di Classe
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''Morire di classe. La condizione manicomiale fotografata da Carla Cerati e Gianni Berengo Gardin'', first published in 1969, is a polemical work about the conditions in Italian mental hospitals of the time, edited by Franco Basaglia and Franca Ongaro Basaglia and with black and white photographs by Carla Cerati and Gianni Berengo Gardin, an introduction by the Basaglias, and various other texts.


Background

In the 1960s, the psychiatrist
Franco Basaglia Franco Basaglia (; 11 March 1924 29 August 1980) was an Italian psychiatrist, neurologist, professor who proposed the dismantling of psychiatric hospitals, pioneer of the modern concept of mental health, Italian psychiatry reformer, figurehead a ...
was the director of a mental hospital in
Gorizia Gorizia (; sl, Gorica , colloquially 'old Gorizia' to distinguish it from Nova Gorica; fur, label= Standard Friulian, Gurize, fur, label= Southeastern Friulian, Guriza; vec, label= Bisiacco, Gorisia; german: Görz ; obsolete English ''Gorit ...
. Although expected to run it along traditional, prisonlike lines, Basaglia, his wife and their team instead reduced the constraints on the patients, so that by 1967 the locks were removed from all of the wards, in line with the ideals of
democratic psychiatry Democratic Psychiatry ( it, Psichiatria Democratica) is Italian real society and movement for liberation of the ill and weak from segregation in mental hospitals by pushing for the Italian psychiatric reform. The movement was political in nature ...
. Basaglia wrote about this in a popular book published in 1968, ''L'istituzione negata. Rapporto da un ospedale psichiatrico'' (The institution denied: Report from a psychiatric hospital); and the changes he was making became more widely known via a television documentary, ''I giardini di Abele'' (The gardens of Abel), made by
Sergio Zavoli Campania (2013–2018) , birth_date = , birth_place = Ravenna, Italy , death_date = , death_place = Rome, Italy , nationality = Italian , profession = Politician, journalist , party = DS (2004–2007) ...
in 1968 and first transmitted in 1969.


Photography

In the account of the photographer
Gianni Berengo Gardin Gianni Berengo Gardin (born 1930) is an Italian photographer who has concentrated on reportage and editorial work, but whose career as a photographer has encompassed book illustration and advertising. "Undoubtedly the most important photographer i ...
, in 1968, Franco Basaglia asked the photographer Carla Cerati to document the conditions in Italian mental asylums for a magazine. Nervous about this, Cerati asked Berengo Gardin to accompany her; he agreed on condition that he too would take photographs, and he later persuaded Basaglia to turn the work into a book. In the account of the historian John Foot, there is no mention of a magazine, and an early plan for the book called for photographs by both Cerati and Berengo Gardin, both of whom were already known to Basaglia. In the latter account the institutions shown in the book were not to be limited to mental hospitals. Cerati and Berengo Gardin photographed in four hospitals: at Gorizia (Basaglia's own mental hospital),
Colorno Colorno (Parmigiano: ) is a ''comune'' (municipality) in the Province of Parma in the Italian region Emilia-Romagna, located about northwest of Bologna and about north of Parma. Colorno borders the following municipalities: Casalmaggiore, Gus ...
(near Parma),
Florence Florence ( ; it, Firenze ) is a city in Central Italy and the capital city of the Tuscany region. It is the most populated city in Tuscany, with 383,083 inhabitants in 2016, and over 1,520,000 in its metropolitan area.Bilancio demografico an ...
and
Ferrara Ferrara (, ; egl, Fràra ) is a city and ''comune'' in Emilia-Romagna, northern Italy, capital of the Province of Ferrara. it had 132,009 inhabitants. It is situated northeast of Bologna, on the Po di Volano, a branch channel of the main stream ...
. The photographers' degree of freedom varied considerably: they were only once able to enter the Florence asylum (where they were not welcomed by the management), but were very free to work in Gorizia. Their photography was under other constraints. Although Berengo Gardin photographed meetings among patients at Gorizia, and scenes where Basaglia was present, these were omitted from the book: Basaglia wanted to avoid the impression of paternalism, and Foot charges that the photographs of Gorizia avoid its current state (unusually liberated for the time) and merely depict its repressive past, as a plank in an overtly polemical work. Before publication of the book, and with the encouragement of the politician Mario Tommasini, an exhibition titled ''La violenza istituzionalizzata'' was arranged in
Parma Parma (; egl, Pärma, ) is a city in the northern Italian region of Emilia-Romagna known for its architecture, Giuseppe Verdi, music, art, prosciutto (ham), Parmigiano-Reggiano, cheese and surrounding countryside. With a population of 198,292 ...
(later moving to Florence); this was the first public showing of many of the photographs that would later appear in ''Morire di classe''. Photographs that would later appear in the book were also used within the film ''I giardini di Abele'', for other books, and leaflets.


Text

The book has an introduction by the Basaglias, and also texts by
Erving Goffman Erving Goffman (11 June 1922 – 19 November 1982) was a Canadian-born sociology, sociologist, Social psychology (sociology), social psychologist, and writer, considered by some "the most influential American sociologist of the twentieth ...
,
Michel Foucault Paul-Michel Foucault (, ; ; 15 October 192625 June 1984) was a French philosopher, historian of ideas, writer, political activist, and literary critic. Foucault's theories primarily address the relationship between power and knowledge, and how ...
,
Paul Nizan Paul-Yves Nizan (; 7 February 1905 – 23 May 1940) was a French philosopher and writer. He was born in Tours, Indre-et-Loire and studied in Paris where he befriended fellow student Jean-Paul Sartre at the Lycée Henri IV. He became a member of t ...
,
Luigi Pirandello Luigi Pirandello (; 28 June 1867 – 10 December 1936) was an Italian dramatist, novelist, poet, and short story writer whose greatest contributions were his plays. He was awarded the 1934 Nobel Prize in Literature for "his almost magical power ...
,
Primo Levi Primo Michele Levi (; 31 July 1919 – 11 April 1987) was an Italian chemist, partisan, writer, and Jewish Holocaust survivor. He was the author of several books, collections of short stories, essays, poems and one novel. His best-known works ...
, Louis Le Guillant and ,
Jonathan Swift Jonathan Swift (30 November 1667 – 19 October 1745) was an Anglo-Irish Satire, satirist, author, essayist, political pamphleteer (first for the Whig (British political party), Whigs, then for the Tories (British political party), Tories), poe ...
,
Rainer Maria Rilke René Karl Wilhelm Johann Josef Maria Rilke (4 December 1875 – 29 December 1926), shortened to Rainer Maria Rilke (), was an Austrian poet and novelist. He has been acclaimed as an idiosyncratic and expressive poet, and is widely recogni ...
,
Frantz Fanon Frantz Omar Fanon (, ; ; 20 July 1925 – 6 December 1961), also known as Ibrahim Frantz Fanon, was a French West Indian psychiatrist, and political philosopher from the French colony of Martinique (today a French department). His works have be ...
,
Peter Weiss Peter Ulrich Weiss (8 November 1916 – 10 May 1982) was a German writer, painter, graphic artist, and experimental filmmaker of adopted Swedish nationality. He is particularly known for his plays ''Marat/Sade'' and ''The Investigation'' and hi ...
and others. Foot points out how both the introduction and the text reproduced employ the notion, whether created by Goffman or popularized by him, of the
total institution A total institution is a place of work and residence where a great number of similarly situated people, cut off from the wider community for a considerable time, together lead an enclosed, formally administered round of life. Privacy is limited in ...
, important in Goffman's 1961 book '' Asylums'', whose Italian translation had been published in 1968. An asylum was totalitarian (Goffman and Foucault), it "colonized" the inmates (Fanon), or it reduced them to the "hollow" people of concentration camps (Levi).


Book design

The photobook ''Morire di classe. La condizione manicomiale fotografata da Carla Cerati e Gianni Berengo Gardin'' (Dying because of your class: The condition of asylums photographed by Carla Cerati and Gianni Berengo Gardin) was published by Einaudi in May 1969. Largely edited by Franco Basaglia and the staff of its publisher,
Einaudi Einaudi is an Italian surname. Notable people with the surname include: *Luigi Einaudi (1874–1961), Italian politician *Mario Einaudi (1905–1994), Italian political scientist, son of Luigi *Giulio Einaudi (1912–1999), Italian publisher, son o ...
, the book has a lilac cover and a design that owes much to advertising practice of the time:
Here, the images and photos themselves took centre stage. This was a design object, a political and sociological photobook, a book to be looked at (or looked away from) as much as read. As well as attempting to revolutionize mental health care, the Basaglias (along with Giulio Bollati, who worked for the Turinese publisher Einaudi) were also attempting to transform the world of books and political campaigning. The appearance of ''Morire di Classe'' was a memorable moment in the history of the movement, and also in the history of publishing.
Although the photographers are named on the title page, individual photographs are unattributed. Likewise, the book does not say which images are from which asylum. None of those taken in Ferrara are used in this book. Certain photographs, or minor variations of them, are repeated, for a somewhat cinematic effect. For rhetorical effect, there are also photographs not taken in mental hospitals: Foot cites a photograph of a policeman seemingly about to hit a demonstrator or the photographer, and:
shot of rich young people lounging around in a party, with a marble table and expensive paintings on the walls above them,
hat A hat is a head covering which is worn for various reasons, including protection against weather conditions, ceremonial reasons such as university graduation, religious reasons, safety, or as a fashion accessory. Hats which incorporate mecha ...
is placed opposite a series of bodies/patients from an asylum, sprawled on the ground and all in uniform. One is in a strait jacket.


Photographic significance

The historian David Forgacs has identified ''Morire di classe'' as one of three major artistic works to come out of the Italian movement in the late 1960s to reform psychiatric care, the other two being the 1969 book edited by Basaglia, ''L'istituzione negata'' and the 1969 television documentary ''I giardini di Abele''; ''Morire di classe'' was "in effect the photographic supplement to hese two" Although psychiatric patients had long been the subject of photography for classificatory or other purposes, ''Morire di classe'' has been called "the first book ever published worldwide to show the cruelties perpetrated against psychiatric patients". Certainly it was a very early one, though Luciano D'Alessandro's ''Gli esclusi'', made in southern Italy with the cooperation of , was also published in 1969. ''Morire di classe'' was published after ''I giardini di Abele'' was first shown. The latter was one of a series of documentaries titled ''TV7'' whose average viewing figure for 1969 was 11 million. It was an early example of an Italian documentary about a total institution, but not the earliest.
Martin Parr Martin Parr (born 23 May 1952) is a British documentary photographer, photojournalist and photobook collector. He is known for his photographic projects that take an intimate, satirical and anthropological look at aspects of modern life, in p ...
and
Gerry Badger Gerald David "Gerry" Badger (born 1946) is an English writer and curator of photography, and a photographer. In 2018 he received the J Dudley Johnston Award from the Royal Photographic Society. Life and career Badger was born in 1946 in Northam ...
describe ''Morire di classe'' as a "harrowing portrayal of the conditions in an Italian mental asylum", and in the tradition of earlier "polemical photo-documentary books" combining photography and text such as ''An American Exodus'' (1939) by
Dorothea Lange Dorothea Lange (born Dorothea Margaretta Nutzhorn; May 26, 1895 – October 11, 1965) was an American documentary photographer and photojournalist, best known for her Depression-era work for the Farm Security Administration (FSA). Lange' ...
and Paul S. Taylor and ''Kan vi være dette Bekendt?'' (1946) by Karl Roos. The book raises an issue of photojournalistic ethics. Parr and Badger comment:
e must be wary of bodies of work featuring mental patients. In cases where those photographed do not know or care what is happening to them, there is a fine line between revelation and exploitation, between compassion and prurient excitement. That line is not crossed here.
e book was an important plank in the eventually successful campaign waged by Franco Basaglia to have the kind of institution shown in Carla Cerati and Gianni Berengo Gardin's photographs closed down.
Asked for a career retrospective to pick the one book among the many he had produced that he would like to be known two hundred years into the future, Berengo Gardin was unable to decide among ''Italiani'', a book on rice cultivation, and ''Morire di classe''.


Social impact

The book has been widely cited as a factor toward the reform of mental hospitals in Italy (and subsequently in other countries) via law 180 (the "
Basaglia law Basaglia Law or Law 180 ( it, Legge Basaglia, Legge 180) is the Italian Mental Health Act of 1978 which signified a large reform of the psychiatric system in Italy, contained directives for the closing down of all psychiatric hospitals and led to ...
") of 1978. Foot quotes both photographers saying as much, and quotes or cites a number of Italian sources agreeing. Here are two examples from the literature about Berengo Gardin:
''Morire di classe'' ..was perhaps the most effective means by which he Basagliasled their campaign against the hypocrisy of the institutions, and prejudices and platitudes that separated the mentally ill from the rest of society. Once again, a few images proved to be more eloquent and effective than thousands of words.
''Morire di classe'' was to prove fundamental in the process that would lead to the passing, in 1978, of Law 180 (or the Basaglia Reform) and the consequent closure of the country's lunatic asylums.
However, Foot points out that although the book and the timing of its publication would be compatible with the claim for it as being a major factor, the claim that it caused change would be much harder to support. Foot says that "there is no evidence at all for many of the claims that are made about ''Morire di Classe". But whatever its influence,
''Morire di Classe'' became a manifesto for Basaglia and the doctors who rejected institutional psychiatry: in that photographic book, photography acted as an interpretation of a social and scientific event but, most of all, it acted as a testimony, as communicative evidence of the horrifying conditions of mental hospitals and the need to abolish them.


Subsequent editions

First published in 1969, the book was reprinted in the 1970s. In 2008 it was given a new edition, identical but for the addition of texts by the sociologist of politics Maria Grazia Giannichedda and the journalist and photographer Claudio Ernè, as well as an editorial note. The photographs also appear in ''Per non dimenticare: 1968. La realtà manicomiale di "Morire di classe"'' (1998). A larger selection of the photographs by Berengo Gardin (although not those by Cerati) appear in ''Manicomi: psichiatria e antipsichiatria nelle immagini degli anni settanta'' (2015).


Notes


References

{{reflist , refs= {{Cite encyclopedia , last=Curti , first=Denis , title=Stories of a Photographer , editor-first=Denis , editor-last=Curti , encyclopedia=Gianni Berengo Gardin: Stories of a Photographer , location=Venice , publisher=Marsilio , year=2013 , isbn=978-88-317-1501-0 No page number. {{Cite encyclopedia , last=Fusina , first=Sandro , title=Against , editor1-last=Koch , editor1-first=Roberto , editor2-last=Mauro , editor2-first=Alessandra , encyclopedia=Gianni Berengo Gardin , location=Rome , publisher=Contrasto , year=2005 , isbn=978-88-89032-72-5 , pages=195 {{cite news , newspaper=Fotografia , archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20140626014029/http://fotografiamagazine.com/gianni-berengo-gardin-italian-henri-cartier-bresson/ , archivedate=26 June 2014 , url=http://fotografiamagazine.com/gianni-berengo-gardin-italian-henri-cartier-bresson/ , date=16 June 2013 , title=Gianni Berengo Gardin, the Italian Henri Cartier-Bresson {{Cite journal , last=Foot , first=John , author-link=John Foot (historian) , title=Photography and radical psychiatry in Italy in the 1960s. The case of the photobook ''Morire di Classe'' (1969) , doi=10.1177/0957154X14550136 , pmid=25698683 , pmc=4361699 , journal=History of Psychiatry , volume=26 , issue=1 , year=2015 , pages=19–35 {{Cite journal , last=Foot , first=John , author-link=John Foot (historian) , title=Television documentary, history and memory. An analysis of Sergio Zavoli's ''The Gardens of Abel'' , journal=Journal of Modern Italian Studies , volume=19 , issue=5 , year=2014 , pages=603–624 , doi=10.1080/1354571X.2014.962258, pmid=25937804 , pmc=4408445 {{cite book , last=Forgacs , first=David , title=Italy's Margins: Social Exclusion and Nation Formation since 1861 , page=200 , location=Cambridge , publisher=Cambridge University Press , year=2014 , isbn=978-1-107-05217-8 , url=https://books.google.com/books?id=G8AdAwAAQBAJ "The books: Interview by Floriana Pagano"; in ''Gianni Berengo Gardin'' (Rome: Contrasto, 2005; {{ISBN, 88-89032-72-3), pp. 421–431. {{Cite journal , author-first=Federica , author-last=Manzoli , title=Images of madness: The end of mental hospitals illustrated through photographs , journal=Journal of Science Communication , volume=3 , issue=2 , year=2004 , pages=1–7 , doi=10.22323/2.03020203 , doi-access=free ''Morire di Classe'' ristampa anastatica a cura di Duemilauno Agenzia Sociale
{{Webarchive, url=https://web.archive.org/web/20190804170318/http://www.news-forumsalutementale.it/%E2%80%9Cmorire-di-classe%E2%80%9D-ristampa-anastatica-a-cura-di-duemilauno-agenzia-sociale/ , date=2019-08-04 ", News Forum Salute Mentale, 11 October 2009. Retrieved 13 February 2016.
{{Cite book , last1=Parr , first1=Martin , authorlink1=Martin Parr , last2=Badger , first2=Gerry , authorlink2=Gerry Badger , title=The Photobook: A History, vol 2 , location=London , publisher=Phaidon , year=2006 , isbn=978-0-7148-4433-6 , page=246


External links


''Morire di classe'', 2008 edition
(
PDF Portable Document Format (PDF), standardized as ISO 32000, is a file format developed by Adobe in 1992 to present documents, including text formatting and images, in a manner independent of application software, hardware, and operating systems. ...
). Editore Duemilauno Agenzia Sociale.
Samples from the series
Cerati's website Anti-psychiatry books Italian books Books of photographs Books about psychiatric hospitals Psychiatric hospitals in Italy Photography in Italy 1969 non-fiction books Giulio Einaudi Editore books