5
54 min
The Disobbedienti emerged from the Tute Bianche during the demonstrations against the G8 summit in Genoa in July 2001. The “Tute Bianche” were the white-clad Italian activists who used their bodies – protected by foam rubber, tires, helmets, gas masks, and homemade shields – in direct acts and demonstrations as weapons of civil disobedience. The Tute Bianche first appeared in Italy in 1994 in the midst of a social setting in which the “mass laborer,” who had played a central role in the 1970s in production and in labor struggles, was gradually replaced in the transition to precarious post-Fordist means of production. “Disobbedienti” thematizes the Disobbedienti’s origins, political bases, and forms of direct action on the basis of conversations with seven members of the movement.
Name | Character | Team | |
---|---|---|---|
Luca Casarini | Self | Unowned | |
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Ulia Conti | Self | Unowned |
Gianmarco de Pieri | Self | Unowned | |
Enrico Ludovici | Self | Unowned | |
Federico Martelloni | Self | Unowned | |
Francesco Raparelli | Self | Unowned | |
Francesca Ruocco | Self | Unowned |